Welcome to our dedicated page for V.F. SEC filings (Ticker: VFC), 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 VF Corporation (VFC) SEC filings page brings together the company’s official regulatory disclosures, offering a structured view of how this apparel and footwear business reports its operations, capital structure and governance. VF files a range of documents with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, including current reports on Form 8‑K, annual and quarterly reports, and registration-related materials for its common stock and senior notes listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
Recent 8‑K filings illustrate the breadth of topics covered. VF uses Form 8‑K to furnish quarterly earnings presentations and press releases, to disclose dividends declared by its Board of Directors, and to report changes in segment reporting such as the realignment into Outdoor and Active segments with an "All Other" category. Other 8‑Ks describe material definitive agreements, including a senior secured revolving credit facility that replaced a prior revolving credit agreement, and actions related to the company’s capital structure, such as the notice of redemption for its 4.125% Senior Notes due 2026 (VFC26).
Filings also document portfolio transactions. VF has reported the completion of the sale of the Dickies® brand to Bluestar Alliance LLC and has provided supplemental investor information presenting historical results excluding Dickies®. Earlier filings and earnings materials discuss the sale of the Supreme® brand business and its treatment as discontinued operations. Governance-related 8‑Ks record the results of annual shareholder meetings, including director elections, advisory votes on executive compensation and auditor ratification.
On Stock Titan, these filings are updated as they appear on EDGAR, and AI-powered summaries help explain the key points from lengthy documents such as 10‑K annual reports, 10‑Q quarterly reports and detailed 8‑Ks. Users can quickly see how VF describes its risk factors, transformation program, segment performance, credit arrangements and securities, and can review historical filings to understand how the company’s strategy and capital structure have evolved over time.
V.F. Corporation entered into a new Credit Agreement providing multi-part facilities to support its liquidity and refinance prior indebtedness. The agreement includes a $100 million letter of credit subfacility, a $100 million swing-line subfacility, a $400 million subfacility for borrowers formed in Switzerland subject to an eligible-asset borrowing base, and a $75 million subfacility for a borrower formed in Germany subject to a receivables borrowing base. The Credit Facility also includes an uncommitted accordion feature enabling expansion of the facility up to $2.00 billion under specified conditions.
Borrowings may be used to refinance the company’s existing indebtedness under the terminated agreement, to pay fees and expenses related to the Credit Facility, and for working capital and general corporate purposes. The agreement lists multiple administrative and arranging banks and is signed on behalf of the company by Paul Vogel, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
VF Corporation (VFC) Q1 FY26 (quarter ended 28 Jun 2025) showed modest top-line pressure but meaningful profitability progress. Revenue slipped 0.5% YoY to $1.76 bn; Outdoor grew 8% while Active fell 10% as Vans continued to lag. Gross margin rose 270 bps to 53.9% on lower product costs, lifting operating loss to $(86.6) m vs. $(123.0) m LY. Net loss from continuing ops narrowed to $(116.4) m (-$0.30/sh) from $(152.0) m (-$0.39/sh).
Cash & equivalents climbed to $642 m (up $213 m since March) helped by $380 m short-term borrowing; inventories rose 31% sequentially to $2.14 bn and 4% YoY. Total debt increased $170 m to $4.15 bn, leaving net debt roughly flat. Shareholders’ equity fell 13% sequentially to $1.29 bn, pushing debt-to-equity above 3×. Operating cash outflow widened to $(145) m vs. $(31) m LY.
‘Reinvent’ restructuring cost $17 m this quarter (cumulative $208 m). Management realigned segments, grouping Timberland with The North Face (Outdoor) and aggregating Vans, Kipling, Eastpak and JanSport into Active. Pension plan termination could trigger $200–$300 m non-cash charges later in FY26. The quarterly dividend remained $0.09/sh; no share repurchases.