Welcome to our dedicated page for K&F Growth Acquisition II SEC filings (Ticker: KFIIR), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
Our SEC filing database is enhanced with expert analysis from Rhea-AI, providing insights into the potential impact of each filing on K&F Growth Acquisition II's stock performance. Each filing includes a concise AI-generated summary, sentiment and impact scores, and end-of-day stock performance data showing the actual market reaction. Navigate easily through different filing types including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly reports, 8-K current reports, proxy statements (DEF 14A), and Form 4 insider trading disclosures.
Designed for fundamental investors and regulatory compliance professionals, our page simplifies access to critical SEC filings. By combining real-time EDGAR feed updates, Rhea-AI's analytical insights, and historical stock performance data, we provide comprehensive visibility into K&F Growth Acquisition II's regulatory disclosures and financial reporting.
K&F Growth Acquisition Corp. II is a Cayman Islands SPAC that raised $287,500,000 in its IPO of 28,750,000 units at $10.00 each, plus $9,227,270 from 922,727 private placement units. A total of $288,937,500 was placed in a trust account.
As of December 31, 2025, the redemption price was $10.43 per public share and funds available for a business combination were $299,876,159, assuming no redemptions and after a $10,062,500 deferred fee. The company has not yet signed a definitive merger agreement and must complete an initial business combination by November 6, 2026 or liquidate.
The sponsor acquired founder shares at a nominal price, holds anti-dilution rights targeting 25% of post-combination ordinary shares, and may convert working-capital loans into up to 150,000 additional units. Public shareholders face potential dilution from founder shares, private placement rights and any future equity or convertible debt used to fund a transaction.