Welcome to our dedicated page for Star Gold SEC filings (Ticker: SRGZ), 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 Star Gold Corp. (SRGZ) SEC filings page on Stock Titan provides access to the company’s regulatory disclosures as filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Star Gold is a Nevada corporation whose common stock is quoted on the OTCQB market under the symbol SRGZ, as reflected in its Form 8-K filings. These documents are a primary source of information on the company’s corporate actions, governance changes, and compliance with federal securities laws.
Through filings such as Form 8-K, Star Gold reports material events, including changes in key officers and other significant corporate developments. For example, a recent 8-K describes the resignation of a former Chief Financial Officer and the appointment of a new Chief Financial Officer and Corporate Secretary/Treasurer, outlining the background and roles of the individual involved. Such filings help investors understand shifts in management and governance at the company.
In addition to current reports, investors may review Star Gold’s periodic filings, where available, to analyze disclosures related to its Longstreet Gold-Silver Project in Nevada, risk factors, and other operational details. These documents can provide context on how the company presents its exploration and development activities, royalty structures, and overall business strategy within a regulated reporting framework.
On Stock Titan, Star Gold’s SEC filings are updated as they are released on EDGAR, and AI-powered summaries are used to highlight key points from lengthy documents. Users can quickly see the main topics, such as management changes, project-related disclosures, or other material events, without reading every page. This page is a useful starting point for reviewing Star Gold’s regulatory history, understanding board and officer changes, and examining how the company describes its operations and risks in official filings.
Star Gold Corp. president and director David Segelov increased his direct equity stake through a derivative conversion. He converted warrants with a $0.08 exercise price into 2,469,275 shares of Common Stock at a reported $0.04 per share. Following these transactions, he directly owns 3,340,424 shares of Star Gold common stock. The filing shows no remaining derivative positions after this conversion.
Star Gold Corp. CEO Lindsay Edward Gorrill, a director and more than 10% owner, converted derivative securities into common equity. On February 27, 2026, he acquired 11,352,750 shares of Common Stock at an indicated price of $0.04 per share through a derivative conversion.
Following these transactions, he directly owns 30,856,913 shares of Common Stock. One related derivative entry shows warrants with an exercise price of $0.08 and an underlying amount of 5,676,375 common shares, reflecting the mechanics of the conversion.
Star Gold Corp. reported a net loss of $389,770 for the nine months ended January 31, 2026, wider than the $203,622 loss a year earlier, as pre-development, legal and professional costs rose sharply while the company generated no revenue. Total assets were $1,055,788 and the working capital deficit was $679,592 as of January 31, 2026, with an accumulated deficit of $13,504,695. The company highlighted substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern and remains reliant on external financing. During the quarter it raised $350,000 from the sale of 8,750,000 units and received $50,000 from warrant exercises, ending with cash of $266,144. After quarter-end, on February 27, 2026, Star Gold closed a private placement of 65,850,000 units for proceeds of $2,634,000 and converted $693,850 of debt into 17,346,250 units, both with attached warrants exercisable at $0.08. The company is directing higher spending toward permitting and technical work on its Longstreet gold project in Nevada as it prepares for an Environmental Impact Statement and mine plan, but it still has no producing mines.
Myrmikan Gold Fund, LLC and related filers reported beneficial ownership of 36,976,707 shares of Star Gold Corp. common stock, representing 18.3% of the class based on 191,737,060 shares outstanding as of February 26, 2026. The reported stake includes 10,000,000 shares underlying outstanding common stock purchase warrants. The filing names Myrmikan Capital, LLC as manager and Daniel Oliver Jr. as manager of the manager and attributes shared voting and dispositive power to the Reporting Persons as disclosed.
Star Gold Corp. filed an initial insider ownership report showing a large beneficial stake held through Myrmikan entities. The filing reports beneficial ownership of 10,000,000 Warrants and 26,976,707 shares of Common Stock as of the reported date.
The securities are noted as being beneficially owned directly by Myrmikan Gold Fund, LLC and indirectly by Myrmikan Capital, LLC and Oliver Daniel Jr, who are each listed as ten-percent owners. The Form 3 records holdings only and does not specify any recent purchases or sales.
Star Gold Corp. completed a private placement of common stock and warrants, raising $3,677,850 through the issuance of 91,946,250 units at $0.04 per unit under Section 4(a)(2) and Rule 506(b) of Regulation D.
Each unit includes one share of common stock and a warrant to buy one-half additional share within twelve months at an exercise price of $0.08 per full share. The placement involved 40 investors, including 38 accredited investors and six affiliates such as the chief financial officer and all three board members.
Star Gold Corp. reported several leadership changes. On February 8, 2026, the Board accepted the resignation of director Paul Coombs, noting he did not leave due to any disagreement over operations, policies, or practices.
On February 9, 2026, the Board appointed Lindsay E. as Chief Executive Officer and accepted the resignation of Mr. Gorrill as Chief Financial Officer, explaining the change was to segregate the CEO and CFO roles. The Board simultaneously appointed Gerry Pascale as CFO. Pascale brings more than 20 years of senior financial leadership experience, including SEC reporting, capital markets work, and governance for public companies.
Star Gold Corp. reported a larger quarterly net loss as it continues pre‑revenue exploration of its Longstreet gold project in Nevada.
For the three months ended October 31, 2025, the company posted a net loss of $78,400, and a six‑month net loss of $208,784, about 40% higher than a year earlier, driven by higher legal, administrative, mineral exploration and new pre‑development expenses. Star Gold again generated no revenue.
As of October 31, 2025, cash was $45,986 with a working capital deficit of $848,606, total liabilities of $1,225,137 and a stockholders’ equity deficit of $473,539, leading management to state that recurring losses and limited liquidity raise substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern. Operations were funded by $138,000 of related‑party promissory notes and $50,000 from the exercise of 2,500,000 repriced warrants, while 35,220,929 options, warrants and convertible securities could further dilute shareholders.
Star Gold Corp. (SRGZ) reported a quarterly net loss of $130,384 for the three months ended July 31, 2025, with no revenue. Operating expenses rose to $114,650, and interest expense to related parties was $15,734. Cash was $10,967 and the company reported a working capital deficit of $745,206. Stockholders’ deficit was $445,139 and total assets were $717,692, driven primarily by a $614,167 mining interest and an $89,400 reclamation bond.
Management states substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern, citing limited resources and ongoing losses. Financing during the quarter came from related-party promissory notes with $68,000 in proceeds; related-party convertible notes outstanding were $627,500. Potential dilution included 2.5 million options, 2.0 million warrants, and 32,198,382 shares from convertible notes and interest. The Longstreet drilling permit expired in December 2022 and the company plans to apply for an extension while advancing hydrology drilling, geochemical work and a plan of operations. Shares outstanding were 97,290,810 as of October 16, 2025.