$FCFS·8-K

FirstCash Holdings, Inc. · Jun 18, 5:15 PM ET

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FirstCash Holdings, Inc. 8-K

Research Summary

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FirstCash Holdings Reincorporates to Texas Effective June 18, 2026

What Happened
FirstCash Holdings, Inc. announced that, following shareholder approval at its June 9, 2026 annual meeting, it completed a conversion from a Delaware corporation to a Texas corporation effective June 18, 2026. The company filed a certificate of conversion in Delaware and a certificate of conversion with a Plan of Conversion plus a Certificate of Formation (the “Texas Charter”) and amended and restated bylaws (the “Texas Bylaws”) in Texas. At the Effective Time, each outstanding share of common stock converted on a 1-for-1 basis to Texas corporation common stock; trading continues on Nasdaq under the ticker “FCFS.” The company says there is no change in headquarters, management, operations, employees, assets or liabilities (other than transaction costs and franchise tax implications), and material contracts and employee plans continue on the same terms.

Key Details

  • Effective date: June 18, 2026; shareholder approval granted June 9, 2026.
  • Share conversion: each Delaware common share converted automatically to one Texas common share (1:1); no action or certificate exchange required by shareholders.
  • Governance change: company affairs now governed by Texas law, the Texas Charter and the Texas Bylaws (replacing the Delaware charter/bylaws).
  • Filings: Plan of Conversion, Texas Charter and Texas Bylaws were filed as exhibits to the 8-K.

Why It Matters
Reincorporation changes the company’s legal domicile and governing law, which can affect certain corporate governance and shareholder rights—details are described in the company’s proxy statement referenced in the filing. For most retail investors, the move is administrative: there is no economic change to operations, capital structure, or trading (ticker remains FCFS), and no action is required. Investors who want to understand any specific legal or governance impacts should review the Plan of Conversion, the Texas Charter and Texas Bylaws filed with the 8-K and the proxy disclosure.

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