Welcome to our dedicated page for Rubber Leaf SEC filings (Ticker: RLEA), 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.
Rubber Leaf Inc (RLEA) SEC filings provide detailed insight into the company’s corporate structure, regulatory status, and key transactions. As outlined in its S-1 and S-1/A registration statements, Rubber Leaf Inc is a Nevada holding company and an emerging growth company and smaller reporting company, with its common stock quoted on the Pink Open Market and an application submitted to list on The Nasdaq Capital Market.
The registration statements describe the offering of common stock of the Nevada holding company and explain that operations are conducted through its wholly owned Hong Kong subsidiary, Rubber Leaf Limited (RLHK). These filings include an exhibit index referencing governance documents, equity plans, material contracts, and a credit line approval letter, which together outline important aspects of the company’s structure and financing arrangements.
Current reports on Form 8-K add further context. One 8-K details a share purchase agreement under which Rubber Leaf Inc disposed of all equity interests in its former PRC operating subsidiary, Rubber Leaf Sealing Products (Zhejiang) Co., Ltd., and confirms that the company’s primary operations are now conducted through RLHK in Hong Kong. The filing also explains that the reorganization did not result in a change of control and that the company continues to operate as an active business through its Hong Kong subsidiary.
Rubber Leaf Inc has also filed a Form 12b-25 (NT 10-Q) explaining a delay in filing a Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q due to difficulties in obtaining and compiling required information, while indicating an intention to file within the extension period. On Stock Titan, users can access these SEC filings with AI-powered summaries that highlight key points from registration statements, 8-Ks, and notifications, helping readers understand how RLEA reports its operations, reorganizations, and compliance timelines.
Rubber Leaf Inc is registering 5,000,000 shares of common stock in a firm-commitment underwritten offering, with an expected initial price of $4 per share and a proposed listing on Nasdaq under the symbol RLEA. The Nevada holding company operates through Rubber Leaf Limited in Hong Kong, supplying automotive rubber and plastic sealing strips primarily to major OEM-related customers.
As of December 31, 2025, 41,109,458 shares of common stock were outstanding, rising to 46,109,458 shares after the offering, or 46,859,458 if the 750,000-share over-allotment option is fully exercised. The CEO will retain about 84.91% voting power post-offering, so the company will remain a controlled company and an emerging growth/smaller reporting company.
The business was restructured by disposing of a PRC subsidiary with significant liabilities and transferring core contracts to the Hong Kong entity. The company depends heavily on related-party distributors and suppliers, has identified material weaknesses in internal controls, and faces regulatory and geopolitical risks tied to Hong Kong, evolving PRC oversight, and potential PCAOB inspection issues under the HFCAA.
Rubber Leaf Inc. files its annual report describing a major restructuring and ongoing risks. The company sold its former PRC manufacturing subsidiary, RLSP, to related party Yongliansen for cash consideration of $3,000,000, after RLSP accumulated significant liabilities and faced multiple legal proceedings. Operations have been shifted to wholly owned Hong Kong subsidiary RLHK, which now handles sales of automotive rubber and plastic sealing strips and supplies brands such as eGT and Volkswagen.
The report highlights heavy dependence on related parties. Shanghai Xinsen and Shanghai Huaxin contributed about all revenue in 2025, while raw materials are now sourced primarily from Yongliansen. As of June 30, 2025, non‑affiliate equity value was about $14,357,366, and as of February 6, 2026 there were 41,109,458 common shares outstanding. Management, including the CEO and CFO, has funded operations through loans totaling $3,171,929.00 as of December 31, 2025. Key risks include intense industry competition, customer and supplier concentration, inflationary pressures, need for additional capital, and evolving PRC/Hong Kong regulatory oversight.
Rubber Leaf Inc. filed Amendment No. 6 to its Form S-1 registration statement. This amendment is described as a technical update filed solely to revise Item 16 in Part II and to add or update certain exhibits, without changing any part of the prospectus in Part I. The prospectus itself is therefore omitted from this amendment.
The updated exhibit index lists corporate documents such as the certificate of incorporation and bylaws, key agreements including a share exchange agreement, material purchase and sales contracts, an equity incentive plan, a credit line approval letter, committee charters, a code of conduct and a clawback policy, along with legal opinions and auditor consent. The amendment is signed on behalf of Rubber Leaf Inc. by Chief Executive Officer and President Xingxiu Hua and other directors and officers, confirming their authorization of this update.
Rubber Leaf Inc is registering 6,250,000 shares of common stock in a firm commitment public offering, with an expected initial price of $4 per share and a planned listing on the Nasdaq Capital Market under the symbol “RLEA,” which listing is a condition to the offering. Investors will hold shares in the Nevada holding company, while operations are conducted through a wholly owned Hong Kong subsidiary focused on automotive rubber and plastic sealing strips supplied directly and indirectly to major auto OEMs.
The company is a “controlled company,” as CEO Xingxiu Hua will hold about 84.91% of voting power after the offering. In 2024, it generated revenue of $6,929,706 and recorded a net loss before income taxes of $2,212,237, with stockholders’ equity of $(2,497,556) as of December 31, 2024. Results depend heavily on a related-party customer, Shanghai Xinsen, and key related-party raw material vendors. The business faces legal and operational risks tied to being based in Hong Kong, potential future PRC regulatory reach and possible U.S. trading prohibitions under the HFCAA if its auditor cannot be fully inspected by the PCAOB.
Rubber Leaf Inc. (RLEA) has sold all of its equity interests in its former China operating subsidiary, Rubber Leaf Sealing Products (Zhejiang) Co., Ltd., to Shanghai Yongliansen Import and Export Trading Co., Ltd. for US$3,000,000 in cash.
The purchaser is a related party because the Company’s Chief Executive Officer, Xingxiu Hua, holds 30% of the purchaser’s outstanding equity. After the sale, the former PRC subsidiary is no longer included in Rubber Leaf’s consolidated operations, and the Company has no ongoing operational role or control over it.
Prior to this sale, Rubber Leaf formed a wholly owned Hong Kong subsidiary, Rubber Leaf Limited (RLHK), and shifted principal orders, customer contracts and supply arrangements from the PRC entity to RLHK. The Company states that RLHK is now its primary operating entity and that it does not expect the restructuring to materially affect its consolidated financial results or result in any change of control.
Rubber Leaf Inc, a Nevada holding company for PRC-based auto sealing supplier RLSP, reported weak results for the nine months ended September 30, 2025. Revenue was $1,144,263, down sharply from $6,916,046 a year earlier, driven entirely by related-party Customer B. The company generated a gross loss of $446,029 and a net loss of $928,554, though this net loss improved from $1,773,183 in 2024.
Total assets were $22,867,186 and total liabilities $26,290,343, leaving a stockholders’ deficit of $3,423,157 as of September 30, 2025. Working capital was negative $14,949,307, cash stood at only $12,798, and operating cash outflow was $126,002 for the period. The company discloses substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern.
Customer and vendor concentration is extreme: Customer B accounted for 100% of revenue and about 99% of accounts receivable, while major vendors A and C are related parties. Rubber Leaf also faces multiple PRC legal proceedings, including a December 2024 judgment requiring RLSP to pay approximately $6.96 million plus late-payment interest on a factory construction dispute, and lawsuits over unpaid materials and customer prepayments. As of November 19, 2025, 41,109,458 common shares were outstanding.