Welcome to our dedicated page for Art Technology Acquisition Cor SEC filings (Ticker: ARTCW), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
Our SEC filing database is enhanced with expert analysis from Rhea-AI, providing insights into the potential impact of each filing on Art Technology Acquisition Cor's stock performance. Each filing includes a concise AI-generated summary, sentiment and impact scores, and end-of-day stock performance data showing the actual market reaction. Navigate easily through different filing types including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly reports, 8-K current reports, proxy statements (DEF 14A), and Form 4 insider trading disclosures.
Designed for fundamental investors and regulatory compliance professionals, our page simplifies access to critical SEC filings. By combining real-time EDGAR feed updates, Rhea-AI's analytical insights, and historical stock performance data, we provide comprehensive visibility into Art Technology Acquisition Cor's regulatory disclosures and financial reporting.
Art Technology Acquisition Corp. is a Cayman Islands SPAC formed to complete an initial business combination in technology, art, financial services and adjacent sectors, but may pursue other industries. It has not begun operations and will not generate operating revenue until a deal closes.
The company raised $253,000,000 through its IPO and concurrent private placement, all placed in a trust account initially at $10.00 per unit. It must complete a business combination within its “completion window” ending on January 7, 2028, or April 7, 2028 if certain conditions are met, or else redeem public shares and liquidate.
As of March 13, 2026, there were 26,125,000 Class A and 8,708,333 Class B ordinary shares outstanding. Sponsor and insiders hold founder shares acquired at a nominal price and 530,000 placement units, creating potential dilution and incentives to close a deal even if outcomes are less favorable for public shareholders. Public shareholders receive redemption rights in connection with any business combination or extension of the completion window.