Welcome to our dedicated page for The Brand House Collective SEC filings (Ticker: TBHC), 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 Brand House Collective, Inc. (Nasdaq: TBHC), formerly Kirkland's, Inc., files reports and disclosure documents with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as a Tennessee corporation in the home improvement and home décor retail industry. These SEC filings provide detailed information about its operations as a multi-brand merchandising, supply chain and retail operator managing brands such as Kirkland's Home and Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc.'s Bed Bath & Beyond Home, Bed Bath & Beyond, buybuy BABY, and Overstock.
On this page, investors can review current and historical SEC filings for TBHC, including Form 8-K reports that describe material events. Recent 8-K filings have covered quarterly financial results, the entry into an Agreement and Plan of Merger with Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc., credit agreement amendments, and executive employment arrangements. These documents explain how the company reports its financial condition, outlines key terms of financing arrangements, and discloses significant corporate actions.
Regulatory filings are especially important for understanding the proposed merger with Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc. A Form 8-K dated November 25, 2025 summarizes the merger agreement, including the planned structure in which a Bed Bath & Beyond subsidiary will merge with The Brand House Collective, the exchange ratio for TBHC common stock, conditions to closing, and potential termination and expense reimbursement fees. Other filings reference joint press releases and provide context on financing facilities used to support store conversions and operations.
Through Stock Titan, TBHC filings are updated in near real time as they are posted to the SEC’s EDGAR system. AI-powered tools can help summarize lengthy documents such as annual and quarterly reports and event-driven 8-Ks, highlighting key terms, risk factors, and transaction details. Users can also focus on disclosures relevant to home retail operations, multi-brand strategies, and the evolving relationship with Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc.
For investors following TBHC, this filings page offers a structured way to review the company’s regulatory history, monitor developments related to the announced merger, and better understand the financial and legal framework underpinning its transformation.
Brand House Collective, Inc. submitted a Form 25 notification to remove its Common Stock from listing and registration on the Nasdaq Stock Market LLC. The filing states the Exchange and the Issuer complied with 17 CFR 240.12d2-2(b) and 17 CFR 240.12d2-2(c) governing voluntary withdrawal.
The Brand House Collective, Inc. reported that Nasdaq notified the company its market value of publicly held shares has been below the required $15,000,000 for 30 consecutive business days, putting its Nasdaq Global Select Market listing at risk. The company has 180 calendar days, until September 22, 2026, to regain compliance, which would occur if its publicly held market value reaches at least $15,000,000 for ten consecutive business days.
The company highlighted its previously announced Agreement and Plan of Merger with Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc., under which it expects the merger to close before September 22, 2026, after which its stock would cease trading on Nasdaq and the company would become a wholly owned subsidiary of Bed Bath & Beyond. The company also notes that its auditor’s report for the year ended February 1, 2025 is qualified regarding its ability to continue as a going concern, and it outlines numerous business, financing, and integration risks that could affect future results.
BRAND HOUSE COLLECTIVE, INC. Chief Transformation Officer Melody Rose Jubert had 1,382 shares of common stock withheld on March 27, 2026 to cover taxes on 4,661 restricted stock units that vested that day. This was a tax-withholding disposition, not an open-market sale. After this transaction, she directly holds 141,219 shares of common stock.
Brand House Collective, Inc. reported a routine insider transaction by President and CEO Amy Ervin Sullivan related to vesting equity compensation. On March 27, 2026, 14,831 restricted stock units vested, and 3,612 common shares were withheld at $0.895 per share to cover tax obligations. This was not an open-market sale, and Sullivan retained the remaining vested shares, bringing her direct ownership to 608,579 common shares.
The Brand House Collective, Inc. held a special shareholder meeting on March 17, 2026 to vote on proposals related to its planned merger with Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc. Shareholders owning 14,594,556 shares, about 65% of the 22,461,383 shares entitled to vote as of January 20, 2026, were present in person or by proxy, satisfying quorum requirements. The voting results showed strong support for the merger-related items, including one key proposal that received 14,159,963 votes for, 421,085 against, and 13,508 abstentions. The merger is expected to close in April 2026, subject to the satisfaction or waiver of the remaining closing conditions in the merger agreement.
The Brand House Collective, Inc., formerly known as Kirkland's, Inc., reported a leadership change. On March 4, 2026, Chief Operating Officer James E. Schisler notified the company of his intent to resign as an officer and employee effective March 20, 2026.
Schisler will continue serving in his current role until his departure date to help ensure continuity. The company states that he is leaving to pursue other opportunities and that there were no disagreements between him and the company, suggesting an orderly transition rather than a dispute-driven exit.
Bed Bath & Beyond Executive Chairman Marcus Lemonis lays out a plan to stabilize and grow the company following 2025. Management prioritized margin integrity over top-line revenue, narrowing the year‑over‑year revenue gap in Q4 and improving adjusted EBITDA loss by 84% (approximately $23 million).
The company is targeting full‑year 2026 revenue growth of low‑ to mid‑single digits, expects gross margin in the 24%–26% range, and says it has lowered its breakeven point through SKU/vendor rationalization. Pending transactions include the anticipated closing of Kirkland’s, which the company says would bring combined annualized revenue to approximately $1.5 billion, plus an additional in‑principle omni‑channel transaction expected to add about $500 million of annualized revenue. A Form S‑4/proxy has been filed in connection with the TBHC merger.
Brand House Collective, Inc. President and CEO Amy Ervin Sullivan reported an automatic share withholding related to equity compensation. On February 4, 2026, 7,413 shares of common stock were withheld at $1.12 per share to cover taxes on 25,000 restricted stock units that vested that day, with the remaining vested shares retained. Following this transaction, she directly beneficially owns 612,191 shares of Brand House Collective common stock.
The Brand House Collective, Inc. has agreed to be acquired by Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc. in an all‑stock merger. Each TBHC share will be converted into 0.1993 shares of BBBY common stock, plus cash for any fractional BBBY share.
TBHC shareholders will vote at a special meeting to adopt the merger agreement, approve merger‑related executive compensation on an advisory basis, and allow possible adjournment to solicit more proxies. Completion requires overall majority approval and a separate majority of disinterested TBHC shares. If completed, TBHC becomes a wholly owned BBBY subsidiary and its stock will be delisted from Nasdaq.
The Brand House Collective, Inc. reported third-quarter fiscal 2025 results, showing a smaller GAAP loss but much weaker performance on an adjusted basis as it moves toward a pending merger with Bed Bath & Beyond.
For the 13-week period ended November 1, 2025, net sales were 103,462 and net loss was 3,705 (both in thousands), improving from a net loss of 7,680 in the prior-year quarter. Operating expenses fell to 23,113 from 34,528, helped by reduced marketing, lower self-insured benefit costs and a 10,000 gain on the sale of the Kirkland’s brand to Beyond.
Excluding this gain and other items, adjusted net loss widened to 13,620 from 3,820, and adjusted EBITDA swung to a loss of 9,904 from income of 466 (in thousands). Inventory decreased to 88,902 from 111,219, while total debt and related-party borrowings remained high. The company highlights that its auditor’s report for the year ended February 1, 2025 is qualified as to its ability to continue as a going concern and it is not holding an earnings call due to the pending acquisition.