NXNT 10-K Annual Report June 30, 2025 | Alphaminr

NXNT 10-K Fiscal year ended June 30, 2025

nexscient_10k.htm

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM 10-K

ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025

TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the transition period from ______ to ______

Commission file number 333-274532

NEXSCIENT, INC.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

Delaware

7372

92-2915192

(State or other jurisdiction of

incorporation or organization)

(Primary Standard Industrial

Classification Code Number)

(I.R.S. Employer

Identification Number)

2029 Century Park East , Suite 400

Los Angeles , CA 90067

(Address of principal executive offices, including ZIP code)

( 310 ) 494-6620

(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Exchange Act: None

Title of each class

Trading Symbol

Name of exchange on which registered

Common Stock

NXNT

OTCQB

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes ☐ No ☒.

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§ 232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files). Yes ☒    No ☐.

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company.  See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer”, “smaller reporting company”, and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.

Large accelerated filer

Accelerated filer

Non-accelerated filer

Smaller reporting company

Emerging growth company

If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act .

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).  Yes No ☒.

As of September 30, 2025 there were 21,323,312 shares of common stock issued and outstanding, par value $0.001 per share.

SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

Certain information included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K and other filings of the Registrant under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), as well as information communicated orally or in writing between the dates of such filings, contains or may contain “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act and Section 21E of the Exchange Act.  Forward-looking statements in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, including without limitation, statements related to our plans, strategies, objectives, expectations, intentions and adequacy of resources, are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements are subject to certain risks, trends and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expected results.  Among these risks, trends and uncertainties are the availability of working capital to fund our operations, the competitive market in which we operate, the efficient and uninterrupted operation of our computer and communications systems, our ability to generate a profit and execute our business plan, the retention of key personnel, our ability to protect and defend our intellectual property, the effects of governmental regulation, and other risks identified in the Registrant’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission from time to time.

In some cases, forward-looking statements can be identified by terminology such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “could,” “expects,” “plans,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “predicts,” “potential” or “continue” or the negative of such terms or other comparable terminology.  Although the Registrant believes that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements contained herein are reasonable, the Registrant cannot guarantee future results, levels of activity, performance or achievements.  Moreover, neither the Registrant, nor any other person, assumes responsibility for the accuracy and completeness of such statements.  The Registrant is under no duty to update any of the forward-looking statements contained herein after the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Part II

Page

Item 1.

Business

3

Item 1A.

Risk Factors

16

Item 1B.

Unresolved Staff Comments

16

Item 2.

Properties

16

Item 3.

Legal Proceedings

16

Item 4.

Mine Safety Disclosures

16

Part II

Item 5.

Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

17

Item 6.

[Reserved]

19

Item 7.

Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations

19

Item 7.A

Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosure About Market Risk

23

Item 8.

Financial Statements and Supplementary Data

23

Item 9.

Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosures

24

Item 9.A

Controls and Procedures

24

Item 9.B

Other Information

25

Item 9.C

Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdiction that Prevent Inspection

25

Part III

Item 10.

Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance

26

Item 11.

Executive Compensation

32

Item 12.

Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters

34

Item 13.

Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence

35

Item 14.

Principal Accountant Fees and Services

36

Part IV

Item 15.

Exhibits and Financial Statements

37

Item 16.

Form 10-K Summary

37

Signatures

38

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PART I

I tem 1. Business

Company Overview

Nexscient, Inc. (the “Company”) is an emerging growth company focused on building a global collaborative network of AI-enabled intelligent enterprise solutions and technologies through internal development, synergistic acquisitions, and capital investments in companies involved in machine learning, artificial intelligence, and Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) technologies.

The global market for AI-enabled enterprise applications is projected to grow significantly as companies pursue operational efficiencies, predictive capabilities, and digital transformation. We believe our platform will be well-positioned to participate in this growth by developing a scalable infrastructure and an integrated suite of applications designed to provide actionable insights for businesses seeking to improve operations, achieve differentiation in their markets, and enhance long-term relevance within their industries.

Our objective is to build a comprehensive platform that integrates enterprise applications and core business processes on an advanced AI technology foundation. By combining these capabilities, we aim to help enterprises unlock efficiencies, gain a competitive advantage, and address industry-specific challenges. Our intended solutions are designed to serve organizations operating in data-intensive and operationally complex environments, where the ability to capture, analyze, and act on information in real-time is increasingly crucial for maintaining competitiveness.

We intend to differentiate ourselves by focusing on industries and market segments that remain underpenetrated by AI solutions, despite their reliance on data, predictive analytics, and process optimization. Many of these sectors, including industrial operations, supply chain management, and other asset-intensive markets, represent opportunities where adoption has lagged but the potential benefits are significant. We believe this focus will enable us to capture niche opportunities where specialized solutions can command higher margins, particularly as broader AI adoption accelerates and commoditization increases across more mature sectors.

Corporate Information

Nexscient, Inc. was incorporated in the State of Delaware on March 14, 2023.  Our fiscal year end is June 30.  We are a development stage enterprise.  Our principal office is located at 2029 Century Park East, Suite 400, Los Angeles, CA 90067.  Our telephone number is (310) 494-6620 and our e-mail contact is info@nexscient.com .  Our website can be viewed at nexscient.ai .

We intend to develop the Nexscient Intelligent Enterprise Solution (“Nexscient IES”) as a comprehensive platform that delivers insight, intelligence, and innovation to the business enterprise.  We plan to assemble a digital ecosystem of enabling enterprise technologies by developing, acquiring, and investing in emerging companies that are capitalizing on machine learning and artificial intelligence (“AI”) revolution.

AI holds the promise of empowering computers to perceive and understand the world around us, enabling the advent of products and services that previously would have been unimaginable and impossible with traditional code.  Since AI learns from data, training it with the highest-quality data will produce the highest-performing outputs.

The Nexscient IES platform takes as a holistic approach to deliver insight, intelligence, and innovation to the business enterprise.  Nexscient IES intends to offer businesses data transformation services that can achieve efficiencies and enhance performance through digital realization, business process agility, and insight and innovation.

We intend to provide a comprehensive platform by integrating disparate technologies into a digital-ready ecosystem.  Within our ecosystem, there will be a foundation of intelligent business applications connected to new and existing business operations, processes, and technologies.

Our focus is to identify and integrate synergistic businesses and technologies into a global collaborative network that leverages our collective pool of knowledge and resources brought together by our executive management team and partner companies to provide strategic guidance, operational support, and capital resources needed to fuel growth.

