Welcome to our dedicated page for Vivic SEC filings (Ticker: VIVC), 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 Vivic Corp. (VIVC) SEC filings page on Stock Titan provides access to the company’s official disclosures filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Vivic is incorporated in Nevada and its common stock trades on the OTCQB market under the symbol VIVC, as reflected in its Form 8-K reports. These filings document material events, corporate governance changes, and other information relevant to shareholders and prospective investors.
Vivic’s recent Form 8-K filings include reports on board and executive transitions and on changes in its regional operations. One 8-K describes the resignation of multiple officers and directors and the appointment of a new President, Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and Secretary, along with a summary of that executive’s employment agreement and equity-based compensation. Another 8-K details the dissolution of VIVIC Corp. Taiwan Branch, explaining that the branch had been engaged in yacht procurement, sales, and leasing services in Taiwan and other countries and that the dissolution was driven by a Taiwan government policy prohibiting importing ships from China, where the company’s main suppliers are.
Through this filings page, users can review Vivic’s current and historical reports, including Forms 8-K and other periodic or transactional filings as they become available from EDGAR. Stock Titan’s platform associates these documents with AI-powered summaries that explain the key points of each filing in plain language, helping readers understand topics such as executive appointments and departures, branch dissolutions, and other disclosed events without needing to parse every technical detail.
Investors interested in Vivic’s yacht-focused business, electric yacht collaborations, and geographic strategy can use the SEC filings page to see how the company formally describes these developments and to track governance and structural changes over time.
Vivic Corp. reported another quarter with no revenue and a smaller loss as it restructures its yacht business. For the quarter ended December 31, 2025, the company generated no revenue and posted a net loss of $126,147, compared with a loss of $962,685 a year earlier, mainly due to sharply lower general and administrative and share-based compensation expenses.
For the six months, Vivic recorded no revenue versus $44,243 last year and a net loss of $500,950, improved from $1,547,193. At December 31, 2025, cash and cash equivalents were only $17,906 with a working capital deficit of about $0.15 million and an accumulated deficit of roughly $6.25 million. Management disclosed substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern and noted dependence on related-party support and new financing, while shifting operations away from Taiwan toward the United States and Southeast Asia.
Vivic Corp (VIVC) filed its Q1 FY2026 report, showing no revenue and a smaller net loss. For the three months ended September 30, 2025, total revenue was $0 versus $44,243 a year ago, and net loss narrowed to $374,803 from $584,508. Operating expenses fell to $372,556 from $491,754, driven by lower general and administrative and share-based compensation.
Cash and cash equivalents were $8,756 as of September 30, 2025, with a working capital deficit of about $0.15 million and negative operating cash flow of $235,051. The company disclosed substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern and noted reliance on related-party and third‑party financing; net cash from financing was $201,143. Vivic is winding down its Taiwan branch and shifting focus to the United States and Southeast Asia. Subsequent to quarter‑end, on October 17, 2025, the company appointed Chen‑Hon Chuang as CEO and CFO with 100,000 RSUs, and reported multiple executive and director resignations. Common shares outstanding were 27,678,419 as of November 13, 2025.
VIVIC Corp. (VIVC) reported the initial beneficial ownership of its newly appointed CEO and CFO, Chen‑Hon Chuang, on Form 3. The filing lists 100,000 shares of Common Stock beneficially owned with direct ownership. It also notes he is to receive additional shares issuable upon settlement of Restricted Stock Units, which are subject to vesting conditions.
Vivic Corp. announced a board change. On October 29, 2025, the Board accepted the resignation of Director Chuen-Huei Lee. The company stated that Mr. Lee’s departure was not due to any disagreement with the company, the Board, management, or its operations or policies.
The resignation letter was filed as Exhibit 17.1 and incorporated by reference. Vivic Corp.’s common stock trades on the OTCQB under the symbol VIVC.
Vivic Corp. reported a leadership transition. On October 17, 2025, the Board accepted the resignations of President/CEO/Secretary Tse‑Ling Wang, CFO Andy F. Wong, and directors Amy (Yin‑Zhen) Huang and Richard (Hui Ming) Pao. The Board appointed Chen‑Hon Chuang as President, Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and Secretary.
Mr. Chuang has served as a Senior Sales Consultant and Technical Advisor to the company’s Hong Kong subsidiary since February 2023 and previously held senior roles in the yacht industry. His employment agreement runs initially through October 16, 2026 and includes 100,000 restricted stock units deemed earned in equal monthly installments of 8,333. Upon a “Qualifying Termination,” he would receive vesting of all RSUs scheduled for the remainder of the term and retain previously earned RSUs; post‑employment non‑compete and non‑solicit obligations apply for 12 months. The company disclosed no family relationships or related‑party transactions involving Mr. Chuang.
Vivic Corp. reported a difficult fiscal year ended June 30, 2025, posting a net loss from continuing operations of $3,446,751 and negative operating cash flow of $0.46 million. The company had cash and cash equivalents of $41,903 and a working capital deficit of approximately $0.62 million. Management disclosed an accumulated deficit of about $5.75 million and identified substantial uncertainty about the company’s ability to generate sustained income over the next 12 months, noting going concern uncertainties.
The year included large stock-based compensation expense of $2,508,783, prepaid stock compensation conversions and issuance of 700,000 shares with a fair value of $1,932,000, significant related-party balances, and multiple short-term loans (several repaid in July 2025). Deferred tax assets of $760,115 carry a full valuation allowance.
VIVIC Corp. reported that its Board of Directors approved the dissolution of its Taiwan branch, VIVIC Corp. Taiwan Branch, which had focused on yacht procurement, sales, and leasing in Taiwan and other countries. A Certificate of Dissolution was filed on August 19, 2025 and approved by regulators on August 21, 2025, following a Taiwan government policy that prohibits importing ships from China, where the company’s main suppliers are located.
VIVIC decided in August 2025 to concentrate its operations in the United States and Southeast Asia and to stop pursuing the Taiwan market. Required public notices were published on September 26, 27, and 29, 2025, and if no creditor objections are filed within three months of the final notice, the court is expected to issue a certificate of closure, allowing the company to close the local bank account and complete deregistration, which it currently expects by year-end 2025. The company states that it does not expect the dissolution to have a significant impact on its overall business performance, while noting that actual results may differ from these expectations.