Home/Filings/8-K/0001185185-26-000020
8-K//Current report

Blueport Acquisition Ltd 8-K

Accession 0001185185-26-000020

$BPACCIK 0002064177operating

Filed

Jan 4, 7:00 PM ET

Accepted

Jan 5, 12:46 PM ET

Size

275.0 KB

Accession

0001185185-26-000020

Research Summary

AI-generated summary of this filing

Updated

Blueport Acquisition Ltd Announces Separate Trading of Units

What Happened Blueport Acquisition Ltd filed an 8-K on January 5, 2026, announcing that on or about January 6, 2026 holders of the Company's publicly traded units (the “Units”) may elect to separate the Units so the underlying Class A ordinary shares and rights can trade separately on Nasdaq. Each Unit consists of one Class A ordinary share and one right to receive one‑sixth (1/6) of one Class A ordinary share upon the consummation of an initial business combination. Units that are not separated will continue to trade under the symbol "BPACU"; separated Class A ordinary shares and rights will trade under "BPAC" and "BPACR," respectively.

Key Details

  • Filing date: January 5, 2026; separate trading effective on or about January 6, 2026.
  • Unit composition: 1 Class A ordinary share + 1 right to receive 1/6 of a Class A share upon an initial business combination.
  • Trading symbols: Units remain "BPACU"; separated Class A ordinary shares "BPAC"; separated rights "BPACR" on Nasdaq Capital Market.
  • To separate Units, holders must have their brokers contact the transfer agent, VStock Transfer, LLC.
  • The Company attached a press release about the separate trading as Exhibit 99.1 to the 8-K.

Why It Matters This filing gives current Unit holders the option to convert their bundled securities into separately tradable Class A shares and rights, and informs them how to do so (through their broker contacting the transfer agent). It clarifies the securities' trading symbols and preserves the existing Unit listing for holders who choose not to separate. Investors should note the rights are fractional (1/6 of a share upon a business combination) and that any action to separate requires broker involvement.