Welcome to our dedicated page for Charging Robotics SEC filings (Ticker: CHEV), 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.
Charging Robotics Inc. filings document registration-statement amendments, material events, governance changes and capital-structure matters for the company. S-1/A filings amend its IPO registration statement and describe securities registration, Delaware corporate status, emerging growth company status and offering-related disclosure.
Current reports on Form 8-K record board and executive changes, material definitive agreements, shareholder voting and capital-structure disclosures. These filings also document warrant-related arrangements tied to a prior securities exchange agreement and other formal events affecting the company’s governance and security structure.
Charging Robotics Inc. reported a larger quarterly loss as it continues to develop wireless charging systems for electric vehicles. For the three months ended March 31, 2026, net loss attributable to the company widened to $540 thousand from $234 thousand a year earlier, driven by higher research and development and corporate expenses, including the consolidation of majority-owned Revoltz.
Research and development costs rose to $200 thousand, while general and administrative costs increased to $381 thousand, partly related to a planned uplisting to a national exchange. Cash was only $25 thousand with a working capital deficit of $2.44 million, and management states there is substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern without new capital.
The company has a $3.0 million credit facility, of which $938 thousand has been drawn, and it agreed to a $2.0 million private placement expected to close on the uplist date. Milestone Warrants for 6,150,000 shares had their performance deadline extended to December 31, 2026. Management also acknowledges material weaknesses in internal controls and is adding finance staff and consultants to improve financial reporting.
Charging Robotics Inc. reported a leadership change, with Chief Executive Officer Yakov Baranes resigning effective May 1, 2026 for personal reasons. He will remain on the company’s board of directors and indicated his decision is not related to any disagreement over operations or policies.
The company appointed Meni Nachmias as its new Chief Executive Officer, also effective May 1, 2026. Nachmias brings over 20 years of leadership experience, largely from senior roles in the Israeli Navy and a managing partner position at Bullard Maritime Services.
Under a new employment agreement, Nachmias will receive a base salary of NIS 12,000 per month and may receive bonuses as determined by the company. The agreement is open-ended from May 1, 2026, and can be terminated by either party with at least 30 days’ written notice, or by the company without notice for defined cause.
Charging Robotics Inc. reported board changes effective March 30, 2026. The company appointed Amir Nardimon, an AI and robotics-focused CEO with prior roles at Cadence Design Systems and Intel, and Itay Meroz, an experienced technology executive and financial expert, as new directors.
On the same date, Amitay Weiss and Kineret Tzedef resigned from the board for personal reasons. The company states their resignations were not due to any disagreement with management, the board, or company operations. The new directors will receive the same compensation as other non-executive directors.
Charging Robotics Inc. files its annual report describing a development-stage business focused on wireless charging systems for electric vehicles, especially automatic parking systems, and majority-owned micro‑mobility subsidiary Revoltz Ltd.
The company has received initial orders from three Israeli automatic parking system providers and is piloting wireless EV charging installations in Tel Aviv. Revoltz advances PORTO, a compact last‑mile delivery EV, under an exclusive Israeli distribution agreement and early institutional customer adoption.
Charging Robotics remains unprofitable, reporting net losses of approximately $3.3 million and $2.9 million for 2025 and 2024, and its auditors include a going concern note highlighting substantial doubt about its ability to continue without additional capital. As of December 31, 2025, 11,246,252 common shares were outstanding.
Charging Robotics Inc. entered into an Earn-Out Milestone Amendment Agreement with holders of milestone warrants originally issued to Xylo Technologies Ltd. The amendment extends the performance period for three milestone warrants, covering an aggregate of 6,150,000 shares if all milestones are achieved, through December 31, 2026, and adjusts certain milestone terms. The milestone warrants and the underlying common shares remain unregistered and are being offered and sold in a private placement relying on Section 4(a)(2) and/or Rule 506 of the Securities Act.
Charging Robotics Inc. filing reports that L.I.A. Pure Capital Ltd. beneficially owns 591,412 shares of Common Stock, representing 5.2% of the class based on 11,246,252 shares outstanding as of the reporting date. The filing lists sole voting and dispositive power over these 591,412 shares.
Charging Robotics Inc. ownership disclosure: Capitalink Ltd. reports beneficial ownership of 1,018,513 shares of Common Stock, representing 9.0% of the 11,246,252 shares outstanding used for the percentage calculation as of the reporting date. The filing describes additional warrants totaling 3,304,835 shares issuable upon an uplisting and a PIPE closing, which are excluded from the reported beneficial ownership and are subject to a 4.99% exercise blocker. The report is signed by Lavi Krasney, CEO and dated 03/16/2026.
Charging Robotics Inc. ownership disclosure: L.I.A. Pure Capital Ltd. reports beneficial ownership of 1,106,405 shares of Common Stock, representing 9.8% of the outstanding shares based on 11,246,252 shares outstanding as of the reporting date. The filing excludes up to 3,304,835 warrants and pre-funded warrant issuances that become exercisable upon an uplisting; those warrants include a 4.99% blocker provision.
Charging Robotics Inc. entered a securities purchase agreement to complete a private placement of up to 500,000 shares of common stock or pre-funded warrants, priced at $4.00 per share and $3.9999 per pre-funded warrant, for expected gross proceeds of about $2.0 million.
The deal is expected to close on the effectiveness date of an uplisting of the company’s common stock to a national securities exchange, subject to customary conditions. Pre-funded warrants are immediately exercisable at $0.0001 per share and include a 4.99% beneficial ownership cap. The company agreed to file a resale registration statement for the issued securities within 30 days of closing.
Charging Robotics Inc. filed Amendment No. 4 to its Form S-1 as an exhibits-only update, primarily to add the consent of its independent registered public accounting firm as Exhibit 23.1, leaving the rest of the registration statement unchanged. The company estimates total offering-related expenses of $209,859, including a $5,859 SEC registration fee, $125,000 in legal fees, and other professional and printing costs. The filing also details recent unregistered issuances, such as 6,146,188 shares and 6,150,000 warrants issued in an acquisition, multiple small private placements of common stock, a $3.0 million credit facility with associated 200,000 warrants at a $15.00 exercise price, and the Revoltz Ltd. share exchange involving 1,385,002 company shares for 37,476 Revoltz shares.