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Nexscient IES Platform

The penetration of artificial intelligence and machine learning across numerous industries will drive global market growth for enterprise applications.  The increased allocation of cash by a large number of major participants would multiply the magnitude of the worldwide market boom.  In this shifting landscape, startups have the chance to showcase the benefits of their innovations, demonstrate more potential for significant impact, and enjoy the flexibility that larger companies often lack -- by becoming part of a collaborative network of like-minded innovators, not just as a stopgap for these benefits but as a long-term destination that aligns with their desired growth and ambitions for success.

Management believes that there are significant opportunities for companies that exploit machine learning and AI to assist traditional businesses by using innovative approaches to create more efficient operations and markets. We intend to focus on emerging companies that can be incorporated into the Nexscient IES platform, operating in the following three domains:

Enterprise Applications

Enterprise applications are software solutions that integrate key operational aspects of entire organizations.  By operationalizing AI, one can drive rapid, actionable insights for tangible business impact via enterprise-grade capabilities and solutions.  Enterprises are investing in advanced analytics and machine learning solutions for its human-centric and cognitive capabilities, but practice and maturity still remain stagnant.  Even as businesses take the plunge in AI adoption, they lack the governance structures and innovative systems to take full advantage of it.  Our domain experience as an advanced analytics company and expertise in machine learning, data science, and engineering services help us go beyond possible for our partner companies.  We help unlock the true potential of AI beyond adoption, we can enable long-term business transformation and enjoy short-term wins.  Nexscient seeks opportunities that provide novel AI technologies and professional services to integrate, implement and support enterprise applications.

Business Process & Technology

Machine learning systems and artificial intelligence technologies are becoming ubiquitous across industries.  However, 87% of machine learning (ML) and AI models never make it to production.  Enterprises still face many challenges when it comes to scaling, automation, standardization, and cost-effectiveness of ML solutions.  The lack of experienced ML teams, monitoring tools, and automated processes leads to poor development standards, duplication of efforts, and underperforming systems.  Furthermore, ML projects implemented with sub-par standards expose enterprises to governance, security, and compliance risks.

AI Training Data & Transformation

We believe AI-enabled managed platforms that integrate automation with expert data operations services provide superior opportunities for data acquisition, curation and continuous monitoring.  These capabilities are essential to augment large-scale, human-intensive data operations to effectively address a large and growing market of enterprises seeking high-quality data engineering services.  We believe a hybrid approach of using AI technology that harnesses machine learning and deep learning techniques, in conjunction with human-powered data annotation and labeling services will deliver superior quality outcomes.

Network Infrastructure

Network infrastructure products and services include computing and communications tools that enable companies to deploy enterprise applications.  Many companies do not have the infrastructures in place to support leading edge enterprise AI applications.  Nexscient seeks opportunities which include network security products and services, companies that service the AI market, machine learning services that enable products that optimize existing investments in enterprise applications and infrastructure management solutions.

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The Industry

Industrial revolutions have come along every hundred years over the past few centuries—think mechanization and steam power in the late 1700s, mass production in the late 1800s and computers in the late 1900s.  And now, just half a century after the start of the electronic era, is the fourth industrial revolution, Industry 4.0 has introduced the ‘Age of Intelligence.’  It blends global networks, the Internet of things (IoT), artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), predictive analytics and much more—and it’s transforming businesses.  However, transformation requires more than technology.

Enterprises are constrained by a lack of insight or enterprise intelligence.  Skill shortages, inadequate tools and lack of experience, continue to inhibit transformation.  When combined with the challenge of business process complexity, organizations become rigid and unable to connect business applications with new technologies and ultimately unable to activate insight, react to market challenges, or innovate at speed and scale.  An organization’s ability to differentiate itself and lead markets becomes more difficult under these conditions.  The culprits that hold back businesses include:

·

Process complexity that degrades both customer experiences and employee productivity;

·

Lack of business insight needed to innovate for industry differentiation; and

·

Inadequate skills, tools and focus.

Businesses understand that the latest technologies and trends are crucial to maximizing competitive advantage.  That’s one reason they’re spending vast sums to adopt them—an anticipated $1.8 trillion in 2024, up by 45% from 2023, according to IDC.  However, only some of these efforts will succeed - others will fall short because they require more than technology.  Without insight, intelligence, and innovation, businesses can get stuck in reactive modes.

Enterprise AI Market

Enterprise AI is the segment of the enterprise software market that incorporates artificial intelligence technologies, such as machine learning, understanding, and interacting, into applications to achieve a level of advancement that eventually surpasses human capabilities in the enterprise infrastructure.  This technological advancement helps in the everyday activities occurring within a company such as automation of interactions combined with improvement in functional productivity with steady development in an organization’s structure.  Enterprise AI deployment automates a variety of functions and interactions, enabling organizations to achieve improved operations and provide better customer support and personalized experiences.  In addition, enterprise AI equips the organization’s vital applications through application programming interface (API) integrations.

The enterprise AI market size was valued at $10 billion in 2023 and is predicted to reach $270 billion by 2032 with a CAGR of 37.87% from 2024-2032.  Growing demand for enterprise AI in various industry verticals including manufacturing, healthcare, and automotive owing to its automatic features such as industrial robots, automated vehicles, and virtual reality drives the market growth.

AI Market Growth

The substantial growth in AI creates tremendous market opportunities for emerging companies with novel technologies.  The global AI market was valued at $146 billion in 2023 and is expected to grow to $1,812 billion by the end of 2030, with a CAGR of over 38% between 2024 and 2030.  The major drivers for this increase include the adoption of AI technologies across multiple industries, as well as advancements in algorithms and infrastructure.

The market is expected to see continued innovation and expansion over the next decade, with AI becoming an increasingly integral part of many business operations.  With this growth, we are seeing a rush of new market entrants (startups) seeking to capitalize on this opportunity—many of which house brilliant minds, brimming with innovative ideas for AI-enabled technologies, products, and services embarking on a journey to build new enterprise.  But many of these aspiring companies struggle to commercialize their ideas because they have difficulty accessing capital and strategic guidance, among other things.

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Market Opportunity

Companies across industry verticals seek to develop AI-based applications for an ever-increasing number of use cases, such as self-driving cars, medical diagnostics, surveillance systems, digital assistants, and chatbots to name a few.  Unlike traditional computer applications that are coded using computer languages to perform functions, AI applications are trained with large quantities of data.  These applications learn by processing data through high-performing AI algorithms and in order for these algorithms to perform accurately, they must be trained on large amounts of high-quality data.   CubicShift seeks to become a leading data engineering company, helping data scientists with their most complex and mission-critical data preparation tasks.

