---
title: "GM $12.75M Privacy Deal: Vanguard Restructures Stake"
type: news
slug: gm-privacy-12-75m-vanguard-restructures-stake-q1-2026
canonical_url: https://13finsight.com/news/gm-privacy-12-75m-vanguard-restructures-stake-q1-2026
published_at: 2026-05-11T00:07:03.283Z
updated_at: 2026-05-11T00:07:05.798Z
author: Alex Rivera
author_title: Breaking News Editor
author_url: https://13finsight.com/authors/alex-rivera
word_count: 745
locale: en
source: 13F Insight
---

# GM $12.75M Privacy Deal: Vanguard Restructures Stake

> While GM settles a $12.75M California privacy case over driver-data sharing, its largest passive owner restructured an 11.5% stake — and a sister entity refiled at 7.47% weeks later. The institutional re-shuffle is the story the wire missed.

General Motors agreed this week to pay $12.75 million to settle California Attorney General Rob Bonta's investigation into driver-location data shared with insurance brokers — the largest state-level connected-car privacy settlement to date. The headlines treat it as a privacy story. The institutional ownership tape tells a different one: the carmaker's biggest passive holder spent the last twelve months unwinding and reconstructing its stake while the regulatory pressure built.Across the 1,586 institutions reporting General Motors in 13F filings, the most consequential SEC paperwork wasn't the consent decree. It was a quiet Schedule 13G filed April 29, 2026 by Vanguard Capital Management LLC declaring a 7.47% beneficial-ownership stake — 67.5 million shares — only weeks after Vanguard Group Inc. filed a 13G/A on March 26 dropping its holding to zero. State Street Corp. also marked an exit Schedule 13G in November 2025 at 4.90%.What the 13D/G Tape Actually ShowsThe picture from the cumulative beneficial-ownership filings on CUSIP 37045V100:July 29, 2025 — Vanguard Group Inc. files 13G/A at 11.52% (110.76M shares). Standard passive-fund reporting at the time.November 10, 2025 — State Street Corp. files 13G marked exit at 4.90% (46.59M shares).March 26, 2026 — Vanguard Group Inc. files 13G/A flagged as exit (0.00%).April 29, 2026 — Vanguard Capital Management LLC files 13G at 7.47% (67.54M shares).This is the corporate-structure plumbing of one of the largest asset managers in the world reorganizing how it reports beneficial ownership of the country's second-largest US automaker. Whether it reflects a restructured Vanguard reporting entity, an internal book-and-records reallocation, or a genuine net reduction across the complex, the surface read is the same: GM's institutional ownership profile is mid-transition just as the regulator wrote its largest connected-car privacy check.The Holder Base, UnfilteredThe top of the GM 13F holder table at the close of the most recent quarter:HolderReported ValueFiling TypeBlackRock, Inc.$6.86B13FVanguard Capital Management's GM book$4.38B13F + 13G (7.47%)State Street Corp$3.72B13F (13G exit Nov 2025)Vanguard Portfolio Management$2.82B13FFranklin Resources Inc.$2.62B13FNote the gap between BlackRock and the Vanguard complex once you sum Vanguard Capital Management and Vanguard Portfolio Management: roughly $7.2B combined, edging past BlackRock. That makes Vanguard's reporting-entity reshuffle materially more consequential to GM's voting-authority profile than the dollar AUM headline suggests.Why a Privacy Settlement Is a 13F-Adjacent StoryConnected-vehicle telematics is the foundation of GM's bull case. The same OnStar, MyChevrolet, MyBuick, MyGMC, and MyCadillac data pipes that California regulators flagged for unauthorized insurer sharing are the data layer that justifies GM's investments in Cruise's autonomous program, subscription telematics, and over-the-air feature unlocks. Active managers — the 15 in the top 20 holders that are not labeled passive — model GM partly as a telematics-data business. A $12.75M cash penalty is rounding error against a $51B+ revenue line. The structural risk is the regulatory precedent: California's Connected Vehicle Privacy Initiative explicitly cited "unauthorized sharing with insurers and data brokers," the exact use case that monetizes telematics for OEMs.The institutional read: passive-index holders rebalance to the index regardless of the headline. The signal worth watching is whether active-manager 13F positions for the next quarter — especially the Franklin Resources and Wellington-class active books — trim or hold. Those filings land on the standard 45-day window after the June 30 quarter close, i.e. by August 14, 2026.What to Watch NextWednesday, May 21, 2026 — GM's annual meeting. The proxy already names the connected-vehicle data committee disclosures Bonta's office cited.Q2 2026 earnings (late July) — Whether management quantifies expected revenue impact from data-sharing restrictions in the OnStar Insurance pipeline.August 14, 2026 — Q2 2026 13F filing deadline. The first holder-base snapshot fully post-settlement and post-Vanguard reshuffle.Other state AGs — Texas and New York have parallel telematics inquiries. Any follow-on settlement at similar magnitude compounds the precedent.Quick Take for HoldersThe privacy settlement, by itself, is a manageable item — $12.75M paid out of a $7-8B annual free-cash-flow base. The 13F-adjacent question is whether telematics-revenue assumptions still hold once the consent-decree restrictions on data sharing are factored in. Anyone running a position should compare the GM holder list and smart-money signals feed against next quarter's active-manager flows. Track GM filings live via the 13F Insight filings hub, and lean on the Learn library for context on how 13D/G versus 13F filings differ — the two filed by Vanguard within five weeks are reading the same shares through two different SEC lenses.SEC primary sources: Vanguard Capital Management 13G accession 0002100119-26-000520 (April 29, 2026); Vanguard Group 13G/A exit accession 0000102909-26-001322 (March 26, 2026); State Street 13G exit accession 0000093751-25-000602 (November 10, 2025).

## FAQ

### What did General Motors agree to pay in the California privacy settlement?

General Motors agreed to pay $12.75 million to settle California Attorney General Rob Bonta's investigation into unauthorized sharing of connected-vehicle driver data with insurance brokers — the largest state-level connected-car privacy settlement to date.

### Why did Vanguard Group file a 13G exit on General Motors in March 2026?

Vanguard Group Inc. filed Schedule 13G/A on March 26, 2026 dropping its General Motors stake to zero. Five weeks later, on April 29, 2026, Vanguard Capital Management LLC — a separate Vanguard reporting entity — filed a new 13G declaring a 7.47% stake (67.5 million shares). The pair of filings reflects a reorganization of how the Vanguard complex reports beneficial ownership of GM.

### Who are the largest institutional holders of GM stock right now?

The top reported holders of General Motors at the close of the most recent 13F window are BlackRock ($6.86B), Vanguard Capital Management ($4.38B, also a 7.47% 13G filer), State Street Corp ($3.72B), Vanguard Portfolio Management ($2.82B), and Franklin Resources ($2.62B). GM has 1,586 institutional holders tracked in 13F filings.

### When is the next GM 13F filing window after this settlement?

The next 13F filing deadline is August 14, 2026, covering Q2 2026 (quarter ending June 30, 2026). That filing window will produce the first complete snapshot of GM's institutional holder base after both the California privacy settlement and the Vanguard reporting-entity restructuring.

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Source: 13F Insight — https://13finsight.com/news/gm-privacy-12-75m-vanguard-restructures-stake-q1-2026
Author: Alex Rivera — https://13finsight.com/authors/alex-rivera
Last updated: 2026-05-11T00:07:05.798Z