Glimpse Group Chief Financial Officer Steps Down
Glimpse Group Inc. disclosed the departure of its chief financial officer in an 8-K filed with the SEC on June 3 2026. The change triggers standard executive-transition disclosures and requires the company to identify a permanent or interim replacement under exchange-listing and SEC rules.
prnewswire.comNEW YORK — Glimpse Group Inc. (GGRP) reported the departure of its principal financial officer, effective June 3 2026, according to an 8-K filed with the SEC the same day.
The filing, submitted under Item 5.02, states that the officer has left the company. No successor has been named in the document. Item 7.01 contains Regulation FD disclosure and Item 9.01 includes exhibits related to the event.
Glimpse Group is a publicly traded holding company whose subsidiaries operate in virtual reality, augmented reality, artificial intelligence and related digital-media businesses. The chief financial officer role encompasses financial reporting, SEC compliance, treasury functions and oversight of the company’s consolidated financial statements.
With the departure, those responsibilities shift immediately to other members of management until a replacement is appointed.
The change takes effect June 3 2026. Under SEC rules the company must disclose the departure and, if it appoints an interim or permanent CFO, file a subsequent 8-K within four business days of that election. Nasdaq listing standards also require prompt notification of executive officer changes and maintenance of qualified financial reporting leadership.
Failure to fill the role within a reasonable period can affect the company’s ability to file timely periodic reports on Forms 10-Q and 10-K.
Downstream, the transition starts the clock on any contractual notice or severance obligations that may exist under the former officer’s employment agreement. It also requires updated signatures on future SEC filings once a new principal financial officer is designated, and may prompt internal control certifications under Sarbanes-Oxley Section 302 to reflect the personnel change.
Investors and auditors will look for disclosure on the reasons for departure in the company’s next quarterly report, though the 8-K itself does not cite a cause.
This marks the latest executive transition at the small-cap technology holding company. The filing is the primary record; no further details on timing of a search or interim arrangements were provided in the document.
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