The AI data training market is estimated to be $12.7 billion in 2024, projected to grow at a CAGR of 22% to reach $92.4 billion by 2034, 1 essentially proxying the enormous growth expected in AI system spending overall ($632 billion by 2028, a 29% CAGR over the 2024-2028 forecast period). 2 . Similarly, the global data annotation tools market was valued at $2.02 billion in 2023, and is projected to reach $23.11 billion by 2032, which is a CAGR of 31.1%. 3

AI Data Preparation

Data teams at some of the largest technology companies are accelerating development of generative AI technologies that produce high quality text, code, and images in response to user prompts.  At their core, they rely upon large language models (LLMs), which use deep neural networks (an artificial intelligence architecture) with billions of parameters and requires massive amounts of training data to encode the essence of human language.  They require fine-tuning through supervised learning and reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF) to render them suitable for specialized tasks and domains, to control hallucinations (models have a tendency to make up things), and to minimize the risk of generating unsafe or biased results.  In addition, companies across industry verticals are seeking to develop AI-based applications for an ever-increasing number of use cases such as self-driving cars, surveillance systems, automated medical diagnostics, digital assistants, chatbots, content moderation, robotics, fraud detection and contract review.

The problem is that many projects fail, stall or perform inadequately because data teams are unable to perform the complex and resource-intensive data preparation tasks necessary to properly train, tune, and operationalize AI models.  Preparing high-quality data takes up 80% of the time for most AI and machine learning projects.  Data preparation includes data annotation (which is estimated to take up 25% of the time) and data transformation (which includes data identification, aggregation, cleansing and augmentation) is estimated to take 55% of the time). Moreover, many data teams within these organizations lack the technology and resources to perform data annotation and transformation tasks and identify lack of data or quality issues with data as a bottleneck in the adoption of AI. Thus, many data teams seek external partners to perform data preparation functions, at scale.  Furthermore, as AI projects become more specialized, also introducing concerns over privacy and security, data preparation becomes increasingly more complex, requiring deep domain knowledge and an infrastructure where data security is assured.

We intend to work with technology companies to enable, accelerate or enrich the services they deliver to end users around generative AI foundation models that support autonomous vehicles, facial recognition, legal research and medical diagnostics, to name a few. We believe our contemplated Nexscient IES, coupled with acquired capabilities in collecting and annotating data at scale with consistency and high accuracy, will contribute meaningfully to the advancement of AI and our emerging business as a leading provider of data transformation services.

AI Model Deployment and Integration

We believe that over the next decade, almost all industries will experience a fundamental shift due to high-performing AI models.  The current pace of AI innovation is accelerating and algorithms and techniques used today will likely be obsolete in the coming years.  Many enterprises seek solutions that require intensive text data processing and analytics.  For these businesses, in addition to deploying and integrating AI models, we intend to provide a range of data engineering support services including data transformation, curation, consolidation, extraction, hygiene, and compliance.

_______________________

1 Data Labeling Solution and Services Market, FactMR (Apr. 2024)

2 Worldwide Artificial Intelligence Systems Spending Guide, IDC (Aug. 2024)

3 Data Annotation Tools Market, Astute Analytica, (Nov. 2024)

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We intend to develop custom AI models, where we select the appropriate algorithms, tune hyperparameters, train and validate models.  We also intend to help businesses fine-tune their custom versions of our proprietary models and third-party foundation models to address domain-specific and customer-specific use cases.  Consequently, these enterprises are expected to benefit from the short time-to-value and high economic returns realized from our value-added AI solutions and platform.

Products and Services

We intend to provide a range of solutions and platforms for solving complex data challenges that companies face when they seek to obtain the benefits of AI systems and analytics platforms.

Intelligent Automation

Enterprises are increasingly looking to re-invent business processes to take advantage of advancements in AI and machine learning, computing, and storage.  Many seek easier ways these advanced capabilities can be trained, deployed, and leveraged.  For clients with critical business processes that involve documents, images, text, emails and other unstructured data, we plan to deploy a range of technologies, including AI and robotic process automation (RPA), to eliminate repetitive tasks, automate where possible, speed up operations, and shift internal talent to creative and analytical work.  We intend to provide intelligent automation for an increasing diversity of complex functions.

Nexscient IES Comprehensive Approach

Companies across industries are increasingly adopting digital technologies to advance toward becoming intelligent enterprises. However, digital transformation can be complex, requiring significant investment of time and resources. Nexscient’s approach is to provide a comprehensive platform designed to reduce this complexity and improve the likelihood of successful outcomes. By assembling a digital ecosystem that integrates technology expertise, business process breadth, and industry insights, our platform is intended to offer enterprises greater efficiency, cost-effectiveness, and adaptability. The Nexscient IES platform is designed to deliver industry-specific configurations that can accelerate integration, streamline operations, and support improved business performance, helping organizations achieve measurable value from their digital transformation initiatives.

By leveraging a comprehensive platform rather than relying on multiple off-the-shelf applications, enterprises can reduce redundancies, lower integration costs, and streamline operations. Our platform incorporates cognitive capabilities that adapt to the specific needs of different industries, enabling organizations to replace fragmented solutions with a unified framework. This approach is designed to deliver greater cost-effectiveness and improved business outcomes by enhancing decision-making, accelerating deployment, and aligning digital investments more closely with strategic objectives.

Nexscient IES Principles

The Nexscient IES platform is premised on three fundamental principles: (i) digital realization, (ii) business process agility, and (iii) insight and innovation.

Digital Realization

The intelligent enterprise depends on more than technology.  It requires the right skills, culture and tools within the organization, as well as the right partnerships.  The use of smart technologies, for example, requires a partner that’s trained and motivated to use them.  That partner must be equipped with the right digital tools, including business processes to accelerate transformation.  The partner chosen to facilitate the realization must be fully trusted—and worthy of that trust.  Given the inevitable risk in any major technology endeavor, a business that aspires to be an intelligent enterprise can afford no less.

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Business Process Agility

Aging business processes are stumbling blocks for creating great customer experiences and employee engagement.  The intelligent enterprise can overcome this obstacle by creating operations and solutions that enable customers and employees to overcome complexity.  A key element in business process agility is simplifying business processes and delivering them with an eye toward industry-specific requirements, insight and cultural alignment.  The industry focus is crucial to meeting the distinctive needs of customers and employees in each market and the intelligent enterprise needs to handle the higher-order tasks.  For example, CRM and ERP projects still focus too much on replicating the complexity of previous systems for the sake of matching unique industry or client-specific requirements.  Intelligent enterprises could, instead, leverage the standard application from the cloud and adopt industry best practices for business processes to match the “last mile” functionality requirements.  Simplification is the goal and the cloud delivery model for enterprise applications contributes to making it a reality.

