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6-KSEC Filing

WF International Ltd. โ€” 6-K Filing

6-K filed on April 2, 2026

April 2, 2026 at 12:00 AM

๐Ÿงพ What This Document Is

This is a Form 6-K, a standard report that foreign companies listed in the U.S. must file with the SEC. Think of it as a "news update" filed outside of their regular annual report. This specific report for April 2026 tells us about the company issuing new shares to pay for services.

๐Ÿ‘‰ In short: WF International used its own stock like cash to pay advisors for help with an acquisition, investor relations, and financial advice.

๐Ÿข What The Company Does

WF International Limited is a company headquartered in Chengdu, China. While the filing doesn't detail its operations, we can infer it is active in corporate strategy, given its focus on acquisitions and using external advisors.

๐Ÿ‘‰ In simple terms: It's a China-based company that appears to be growing through acquisitions and has hired a team of outside experts to help it navigate deals, investor communication, and financial planning.

๐Ÿš€ Key Moves: Paying with Stock, Not Cash

On February 26, 2026, the company made three important payments entirely in newly issued ordinary shares, not cash.

1. Acquisition Help: It issued 739,840 shares, valued at $500,000, to an advisor for consulting on its acquisition of "Chaokun" (a sports culture company).

2. Investor Relations Boost: It issued 190,245 shares, valued at $90,000, to the same advisor for 12 months of investor relations services.

3. Financial Advice: It issued 697,564 shares, valued at $330,000, to a different advisor for 12 months of financial advisory services.

Why it matters: This is a classic "share-based compensation" move. The company is preserving its cash for operations and growth while using its stock as currency to attract top-tier help.

๐Ÿ“ฆ Financial Position & Dilution

After these share issuances, the company now has 10,248,337 ordinary shares issued and outstanding.

โš ๏ธ Why this matters (The Dilution Effect): Every new share issued makes each existing share represent a slightly smaller piece of the company. Think of it like a pizza: if you issue more slices, each original slice gets smaller. This dilution is a direct cost to current shareholders.

๐Ÿ” The Details: Why No Registration?

The shares were issued as "unregistered" securities. This is standard and legal. They were offered under exemptions that allow private placements to sophisticated parties without the full, costly process of a public registration.

๐Ÿ‘‰ The takeaway for investors: These new shares are not freely tradable on the open market immediately, limiting their potential to impact the stock price in the short term.

๐Ÿง  The Analogy

Imagine you want to renovate your house but want to save your cash. Instead of paying the contractor, architect, and interior designer in dollars, you agree to give them a small percentage ownership in your home. They get paid, you keep your cash, but you now own a slightly smaller slice of your own house. That's exactly what WF International did with its company shares.

๐Ÿ“‡ Key Contacts & People

  • Ke Chen, Chief Executive Officer (signed the report on behalf of the company).

๐Ÿงฉ Final Takeaway

WF International is strategically using its own stock as currency to pay for critical advisory and investor relations services, conserving its cash. While this is a smart move to access talent and expertise, it comes at the cost of diluting ownership for existing shareholders.