Welcome to our dedicated page for Amarc Res SEC filings (Ticker: AXREF), 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.
Amarc Resources Ltd. filings document its status as a Canadian foreign private issuer reporting to the SEC on Form 6-K. The record includes furnished press releases and MD&A materials that describe the company's British Columbia mineral properties, including JOY, DUKE and IKE, along with exploration activity, technical information and market trends affecting copper-gold projects.
The company's MD&A disclosures also address IFRS financial reporting, results of operations, liquidity, capital resources, commitments, related-party transactions, financial instruments and risk management, outstanding share data, disclosure controls, internal control procedures and risk factors. These filings frame Amarc's public-company reporting around exploration-stage asset development, joint venture funding arrangements and mineral-property risk.
Amarc Resources is a copper-gold exploration company focused on three British Columbia districts: JOY, DUKE and IKE. The MD&A highlights extensive 2024–2025 drilling success at the JOY District’s AuRORA deposit, where mineralization has now been intercepted over an area of about 1.4 km by 0.8 km, supported by multiple long, high-grade Cu-Au-Ag intercepts.
At JOY, partner Freeport has funded over $35 million, earned a 60% interest and elected to increase its stake to 70% by sole funding a further $75 million over five years through joint venture company Aurora Minerals. At the DUKE District, partner Boliden has invested $30 million and earned a 60% interest, with an option to reach 70% by spending an additional $60 million.
Financially, for the three months ended December 31, 2025 Amarc reported a net loss of $227,313, but net income of $43,555 for the nine months, helped by $18.8 million of cost recoveries from partners. Exploration and evaluation expenses were $22.3 million over nine months, largely at JOY and DUKE. The company ended the period with cash of $1.56 million and accounts payable and accrued liabilities of $769,418, and continues to depend on partner funding and external capital for future exploration.