Insights & Innovation

Systems of intelligence and technology advancement are key to enabling enterprises to innovate at scale and speed—and to disrupt their markets.  This requires integration with the latest advancements in artificial intelligence, machine learning, automation, Internet of things, virtual reality/augmented reality, among others.  To achieve this, enterprises need access to world-class skills, insight into new technologies and cross-industry experience at a global level.  The holistic approach should infuse deeper intelligence at all levels of the enterprise, from strategy through operations.  It should go beyond application silos to identify connected information anywhere in the enterprise but should be well-grounded in change management and user-adoption practices.  To predict and lead markets is a key aspiration for business leaders and without intelligence, insight and innovation the business will be reactive at best.

Nexscient IES Process Flow

Our robust and scalable platform intends to exploit Intelligent Enterprise, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and Cloud-computing technologies to deliver an innovative solution for companies that helps improve business processes, avoid unscheduled downtimes, decrease equipment maintenance costs, and improve overall production efficiencies.   Creating an intelligent enterprise solution involves several advanced technologies and analytic techniques that deploy neural networks, deep learning, machine learning and predictive analytics:

·

Descriptive Analytics: This component generally provides a dimensional view of business performance. It collects and reveals present and historical data on an organization’s operating metrics such as revenues, customers, costs, operational KPIs, and other financial information, among other things. Then, this data is processed through predictive analytics.

·

Predictive Analytics: As the name suggests, this technique will tell us what will happen next by using past experiences. With the application of several techniques in data science, such as clustering classification and regression, we’ll be able to answers questions like which product a customer will buy next or which equipment needs attention or even predict when it’s likely to fail. This information is further processed through cognitive analytics.

·

Cognitive Analytics: This analytic technique involves applying human-like intelligence to a particular task for understanding, not only the words of information, but also the underlying context. It brings together several intelligent technologies that involve artificial intelligence algorithms, cognitive computing, and a number of machine learning technologies such as neural networks and deep learning.

·

Prescriptive Analytics: This technique will help uncover actionable insights, that is, the best set of actions for a given situation by prescribing proper recommendations. It brings together several intelligent techniques such as neural networks, deep learning, and several other AI algorithms.

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Nexscient IES Framework

At its core, the Nexscient IES platform breaks down the barriers between siloed applications and unifies business processes into one platform so they work seamlessly together to help run the enterprise’s business in the cloud, while delivering end-to-end support that integrates the entire ecosystem.  The Nexscient IES framework integrates enterprise applications and business processes on an advanced technology platform within a scalable infrastructure to deliver transformative results.  The key components within this framework include:

·

Enterprise Applications: Includes various enterprise applications that offer solutions for customer experience, inventory and supply chain management, manufacturing and asset management systems. May include vertical solutions from organizations and partners that utilize industry best practices to extend their current business model via industry cloud.

·

Business Process Intelligence: Includes business network and process intelligence, cloud-based solutions that allow all organizations to connect all their trading partners into a single directory and streamline their supply chain operations. Business process intelligence solutions enable organizations to analyze the performance of their business processes and then back the process insights into preferable actions to help drive digital transformation.

·

Business Technology Platform: This platform comprises technology solutions such as database and data management, analytics, application development and integration, and intelligent technologies. It provides organizations with a capability in which they can build, manage, deploy, and connect data and business processes on one interconnected platform.

·

Scalable Network Infrastructure: Provides the infrastructure to host applications in the data centers or one of the hyper-scalers, such as Amazon AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud platform. It supports agility and scalability while reducing cost of ownership.

Nexscient IES Platform Benefits

The Nexscient IES platform can provide the following key benefits:

·

Visibility: removal of barriers to more data and process integration; the ability to join the organization’s ecosystem and integrate its software environment for maximum transparency, case of access, and on-demand access, analysis, and reporting in support of advanced pattern recognition on data, process minimization, proper decision making, and innovation.

·

Focus: the ability to strengthen insights derived from improved visibility to model possible outcomes more effectively and create efficient and better use of resources, capital, and labor.

·

Agility: capacity for swift, strategic, and value-focused responses to rapid changes in the supply chain, marketplace, or the organization itself.

·

Efficiency: real-time data analytics and agility allow businesses to address ever-changing markets by adjusting operations efficiently during market fluctuations. Continuously collected and analyzed data provides insights and recommendations for automated business processes that can increase productivity, improve efficiency, and reduce costs.

·

Innovation: integrated into team structure for efficient collaboration and customer-centric solutions, with high level of confidence from data-driven solutions, collaboratively assembled and customer approved.

·

Customer-Centric: customer-focused solutions are realized with proper techniques and tools to accurately obtain data and gear that information based on customer needs, and integrated into the foundation of the intelligent enterprise.

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Our Growth Strategy

We believe we are living in a transformative era—one in which artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming the “brain” behind our computers, robots, and vehicles.  AI is no longer a futuristic concept; it is being embraced by thousands of enterprises to deliver products and services that would have been unimaginable using traditional software development methods.

Unlike conventional programming, AI systems learn by analyzing massive amounts of data—essentially writing their own logic.  In this context, the adage “garbage in, garbage out” has never been more relevant.  Success in AI hinges on a data-centric approach that prioritizes the consistent collection and precise annotation of high-quality data.  This will ultimately determine which organizations lead—and which are left behind.

Our growth strategy is rooted in our deep expertise in delivering high-quality data.  We are focused on serving large, fast-moving, and rapidly expanding markets centered around the development and commercialization of advanced AI systems and enterprise-scale deployments.  Our solutions and contemplated platforms are built on a foundation of cutting-edge technology, skilled domain experts, and a relentless commitment to data integrity—supported by anticipated investments in AI and machine learning R&D.

We intend to shift the focus from “services” to “solutions” and introduce AI data operations-as-a-service offerings.  We differentiate “solutions” from “services” by the extent to which they are technology-enabled, repeatable, and address generalized requirements.  Solutions and SaaS products should result in revenue that produces relatively higher recurring margins.

To execute our strategy, we plan to strengthen our leadership team by recruiting senior executives in product management and technology, expanding our direct sales force, refreshing our brand messaging and visual identity, and bolstering our digital marketing and product engineering capabilities.  Looking ahead, we plan to drive further operational efficiencies by simplifying our business—continuously evaluating product and service selections and assessing each asset's alignment with our mission and strategic objectives.  We believe that as revenue scales, our business model is designed to deliver operating income growth at a rate that significantly outpaces revenue growth.

Key elements of our growth strategy include:

Driving New Customer Acquisition

We believe we are still in the early stages of penetrating our addressable markets.  We intend to pursue new long-term, strategic customer relationships, especially with customers with large and growing commitments to AI innovation, where we can deliver a wide range of our capabilities and have meaningful impact.  We are focused on hiring and retaining sales talent and building a data-driven sales organization.  We believe that our current organization is operating well and will likely enable us to achieve our near-term growth targets.

