Home/Filings/8-K/0001493152-26-001153
8-K//Current report

Glimpse Group, Inc. 8-K

Accession 0001493152-26-001153

$VRARCIK 0001854445operating

Filed

Jan 8, 7:00 PM ET

Accepted

Jan 9, 5:24 PM ET

Size

219.6 KB

Accession

0001493152-26-001153

Research Summary

AI-generated summary of this filing

Updated

Glimpse Group, Inc. Changes Independent Auditor to GreenGrowth

What Happened

  • Glimpse Group, Inc. announced it dismissed its independent registered public accounting firm, Turner, Stone & Company, L.L.P., and on January 7, 2026 appointed GreenGrowth CPAs as its new independent registered public accounting firm. The company’s audit committee approved both the dismissal and the appointment.
  • Turner Stone had issued auditor’s reports for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2025 and June 30, 2024 that were unqualified (no adverse opinions or disclaimers) and the filing states there were no disagreements or reportable events between the company and Turner Stone for those periods. Turner Stone provided a letter dated January 9, 2026 agreeing with the company’s disclosure.
  • The company disclosed that, during the fiscal years ended June 30, 2025 and 2024 and the interim period from July 1, 2025 to the appointment date, it did not consult GreenGrowth on accounting or auditing matters (no pre-appointment consultations that would affect accounting decisions or audit opinions).

Key Details

  • Dismissal and appointment effective January 7, 2026; 8-K filed January 9, 2026.
  • Turner Stone’s reports for FY 2025 and FY 2024 were unqualified; no disagreements or reportable events were reported.
  • Audit committee approved both the dismissal of Turner Stone and the appointment of GreenGrowth.
  • GreenGrowth had no pre-appointment consultations with the company on accounting or auditing issues for the referenced periods.

Why It Matters

  • A change in independent auditor is a notable corporate governance event investors watch because it can affect the audit of future financial statements.
  • In this case, the filing reports no disagreements or reportable events and existing auditor reports were unqualified, which suggests the change appears procedural rather than prompted by a disclosed audit dispute.
  • Investors should note the new auditor on future filings (quarterly and annual reports) and monitor upcoming financial statements for any changes in audit opinions or auditor commentary.