---
title: "Cross-Checking 13F + 13D + Form 4 + 990-PF: The Full Picture"
type: learn
slug: cross-checking-13f-13d-form-4-990-pf-complete-ownership-decoder
canonical_url: https://13finsight.com/learn/cross-checking-13f-13d-form-4-990-pf-complete-ownership-decoder
published_at: 2026-05-15T07:54:43.704Z
updated_at: 2026-05-15T07:54:47.186Z
author: Sarah Mitchell
author_title: Education Editor
author_url: https://13finsight.com/authors/sarah-mitchell
word_count: 780
locale: en
source: 13F Insight
---

# Cross-Checking 13F + 13D + Form 4 + 990-PF: The Full Picture

> Each SEC and IRS filing captures different information at different thresholds. Reading institutional ownership correctly requires cross-referencing Form 13F-HR (institutional holdings), Schedule 13D/G (5%+ beneficial), Form 4 (insider transactions), and IRS 990-PF (foundation endowment). Here's the framework.

Institutional ownership of US public companies is documented across multiple SEC and IRS filing types, each capturing different information at different thresholds. Reading any single filing in isolation provides an incomplete picture. Form 13F-HR reports quarterly institutional holdings above $100 million. Schedule 13D/G reports 5%+ beneficial ownership. Form 4 reports insider transactions within 2 business days. IRS Form 990-PF reports private foundation endowment composition annually. Proxy filings (DEF 14A) report board-and-executive ownership. Cross-referencing these filings produces the complete picture of who owns what and why. This guide explains how to combine them.The five filing types comparedFilingThresholdFrequencyWhat It CapturesForm 13F-HR$100M US equityQuarterly (45-day lag)Institutional holdings listSchedule 13D5%+ beneficial, intent to influence10-day triggerActivist engagementSchedule 13G5%+ beneficial, passiveAnnual + amendmentsPassive concentrationForm 4Insider transaction2 business daysIndividual insider tradeIRS 990-PFPrivate foundationAnnualFoundation endowmentDEF 14A (proxy)Public company annualAnnualBoard and executive ownershipThe 13F + 13G cross-check patternForm 13F-HR reports an investment manager's discretionary holdings of US-listed equity. Schedule 13G reports a specific issuer-level beneficial-ownership disclosure. When the same institutional manager exceeds 5% beneficial ownership of a specific company, both filings appear — and they capture different perspectives.Example: Vanguard at Apple. Vanguard's various 13F-HR filings collectively capture ~$5 trillion in US equities. Vanguard's Schedule 13G/A for Apple separately discloses Vanguard Group's beneficial ownership of AAPL at specific thresholds. Reading only the 13F-HR misses the Schedule 13G beneficial-ownership concentration; reading only the Schedule 13G misses Vanguard's broader US-equity portfolio.The 13F + Form 4 cross-check patternForm 13F-HR captures investment manager institutional holdings. Form 4 captures Section 16 insider transactions. For companies where the investment manager is the operating company (Nvidia, Apple, Berkshire), both filings appear but capture different things.Example: Berkshire Hathaway + Buffett. Berkshire's 13F-HR reports the firm's $274 billion investment portfolio (Apple, Bank of America, American Express, Coca-Cola, Chevron, etc.). Warren Buffett's personal Form 4 filings (as Berkshire Hathaway insider) report his individual transactions in Berkshire stock. Reading them together provides the full picture of Buffett's personal-and-firm-level capital allocation.The Form 4 + Schedule 13G cross-check pattern (founders)For founder-led companies with dual-class structures, Form 4 Table I captures direct Class A ownership; Form 4 Table II captures derivative-securities holdings; Schedule 13G/A captures total beneficial ownership. All three can show different numbers for the same insider.Example: Joe Mansueto + Morningstar. Form 4 Table I after the May 2026 sale: 8.09 million direct shares. Form 4 Table II: minimal derivative holdings. Schedule 13G/A filed February 2026: 14.91 million shares at 37.5% beneficial ownership. The difference of 6.82 million shares represents indirect holdings via family trusts and foundations not visible in Form 4 Table I alone.The 13F + 990-PF cross-check pattern (foundations)Charitable foundations file both Form 13F-HR (if their US-listed equity holdings exceed $100M) and IRS Form 990-PF (annual private foundation tax filing). The 990-PF captures the foundation's total asset composition (including private equity, real estate, fixed income, alternatives not in the 13F) plus annual grant-making activity, operating expenses, and distribution rates.Example: Mastercard Foundation. The Foundation's Form 13F-HR reports $32.6 billion in Mastercard stock at 96.84% portfolio concentration. The Foundation's IRS Form 990-PF reports total assets, annual distributions (~$700M for charitable activities), endowment composition across asset classes, and grant-making activity by geography and program. Reading only the 13F-HR misses the Foundation's broader strategic context.The 13D-to-13G conversion signalSchedule 13D and Schedule 13G are mutually exclusive for any single position. A holder can convert from 13G (passive) to 13D (activist with intent to influence) when their stance changes — and this conversion typically precedes a public campaign. Watching for 13G-to-13D filings is one of the cleanest early-activist signals.Example: Activist preparation. When Carl Icahn or similar activists begin building a new campaign position, they typically convert from 13G to 13D within 10 days of crossing the intent-to-influence threshold. The conversion filing precedes (or coincides with) public letters, board-nominee announcements, and proxy-contest filings.How to combine the filings for a complete pictureFour-step framework:Start with Form 13F-HR. Identify the major institutional managers holding the stock. Filter for active conviction versus passive index inventory using filer-type classification.Cross-reference Schedule 13D/G filings. Look for 5%+ beneficial ownership disclosures. Distinguish passive 13G filings from activist 13D engagements. Watch for 13G-to-13D conversions as early-activist signals.Read Form 4 filings for insiders. Track Section 16 insiders' personal transactions. Pair Form 4 Table I (direct Class A) with Table II (derivatives) and Schedule 13G/A (total beneficial) for founder-led companies.Add 990-PF and proxy filings for full context. For charitable foundations, IRS 990-PF provides the broader strategic context. For all public companies, the annual DEF 14A proxy filing details board-and-executive ownership in ways the 13F alone cannot capture.For real-time tracking across all filing types, see the institutional signals feed. For related reading techniques on filing-type-specific interpretation, see our filing thresholds decoder, Form 4 cumulative ledger guide, and charitable foundation decoder.