Expanding Relationships with Customers

We intend to “land-and-expand” services within customer accounts.  By initially engaging with a specific line of business and addressing targeted use cases, we intend to deliver measurable value that earns trust.  As a result, we expect customers to expand their engagement with us—broadening the number of use cases and extending our solutions across additional business units.

Continue to Develop New Capabilities

We intend to develop new capabilities designed around emerging customer needs and advances in AI technologies.  We intend to develop additional charter customer relationships, by enhancing our relationship with companies to co-develop an AI-enabled platforms.

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Continuing to Innovate

We believe that our ability to innovate will continue to be an important contributor to our growth and market traction.  We intend to work closely with our customers, assessing their requirements for enhancements to our existing capabilities and new capabilities with the goal of better serving them.  We have well-defined roadmaps for our contemplated AI platforms which will introduce new features and functions that will enable us to generate growth by broadening the appeal of our platforms to potential new customers as well as increasing the opportunities for further expansions with existing customers.

Competition

We operate in a highly competitive landscape that includes both specialized AI data service providers and large-scale IT services firms.  Key competitors across industry verticals include Appen, CloudFactory, Surge AI, Innodata, Invisible Technologies, Turing, DefinedCrowd, Deepen.ai, Telus, Samasource, and Scale AI—several of which are well-established players with significant market presence.  In addition, we compete with global technology service providers such as Cognizant Technology Solutions, EXL, Genpact, Infosys, and Tata Consultancy Services.  We intend to differentiate ourselves by delivering high-quality, cost-effective solutions that leverage our proprietary platforms, robust IT infrastructure, our management’s global domain expertise, and operational efficiencies.

Sales and Marketing

We intend to sell our services through a direct inside sales team, a direct field sales team and indirect channel partner relationships.  Teams will be designed to efficiently sell to organizations of all sizes and will initially focus on new customer acquisitions.  As we expand, they will pursue up-selling and cross-selling opportunities of new offerings to existing customers.  We plan to leverage the uniqueness of our solution to create brand preference and build a strong sales pipeline while cultivating customer relationships to help drive revenue growth efficiently and effectively.  Our most important marketing goal as an emerging growth company is to establish product and brand awareness with customers in each target market.  The way we go about this task will vary from one target market segment to another.

Direct Sales

Teams will be organized by geography as well as by target organization size.  The inside and field sales teams will focus on small and middle-market transactions, while larger or more complex transactions will be handled by highly trained sales consulting engineers to help define customer use cases, manage solution evaluations, and train channel partners.  Our sales force will work directly with, and be involved in sales to, substantially all of the end customers of our channel partners and we may sometimes engage a channel partner solely to assist with finalizing a purchase if for example the customer is working on broader software initiative with that channel partner. As growth allows, we intend to invest in a dedicated sales team focused on U.S. federal, state, and local government entities.

Channel Partners

We will focus efforts to partner with enterprise applications suppliers.  We will emphasize our products' potential as an additional source of revenue for them with recurring monthly revenues; this should make our product very desirable as part of their product lines.  By solidifying these partnership agreements, we will also enable cross-marketing back into the consumer market through their sales forces' efforts and their advertising, increasing our sales efforts nationwide without the expense of additional personnel to cover the entire U.S.  We believe that once partnered with these companies, our channel market partners (resellers) will advertise the Nexscient and Nexscient IES system as new features in their traditional outlets, primarily print advertising and in-house POS material, in order to increase mutual sales and brand awareness, benefiting both organizations.

Marketing

We will focus our marketing efforts on increasing the strength of the ‘Nexscient’ brand, communicating product advantages and business benefits, generating leads for our sales teams and channel partners while driving product adoption.  We will deliver targeted content to demonstrate our intelligent enterprise solutions platform and use digital advertising methods to deliver opportunities to our sales teams.  We will engage with existing customers to provide education and awareness to promote expanded use of our software and services.  We will work with our own researchers, as well as the broader AI data engineering and data science community, to share important information through the online community, social media, and traditional public relations.

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We also intend to market to businesses through traditional sales efforts, such as advertising in trade journals and publications and establishing a presence at select trade shows geared towards businesses in our market segment.  For the larger companies we target, we will offer the free use of our service for a limited time, to prove their efficacy in order to penetrate and gain market share in this segment.

Trends

In the Age of Intelligence, the Nexscient IES platform can enable businesses to bolster their market potential through digital realization, empowering them with process agility, activating insight, and promoting innovation.  The Nexscient IES platform marshals intelligent business applications to help companies gain insights, take predictive actions, and lead respective markets.  Within the Nexscient IES platform, these intelligent business applications use data and intelligence to capture new business opportunities and enable better decisions at all levels of an organization.

The key business enablers of the Nexscient IES platform include a digital ecosystem of intelligent business applications, integrated technologies, and a connected system of intelligence and solutions developed with insight, industry relevance, and market differentiation.  As a result, the intelligent enterprise is more likely to innovate with industry insight, simplify business processes, empower employees, improve customer experiences, and realize their business objectives.

Target Industries

Artificial intelligence is upending many industries.  Accelerating innovation is imperative to how businesses achieve results while staying competitive in today’s business environment.  In order to success, you need to have specialized solutions to achieve faster results and shorter go-to-market timelines.  Our approach is to amass the unique, industry-specific knowledge needed to properly understand any project, technology or organization and the marketplace in which they operate in order to produce successful outcomes.  Below we address four key industry sectors that can benefit from the Nexscient IES solution:

Manufacturing

AI is the engine for high-speed performance with manufacturing analytics as companies fast-track value in their production.  The data volume coming in from various parts of the industrial value chain can be overwhelming.  In a sector that lives on the proven edge of technology instead of the cutting edge, these businesses are still stuck with organizing their data pool around possible use cases.  As a result, they are unprepared to handle heterogeneous data and derive actionable insights, leading to multiple challenges.  Many organizations are hardly an avant-garde AI implementation.  These sectors are typically quite traditional and reluctant to embrace new technology trends, especially if they are not solid market-proven.  However, things are – slowly but surely – changing.  AI started to gain a well-deserved spotlight as it became evident that it is a safe way to increase the overall operational performance.  Under the broad “Artificial Intelligence” term” are hidden plenty of different approaches are hidden able to cover specific transformational needs perfectly, regardless of how different they may be.

