https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/comets-ml/conversations/messages/26877if. IF 2017 VT14 is/was a comet, it may produce a meteor shower on Dec. 13/14 (coincidentally, the same time as Geminids, but in the evening). The radiant computed with the program by L. Neslusan et al. has coordinates 332.5 21.2 (22:10 +21:12) which is in western Pegasus, about 4 deg south of the 4th mag star iota Pegasi. The meteors should be extremely slow (geocentric speed 10-11 km/s). You can see an example of such a slow mover at NASA ASGARD website, namely on the page of fireballs detected by the network in USA last night:
https://fireballs.ndc.nasa.gov/20171129.html The very first meteor on top of that page (20171128 02:07:55 UTC) has v_g=12.5+/-0.9 km/s and the radiant position alpha=321.6+/-0.7, delta=37.0+/-0.3.
Given the small size of 2017 VT14 (H=22.6 or 22.7) one should not expect a large meteor activity. But it's worth while checking in the evening of Dec. 13/14 while observing the Geminids.