## FAQ

### Why read multiple SEC filings together?

Each filing captures different information at different thresholds. Form 13F-HR reports institutional manager holdings above $100M. Schedule 13D/G reports 5%+ beneficial ownership at the issuer level. Form 4 reports insider transactions within 2 business days. IRS Form 990-PF reports foundation endowment composition annually. Proxy filings detail board-and-executive ownership. Reading any single filing in isolation provides an incomplete picture; cross-referencing produces the complete view.

### How do 13F-HR and Schedule 13G differ?

Form 13F-HR reports an institutional investment manager's quarterly discretionary US-equity holdings exceeding $100 million total. Schedule 13G reports a specific issuer-level 5%+ beneficial-ownership disclosure with passive intent. Vanguard files both: 13F-HRs collectively capturing $5 trillion in US equities, and separate 13G filings for individual issuers (Apple, Microsoft, etc.) where Vanguard's beneficial ownership crosses 5% thresholds.

### What is the 13G-to-13D conversion signal?

Schedule 13D and Schedule 13G are mutually exclusive for any single position. A holder can convert from 13G (passive, no intent to influence) to 13D (active engagement, intent to influence) within 10 days of crossing the intent threshold. This conversion typically precedes a public activist campaign — board-nominee announcements, public letters, proxy contests. Watching for 13G-to-13D conversions is one of the cleanest early-activist signals.

### How do I read founder Form 4 alongside Schedule 13G/A?

For founder-led companies with multi-class structures, Form 4 Table I captures direct Class A ownership; Form 4 Table II captures derivative-securities holdings (Class B, options, trusts); Schedule 13G/A captures total beneficial ownership including indirect holdings. All three can show different numbers. Joe Mansueto's Form 4 Table I shows 8.09M direct shares; his Schedule 13G/A shows 14.91M shares (37.5% beneficial). Read all three together for the complete picture.

### Why does Mastercard Foundation file both 13F and 990-PF?

The Mastercard Foundation's Form 13F-HR reports its $32.6 billion in Mastercard stock at 96.84% portfolio concentration (the founding gift). The Foundation's IRS Form 990-PF reports total assets across all asset classes (private equity, real estate, fixed income, alternatives), annual grant-making activity ($400-700M), operating expenses, and distribution rates. Reading only the 13F-HR misses the broader strategic context that 990-PF provides — the complete charitable endowment picture.

### What does proxy filing (DEF 14A) add to ownership analysis?

The annual DEF 14A proxy filing details board-and-executive ownership of public-company stock, including details on grant schedules, performance shares, and beneficial-ownership thresholds that may not appear in standard Form 4 cover summaries. Combined with 13F-HR (institutional holdings) and Form 4 (insider transactions), proxy filings complete the picture of who owns what. For founder-led companies, the proxy provides multi-class voting-structure details essential for governance analysis.

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Source: 13F Insight — https://13finsight.com/learn/cross-checking-13f-13d-form-4-990-pf-complete-ownership-decoder
Author: Sarah Mitchell — https://13finsight.com/authors/sarah-mitchell
Last updated: 2026-05-15T07:54:47.186Z