Healthcare

As the healthcare landscape evolves, so do the expectations of patients, creating a pressing need for healthcare providers to forge deeper connections, streamline processes and enhance communication.  Employing specialized knowledge and tailored solutions can offer patient experiences that nurture relationships and encourage better health outcomes.  Value-based care driven with healthcare analytics can help individuals make informed decisions.  By leveraging ML/AI in healthcare to organize, integrate, and decode health data, care providers can significantly improve value-driven patient insights.  The sudden shift to remote healthcare, the surge of AI for patient monitoring, and the growing preference for telehealth practices has led to a proliferation of data sources for the healthcare sector.  However, harnessing that data to improve processes and derive value has been an uphill task.  Inefficient data management practices and complex, disparate care management platforms prevent health providers from getting deep insights into their care ecosystem and their patients’ health, leading to suboptimal processes and undesirable gaps in the healthcare ecosystem.

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Logistics & Autonomous Vehicles

Managing a supply chain logistics can be a daunting task due to organizational complexity, lack of transparency, or too much reliance on manual processes.  This makes supply networks especially vulnerable amidst business disruptions.  AI-powered insights improve the business’ ability to respond to dynamic shifts, but legacy systems and siloed data leave them with impaired visibility and poor predictability.  AI and Machine Learning in vehicles, logistics, supply chains, and – in general, transport, support process optimization, and risk management to improve workflows.  By taking into account all possible disruptions, unpredicted events, and historical and real-time data, AI solutions can detect patterns and – based on that – suggest what decisions should be taken to avoid delays, speed up deliveries, reduce costs, route optimization, and increase the efficiency at resource management.

Financial Services

AI is a powerful tool in creating actionable insights and generating tangible results for the financial services sector.  With rising expectations, there’s never been a better time for financial services and fintech brands to invest in a high-tech, high-touch customer experience.  The financial services sector has recently taken the lead in digital transformation, eagerly embracing the potential of Big Data, Data Engineering, AI, and Machine Learning.  Those areas, used to collect, sort, process, analyze, and convert massive, complex data sets into meaningful business insights, are considered a “make or break” factor for traditional finance institutes, constantly threatened by tech-savvy FinTech start-ups.  The potential of AI and Data Engineering is almost limitless.  Data – text, numeric, and images – can be used in numerous ways to advance the ability to recognize patterns, anticipate future events, create smart rules, make intelligent, data-based decisions and automated communication with clients.  More finance-oriented usages of AI are fraud detection, high-frequency trading, risk management, and investment management, but – as we said above – with AI sky is the limit.

Intellectual Property

To protect our unpatented proprietary technologies and processes, we rely on trade secret laws and confidentiality agreements with our employee(s), consultants, channel partners and vendors.  At present our intellectual property is the Nexscient Intelligent Enterprise Solution which is currently in development.  The company will rely on provisional patents in the near term, filing for full patent protection, as necessary.

We depend, in part, upon proprietary technologies and methodologies, AI-based data annotation and data transformations platforms, various applications of its platforms, trained machine learning algorithms that support discrete data annotation and transformation tasks, proprietary data models and other intellectual property rights.  We rely on a combination of trade secret, license, nondisclosure and other contractual agreements and copyright and trademark laws to protect our intellectual property rights.  We intend to file several patent applications to protect newly developed proprietary technologies and methodologies.

We enter into confidentiality agreements with our employees, contractors and customers, and limit access to and distribution of our proprietary information and that of our customers.  We cannot assure that these arrangements will be adequate to deter misappropriation of our proprietary information or that we will be able to detect unauthorized use and take appropriate steps to enforce our intellectual property rights.

Registered Trademark

Our brand identity is a key asset in our business strategy and market recognition.  The “Nexscient” name is protected as a registered trademark of the Company with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”).  We consider this mark to be of material importance to our business, as it represents the foundation of our corporate brand, product offerings, and reputation in the marketplace.

We intend to actively monitor and enforce our trademark rights to prevent unauthorized use or infringement. We may pursue additional trademark registrations in the United States and other jurisdictions as our business expands. While we believe our intellectual property rights provide us with meaningful competitive advantages, they do not guarantee exclusivity.

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There can be no assurance that our intellectual property rights will not be challenged, invalidated, circumvented, or otherwise impaired.  Competitors or other third parties may attempt to imitate our brand, claim rights in similar marks, or oppose our applications, which could result in costly legal proceedings and diversion of management resources.  In addition, the laws of some foreign jurisdictions may not protect intellectual property rights to the same extent as the laws of the United States.

Our continued success depends in part on our ability to maintain the strength of the Nexscient brand.  If we are unable to adequately protect our trademarks, trade secrets, and other intellectual property, or if we fail to enforce our rights effectively, our business, financial condition, and results of operations could be adversely affected.

Research & Development

We focus on advancing AI-based technologies that power both our internal operations and client-facing solutions.  In parallel, our product engineering teams conduct ongoing R&D to continuously improve the functionality, scalability, and versatility of Nexscient IES and other AI industry platforms.  These efforts support the development of new use cases and innovative capabilities, enabling us to maintain a competitive edge.

We view customer feedback as playing a critical role in guiding our product roadmap, ensuring we remain tightly aligned with client priorities while anticipating broader industry shifts.  We believe our culture of innovation helps us attract and retain top-tier AI talent and technologists across a globally distributed R&D presence in North America, Europe, and the Asia-Pacific region.

Subsidiaries

The Company has no subsidiaries.

Employees

We currently employ three full-time employees and contracted consultants on an as-needed basis.

Legal Proceedings

We know of no material, existing or pending legal proceedings against our Company, nor are we involved as a plaintiff in any material proceeding or pending litigation.  There are no proceedings in which our directors, officers or any affiliates, or any registered or beneficial shareholder is an adverse party or has a material interest adverse to our interest.

Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act

In April 2012, the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act ("JOBS Act") was enacted into law.  The JOBS Act provides, among other things:

·

Exemptions for emerging growth companies from certain financial disclosure and governance requirements for up to five years and provides a new form of financing to small companies;

·

Amendments to certain provisions of the federal securities laws to simplify the sale of securities and increase the threshold number of record holders required to trigger the reporting requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934;

·

Relaxation of the general solicitation and general advertising prohibition for Rule 506 offerings;

·

Adoption of a new exemption for public offerings of securities in amounts not exceeding $50 million; and

·

Exemption from registration by a non-reporting company of offers and sales of securities of up to $1,000,000 that comply with rules to be adopted by the SEC pursuant to Section 4(6) of the Securities Act and exemption of such sales from state law registration, documentation or offering requirements.

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In general, under the JOBS Act, a company is an emerging growth company if its initial public offering ("IPO") of common equity securities was effected after November 13, 2023 and the Company had less than $1 billion of total annual gross revenues during its last completed fiscal year.  A company will no longer qualify as an emerging growth company after the earliest of:

(i)

the completion of the fiscal year in which the company has total annual gross revenues of $1 billion or more,

(ii)

the completion of the fiscal year of the fifth anniversary of the company's IPO;

(iii)

the company's issuance of more than $1 billion in nonconvertible debt in the prior three-year period, or

(iv)

the company becoming a "larger accelerated filer" as defined under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

The JOBS Act provides additional new guidelines and exemptions for non-reporting companies and for non-public offerings.  Those exemptions that impact the Company are discussed below.

