$CORZ filed an 8-K on May 15, 2026 covering a report date of May 12. The disclosed item is Item 5.07, the standard SEC form for reporting shareholder vote results. The filing is live at the SEC primary document URL.

Item 5.07 filings are procedural by design. They record what shareholders voted on and how the votes fell. The substantive question is what was on the ballot. A routine annual meeting vote on directors and auditors reads differently than a vote on a material transaction, an equity plan expansion, or a governance change. The available source data identifies the item but does not reproduce the resolution text or vote tallies, so the full analytical read requires pulling the primary document directly.

The Disclosure Cadence Behind the Scores

$CORZ's Filing Risk Score sits at 100, and Event Momentum matches it. Those readings reflect the density and recency of $CORZ's filing activity, not a judgment about financial health. For a Bitcoin miner and hosting operator of $CORZ's scale, a high disclosure cadence is partly structural: fleet expansions, power contract amendments, customer agreements, and capital markets activity all generate SEC filings. The elevated cadence signal has been a persistent feature of $CORZ's profile, and this 8-K adds one more data point to that pattern.

The BTC Exposure Score at 80 reflects what $CORZ actually is. Mining economics tie directly to Bitcoin price, network difficulty, and energy cost per coin. Revenue for the quarter ending March 31, 2026 came in at $115.24 million. That top line moves with Bitcoin conditions, and any shareholder vote touching capital allocation, fleet strategy, or hosting agreements carries Bitcoin-linked implications even when the ballot language is generic.

Price Context Around the Vote

The stock hit a 52-week high of $25.17 on May 14, the day before this 8-K landed. It has gained more than 100% over the trailing year and is up roughly 59% year to date through May 20. Both the short-term and long-term trend classifications are uptrend. That context matters for reading a shareholder vote filing: companies holding annual meetings near multi-year highs tend to face less governance friction than companies filing the same form under pressure.

The Insider Activity Signal at 44 sits below the neutral baseline, indicating the Form 4 tape has not produced an unusual cluster recently. That is a quieter insider picture than the filing cadence alone would suggest.

What the Full Filing Resolves

The item number alone does not settle the question. Pull the primary document to confirm whether the May 12 vote covered routine annual meeting business or included a non-routine resolution. Non-routine items, including equity plan amendments, merger approvals, or bylaw changes, carry more weight than director elections and auditor ratification. If the vote included anything touching $CORZ's capital structure or hosting agreements, the result matters for how the company's Bitcoin miner and hosting thesis develops through the rest of 2026.

Research only. Not investment advice.