Welcome to our dedicated page for AsiaStrategy SEC filings (Ticker: SORA), 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.
The AsiaStrategy (Nasdaq: SORA) SEC filings page on Stock Titan provides access to the company’s U.S. regulatory disclosures as a foreign private issuer. AsiaStrategy, a Cayman Islands exempted company based in Hong Kong, files reports primarily on Form 20-F and Form 6-K, which together outline its luxury watch trading business, its institutional digital asset strategy, and key corporate developments.
Through its Form 6-K submissions, AsiaStrategy furnishes press releases and transaction updates to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. These filings include information on convertible note issuances used to raise capital, with stated intentions to allocate proceeds toward Bitcoin purchases, potential investments in listed companies with Bitcoin treasury strategies, and working capital. They also document matters such as changes in the independent registered public accounting firm, auditor dismissal, and related correspondence, as well as references to material weaknesses in internal controls previously identified in its annual report on Form 20-F.
Investors can use AsiaStrategy’s filings to review unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements, management’s discussion and analysis of financial condition and results of operations, and Inline XBRL data that supports financial reporting. These documents help clarify how the company presents its luxury watch distribution activities, its evolving digital asset focus, and its approach to financial reporting and governance.
On Stock Titan, AsiaStrategy filings are updated from the EDGAR system and paired with AI-powered summaries that explain the significance of each document in clear language. Users can quickly understand the implications of new 6-K submissions, auditor changes, capital raises, and other regulatory disclosures without reading every technical detail. This makes it easier to follow how AsiaStrategy’s hybrid model of luxury goods and Bitcoin-oriented strategy is reflected in its official SEC reporting.
AsiaStrategy filed a Form 6-K to furnish a press release about changes in its shareholder base. The update states that Sora Ventures’ Jason Fang has become the company’s largest shareholder. Fang also serves as AsiaStrategy’s Co-Chief Executive Officer and a Director, underscoring his central role in the company’s ownership and management.
AsiaStrategy (Nasdaq: SORA) changed its independent auditor. The company appointed J&S Associate PLT as its independent registered public accounting firm, effective November 6, 2025. J&S Associate PLT will audit the consolidated financial statements for the year ending December 31, 2025 and review the consolidated financial statements for the six months ended June 30, 2025.
The audit committee and board also approved the dismissal of Marcum Asia CPAs LLP on October 31, 2025. Marcum Asia’s most recent audit report did not include an adverse opinion, a disclaimer of opinion, or qualifications as to uncertainty, scope, or accounting principles. The company states there were no disagreements or reportable events with Marcum Asia, other than material weaknesses previously reported on May 12, 2025: limited U.S. GAAP expertise, absence of an internal audit function, and deficiencies in IT controls across access, change management, IT operations, and cybersecurity.
Marcum Asia provided a letter addressing these disclosures, included as Exhibit 99.1.
AsiaStrategy closed the sale of its convertible notes and received gross proceeds of US$10 million. The notes carry a 3.0% annual interest rate, have a three‑year term, and are initially convertible at US$4.64 per share. The transaction closed on October 13, 2025 following agreements signed on August 15, 2025.
This financing provides cash to the company while giving investors the option to convert debt into ordinary shares at a set price. Conversion terms and the fixed rate outline clear economics for both funding cost and potential future share issuance.