Financial Disclosure . The financial disclosure in a registration statement filed by an emerging growth company pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933 will differ from registration statements filed by other companies as follows:

(i)

audited financial statements required for only two fiscal years;

(ii)

selected financial data required for only the fiscal years that were audited;

(iii)

executive compensation only needs to be presented in the limited format now required for smaller reporting companies.

(A smaller reporting company is one with a public float of less than $75 million as of the last day of its most recently completed second fiscal quarter).

However, the requirements for financial disclosure provided by Regulation S-K promulgated by the Rules and Regulations of the SEC already provide certain of these exemptions for smaller reporting companies.  The Company is a smaller reporting company.  Currently a smaller reporting company is not required to file as part of its registration statement selected financial data and only needs audited financial statements for its two most current fiscal years and no tabular disclosure of contractual obligations.

The JOBS Act also exempts the Company's independent registered public accounting firm from complying with any rules adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board ("PCAOB") after the date of the JOBS Act's enactment, except as otherwise required by SEC rule.

The JOBS Act also exempts an emerging growth company from any requirement adopted by the PCAOB for mandatory rotation of the Company's accounting firm or for a supplemental auditor report about the audit.

Internal Control Attestation . The JOBS Act also provides an exemption from the requirement of the Company's independent registered public accounting firm to file a report on the Company's internal control over financial reporting, although management of the Company is still required to file its report on the adequacy of the Company's internal control over financial reporting.

Section 102(a) of the JOBS Act exempts emerging growth companies from the requirements in §14A(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 for companies with a class of securities registered under the 1934 Act to hold shareholder votes for executive compensation and golden parachutes.

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Other Items of the JOBS Act . The JOBS Act also provides that an emerging growth company can communicate with potential investors that are qualified institutional buyers or institutions that are accredited to determine interest in a contemplated offering either prior to or after the date of filing the respective registration statement.  The Act also permits research reports by a broker or dealer about an emerging growth company regardless if such report provides sufficient information for an investment decision.  In addition, the JOBS Act precludes the SEC and FINRA from adopting certain restrictive rules or regulations regarding brokers, dealers and potential investors, communications with management and distribution of research reports on the emerging growth company IPO.

Section 106 of the JOBS Act permits emerging growth companies to submit 1933 Act registration statements on a confidential basis provided that the registration statement and all amendments are publicly filed at least 21 days before the issuer conducts any road show.  This is intended to allow the emerging growth company to explore the IPO option without disclosing to the market the fact that it is seeking to go public or disclosing the information contained in its registration statement until the company is ready to conduct a roadshow.

Election to Opt Out of Transition Period . Section 102(b)(1) of the JOBS Act exempts emerging growth companies from being required to comply with new or revised financial accounting standards until private companies (that is, those that have not had a 1933 Act registration statement declared effective or do not have a class of securities registered under the 1934 Act) are required to comply with the new or revised financial accounting standard.

The JOBS Act provides a company can elect to opt out of the extended transition period and comply with the requirements that apply to non-emerging growth companies but any such an election to opt out is irrevocable.  The Company has elected not to opt out of the transition period.

I tem 1.A Risk Factors

We are a smaller reporting company as defined by Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and are not required to provide the information under this item.

Item 1.B Unresolved Staff Comments

None.

Item 2. Properties

Our executive offices are located at 2029 Century Park East, Suite 400, Los Angeles, CA 90067.  We signed an office service agreement with Regus Management Group, LLC for mailbox plus virtual office and a single executive suite office.  However, once we expand our business to a significant degree, we will have to lease office space.  We do not foresee any significant difficulties in obtaining any required office space.  We do not currently own any real property.

Item 3. Legal Proceedings

From time to time, the Company may become subject to various legal proceedings that are incidental to the ordinary conduct of its business. Although the Company cannot accurately predict the amount of any liability that may ultimately arise with respect to any of these matters, it makes provision for potential liabilities when it deems them probable and reasonably estimable. These provisions are based on current information and legal advice and may be adjusted from time to time according to developments.

We know of no material, existing or pending legal proceedings against our company, nor are we involved as a plaintiff in any material proceeding or pending litigation. There are no proceedings in which any of our directors, officers or affiliates, or any registered or beneficial stockholder, is an adverse party or has a material interest adverse to our interest.

Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures

Not applicable.

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PART II

I tem 5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity

Common Stock and Preferred Stock

Our Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation authorize us to issue up to eighty-five million (85,000,000) shares, consisting of: (i) seventy-five million (75,000,000) shares of common stock, par value $0.001 per share (the “Common Stock”); and (ii) 10,000,000 shares of blank check preferred stock, par value $0.001 per share (the “Preferred Stock”).

Our articles of incorporation authorize our board, without stockholder approval, to issue up to 10,000,000 shares of Preferred Stock in one or more series, to determine the designations and the powers, preferences and rights and the qualifications, limitations and restrictions thereof, including the dividend rights, conversion or exchange rights, voting rights (including the number of votes per share), redemption rights and terms, liquidation preferences, sinking fund provisions and the number of shares constituting the series.  Our board of directors has the discretion to issue Preferred Stock with voting and other rights that could adversely affect the voting power and other rights of the holders of Common Stock and which could have the effect of making it more difficult for a third party to acquire, or of discouraging a third party from attempting to acquire, a majority of our outstanding voting stock.

The following statements relating to the capital stock set forth the material terms of the securities of the Company.  Reference is also made to the more detailed provisions of the certificate of incorporation and the by-laws, copies of which are filed as exhibits to this registration statement.

Voting Rights

Except as otherwise required by law or as may be provided by the resolutions of the board of directors authorizing the issuance of Common Stock, all rights to vote and all voting power shall be vested in the holders of Common Stock.  Each share of Common Stock shall entitle the holder thereof to one vote.

No Cumulative Voting

Except as may be provided by the resolutions of the board of directors authorizing the issuance of Common Stock, cumulative voting by any shareholder is expressly denied.

No Preemptive Rights

Preemptive rights shall not exist with respect to shares of Common Stock or securities convertible into shares of Common Stock of the Company.

Dividends

We have not paid any cash dividends on our Common Stock since inception and presently anticipate that all earnings, if any, will be retained for development of our business and that no dividends on our Common Stock will be declared in the foreseeable future.  Any future dividends will be subject to the discretion of our Board of Directors and will depend upon, among other things, future earnings, operating and financial condition, capital requirements, general business conditions and other pertinent facts.  Therefore, there can be no assurance that any dividends on our Common Stock will be paid in the future.

