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. (COBA) reported it entered a Deed of Undertaking with a wholly owned subsidiary of Glencore plc, granting Glencore an irrevocable and exclusive right of first and last refusal to purchase up to 100% of cobalt and/or copper products and other materials derived from the La Cobaltera and El Cofre projects in northern Chile, for the life of mine.
Actual purchases would occur under future offtake contracts between the parties. Pricing is expected to be mutually agreed no later than three months before deliveries and based on a premium or discount to a prevailing benchmark, such as the Fastmarkets cobalt price index. The company also furnished a press release as Exhibit 99.1.
Chilean Cobalt Corp., through its wholly owned subsidiary Baltum Mineria SpA, signed and closed a definitive purchase agreement on September 12, 2025 to acquire 3,742 hectares of exploitation-level mining concessions in the San Juan mining district in Chile from Cobalt Chile SpA, an unrelated party. The consideration includes $101,833,291 Chilean pesos in cash and 4.5 million shares of the company’s restricted common stock. After this transaction, the company’s total owned mining concessions increase to 6,377 hectares, advancing its goal of consolidating the district. The 4.5 million-share issuance will represent 9.37% of post-transaction common stock and is subject to a multi-year lockup that permits only 1.5 million cumulative shares to be sold under exemptions in each successive year until the third anniversary, with any remaining shares then saleable under an appropriate exemption.