$XALL (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NEWMEDIAWIRE Xalles
Post# of 44843
Xalles Holdings recently filed a Form 1-A-W with the SEC to withdraw the company’s application for Tier I Reg A fundraising. This was done to support the new business roadmap. Xalles will first complete its PCAOB financial audits, including companies that were acquired within the last 2 years or are about to be acquired, which will change the company’s status to Fully SEC Reporting. This status will then allow the company to proceed with an OTC Markets uplist to the Quotation Board (OTCQB), while in parallel submit a new Form 1-A to the SEC to apply for a larger Tier II Reg A equity offering.
The logic behind these adjustments in the roadmap include wanting to perform the audits on the companies to set a new higher financial standard for near term and future acquisitions of operating companies, obtain the uplist to OTCQB as soon as possible, and proceed with the closing of acquisition deals that have been announced or in our pipeline without having to work around the Tier I Reg A processes.
The expected timeline of the key milestones is as follows:
Acquisition of 2-5 companies – completed throughout October and November 2020
PCAOB Audits – completed by November 2020
Uplist to OTCQB – completed by December 2020
Tier II Reg A offering submitted and qualified – completed during Q1 2021
“The new strategy we are implementing for the fourth quarter of this year and progressing into 2021 will allow Xalles to maximize shareholder value,” stated Thomas Nash, Xalles Holdings CEO. “We realized that the short-term priorities need to be completing the acquisitions that have been lined up in the past few months, while moving swiftly through the audit process to a Quotation Board uplist. The management team is excited to finish 2020 strong in terms of revenue, asset appreciation, and operating companies that will produce tremendous financial results throughout 2021. The new strategy also puts the company in a better position to do fundraising under more favorable terms.”