Welcome to our dedicated page for Chilean Cobalt SEC filings (Ticker: COBA), 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.
Chilean Cobalt Corp.'s SEC filings document a Nevada emerging growth company engaged in critical minerals exploration and development, including cobalt-copper projects in Chile and rare earth project agreements. Its 8-K reports cover board appointments, governance matters, Regulation FD disclosures, material definitive agreements, private equity financing arrangements, and changes to preferred-stock rights and common-stock capital structure.
The filing record also includes notice-of-late-filing disclosure for a quarterly report and material-event reports related to sustainable cobalt recovery work, placement-agent arrangements, PIPE financing, and project-level agreements. The filings identify no securities registered under Section 12(b) and describe recurring disclosure obligations through project development, financing, governance, reporting-status, and capital-structure events.
Chilean Cobalt Corp. filed an update on its earn-in and option agreement for the NeoRe Rare Earth Project in southern Chile. The agreement with NeoRe SpA was amended on March 2, 2026 to better define the subject properties without changing the financial provisions or other material terms. The project currently covers 6,300 hectares across 21 mining concessions.
A March 6, 2026 press release reports that NeoRe has begun full on-site exploration, drilling about 192 meters year-to-date with rare earth grades up to 1,060 ppm TREE and surface samples above 800 ppm. Seven new concessions added roughly 2,100 hectares and more than 20 additional targets have been identified. An accelerated work program aims to complete Tranche 1 activities by July 2026, expand drilling with two crews, advance modular processing engineering, and run an analytical campaign of over 100 samples with academic support.
Chilean Cobalt Corp. reported that it is part of a consortium selected for a Sustainable Cobalt Project that has been awarded a $3,000,000USD grant from Corfo, Chile’s economic development agency. The three-year project aims to develop ways to recover cobalt from tailings and mining waste, with total expected project costs of $3,950,000USD.
The non-grant portion of $950,000USD is expected to be funded by consortium participants, with $600,000USD as in-kind support and $350,000USD as direct monetary contributions. Chilean Cobalt Corp. expects to provide about 21% of this consortium support, split roughly half in-kind and half in cash over the project’s life. The filing furnishes, but does not file, the related press release as an exhibit.
Chilean Cobalt Corp. reported that it has entered into a binding earn-in and option agreement with NeoRe SpA, a privately held Chilean company, for an ionic adsorption clay-style rare earth element (REE) project. The arrangement gives Chilean Cobalt the right to acquire the project in exchange for 6,000,000 common shares if it proceeds to an outright purchase.
Under the agreement, the company may provide NeoRe with up to a maximum of $3,000,000 to fund a phased development strategy and secure an option over approximately 4,250 hectares of a REE system enriched with yttrium, neodymium, dysprosium, and terbium, which are described as critical to defense and advanced manufacturing supply chains. If the option is not exercised, Chilean Cobalt would receive a net smelter royalty of as much as 2%, depending on the development phase reached. The company expects development scale-up over approximately 12–24 months, and NeoRe may earn additional bonus shares by meeting permitting and production targets to be agreed in a future definitive acquisition agreement.
Chilean Cobalt Corp. has filed a new prospectus supplement for the resale of up to 39,000,000 shares of its common stock by existing stockholders, updating an existing S-1 prospectus and prior supplements. The supplement also includes a current report describing that on December 31, 2025, all 2,407,785 issued and outstanding shares of Series B Convertible Preferred Stock automatically converted into common stock, increasing common stock issued and outstanding to 56,409,930 shares and reducing the Series B preferred balance to zero. Following this conversion, former Series B holders now only hold common stock and no longer have the special rights, preferences, or privileges previously attached to the preferred shares.
Chilean Cobalt Corp. reported that on December 31, 2025, all of its 2,407,785 issued and outstanding shares of Series B Convertible Preferred Stock automatically converted into common stock under existing certificate provisions. This auto-conversion increased the company’s common stock issued and outstanding to 56,409,930 shares and reduced the Series B preferred outstanding to zero.
After this conversion, former preferred holders no longer have the special rights tied to the Series B preferred, including anti-dilution protections and priority or more favorable conversion terms. They now only hold the same rights as other common stockholders, meaning the company’s equity structure is simplified into common stock without this preferred class.
Chilean Cobalt Corp. announced a private investment in public equity (PIPE), selling 6,000,000 shares of its equity securities for $3,000,000 in gross proceeds to two investors. The buyers are a wholly owned subsidiary of Glencore plc, together with its subsidiaries, and Madesal SpA, together with its subsidiaries.
The company expects to use the net proceeds, after placement agent expenses and fees, to fund exploration work, continue consolidating its project district, advance environmental, social and governance (ESG) diligence, and for general corporate and working capital purposes.
Chilean Cobalt Corp. reported a new private equity financing. On November 25 and 27, 2025, the company entered into stock purchase agreements with investors for a PIPE transaction, selling an aggregate of 6,000,000 shares of common stock at $0.50 per share, for total gross proceeds of $3,000,000. The shares were issued in reliance on exemptions from registration under Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act and Rule 506 of Regulation D.
The company also signed a placement agent agreement with DA Davidson, which entitles the agent to a fee equal to 7% of the gross proceeds from the PIPE and reimbursement of up to $100,000 for legal fees related to closing the equity sales. Detailed terms of the placement agent agreement and the securities purchase agreements are provided in the attached forms as exhibits.
Chilean Cobalt Corp. (COBA) reported another loss-making quarter with no revenue as it advances early-stage cobalt-copper projects in Chile. For the three months ended September 30, 2025, the company posted a net loss of $2,287,316 versus $192,968 a year earlier, driven largely by a $1,881,082 impairment of newly acquired mining concessions. For the nine-month period, the net loss widened to $2,932,125 from $666,278.
Cash fell to $189,157 as of September 30, 2025, with total assets of $337,454 and stockholders’ equity of $313,212, underscoring tight liquidity. Management discloses substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern and expects to rely on additional equity and debt financing to fund exploration and development. During the period, COBA raised $830,945 through issuances of Series B preferred stock and issued 4,500,000 common shares valued at $1,890,000 for an acquisition that was subsequently fully impaired.
Chilean Cobalt Corp. notified the SEC that it will file its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2025 after the deadline, relying on Rule 12b-25, which allows up to five extra calendar days for a quarterly filing. The company says the delay stems from needing additional time to obtain and compile information for the report and states the filing will be made as soon as practicable.
The company also discloses that net loss for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2025 increased by $2,094,348 and $2,265,847, respectively, compared with the same periods in 2024. This larger loss is mainly due to a $1,881,082 impairment charge on mining concessions acquired via a non-cash equity issuance on September 12, 2025, reflecting concerns about the reliability and availability of independent valuations for these assets.
Sativus Tech Corp. (COBA) filed a Form 12b-25, notifying a late filing of its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended September 30, 2025. The company cites unforeseen events that made completing the report without unreasonable effort and expense impractical. The notification was signed by Chief Executive Officer Michael Oster on November 14, 2025.