Rights upon Liquidation, Dissolution or Winding-Up of the Company

Upon any liquidation, dissolution or winding-up of the Company, whether voluntary or involuntary, the remaining net assets of the Company shall be distributed pro rata to the holders of the Common Stock.

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Holders

As of September 30, 2025, we have 21,323,312 issued and outstanding shares of Common Stock, which are held by 88 shareholders of record.

Securities Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans

None.

Transfer Agent and Registrar

Nexscient, Inc. has appointed VStock Transfer, LLC as its transfer agent.  VStock’s address is 18 Lafayette Place, Woodmere, NY 11598.  The transfer agent is responsible for all record-keeping and administrative functions in connection with the common shares.

Market Information

The Company’s common stock was approved for trading on the OTCQB on August 2, 2024.  Our common shares are currently quoted on the OTCQB under the symbol "NXNT".  The following table sets forth the range of the high and low sale prices of the common stock for the periods indicated.  The quotations reflect inter-dealer prices, without retail markup, markdown or commission, and may not represent actual transactions.  Consequently, the information provided below may not be indicative of our common stock price under different conditions.

Period Ended

High

Low

Year Ended June 30, 2025

June 30, 2025

$ 2.00

$ 0.27

March 31, 2025

$ 1.01

$ 0.55

December 31, 2024

$ 0.25

$ 0.25

September 30, 2024

$ 0.01

$ 0.01

Since being quoted, the high and low price of our common stock ranged between $2.00 per share and $0.25 per share, respectively. As of September 30, 2025, there were 21,323,312 shares of common stock outstanding held by approximately 88 stockholders of record.

Trades in our common stock may be subject to Rule 15g-9 of the Exchange Act, which imposes requirements on broker/dealers who sell securities subject to the rule to persons other than established customers and accredited investors.  For transactions covered by the rule, broker/dealers must make a special suitability determination for purchasers of the securities and receive the purchaser’s written agreement to the transaction before the sale.

Penny Stock Regulation

Penny stocks generally are equity securities with a price of less than $5.00 per share other than securities registered on national securities exchanges or listed on the NASDAQ Stock Market, provided that current price and volume information with respect to transactions in such securities are provided by the exchange or system.  The penny stock rules impose additional sales practice requirements on broker-dealers who sell such securities to persons other than established customers and accredited investors (generally those with assets in excess of $1,000,000 or annual income exceeding $200,000, or $300,000 together with their spouse).  For transactions covered by these rules, the broker-dealer must make a special suitability determination for the purchase of such securities and have received the purchaser's written consent to the transaction prior to the purchase.  Additionally, for any transaction involving a penny stock, unless exempt, the rules require the delivery, prior to the transaction, of a disclosure schedule prescribed by the SEC relating to the penny stock market.  The broker-dealer also must disclose the commissions payable to both the broker-dealer and the registered representative and current quotations for the securities.  Finally, monthly statements must be sent disclosing recent price information on the limited market in penny stocks.  Because of these penny stock rules, broker-dealers may be restricted in their ability to sell the Company’s common stock.  The foregoing required penny stock restrictions will not apply to the Company’s common stock if such stock reaches and maintains a market price of $5.00 per share or greater.

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Additional Information

We refer you to our Articles of Incorporation, Bylaws, and the applicable provisions of the Delaware Revised Statues for a more complete description of the rights and liabilities of holders of our securities.

I tem 6. [Reserved]

We are a smaller reporting company as defined by Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act and are not required to provide the information required under this item.

Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.

The following discussion of our financial condition and results of operations should be read in conjunction with the financial statements and related notes to the financial statements included elsewhere in this document.  Some of the statements under “Management’s Discussion and Analysis,” “Description of Business” and elsewhere herein may include forward-looking statements which reflect our current views with respect to future events and financial performance.  These statements include forward-looking statements both with respect to us specifically and the renewable energy industry in general. Statements which include the words “expect,” “intend,” “plan,” “believe,” “project,” “anticipate,” “will,” and similar statements of a future or forward-looking nature identify forward-looking statements for purposes of the federal securities laws or otherwise.  The safe harbor provisions of the federal securities laws do not apply to any forward-looking statements contained in this document.  All forward-looking statements address such matters that involve risks and uncertainties. Accordingly, there are or will be important factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from those indicated in these statements.  We undertake no obligation to publicly update or review any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise.  If one or more of these or other risks or uncertainties materialize, or if our underlying assumptions prove to be incorrect, actual results may vary materially from what we projected.  Any forward-looking statements you read herein reflect our current views with respect to future events and are subject to these and other risks, uncertainties and assumptions relating to our written and oral forward-looking statements attributable to us or individuals acting on our behalf and such statements are expressly qualified in their entirety by this paragraph.

Overview

Nexscient, Inc. is an emerging-growth company that’s building a global collaborative network of AI-enabled Intelligent Enterprise Solutions and technologies through internal development, synergistic acquisitions, and capital investments in companies involved in machine learning, artificial intelligence, and the Industrial Internet of Things technologies.  We plan to deliver an innovative solution for process automation in various industry sectors that helps improve business processes, decrease equipment maintenance costs, and improve overall efficiencies.

We intend to develop Nexscient IES as a holistic solution that delivers insight, intelligence, and innovation to the business enterprise.  The platform is currently in development.

As part of our growth strategy, we also seek to acquire and integrate synergistic AI and machine learning companies and technologies into our collaborative network, further expanding our service offerings while enhancing shareholder value.  Our objective is to build an ecosystem of intelligent enterprise AI applications, technologies, and business process solutions that deliver actionable insights for businesses seeking to improve their operations, realize market differentiation, and attain industry relevance.

With Nexscient IES, businesses can predict and lead through digital realization, business process agility, and insight and innovation.  We intend to provide a comprehensive platform by integrating disparate technologies into a digital-ready ecosystem.  Within our ecosystem, there will be a foundation of intelligent business applications connected to new and existing business operations, processes, and technologies.

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Results of operations for fiscal years ended June 30, 2025 compared to June 30, 2024.

Revenue

We are in our development stage and have not generated any revenue for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2025 and 2024.

Operating Expenses

During the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025 and 2024, we incurred total operating expenses of $488,042 and $937,592, respectively, a decrease of $449,550, or 48%, as a result of reducing project development expenses and focusing on identifying acquisition candidates.  Of this total, for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2025 and 2024, $39,708 and $303,000, respectively, was accounted as a non-cash expense related to the issuance of shares paid to consultants in lieu of cash for services rendered related to the software development.

Operating expenses consisted of the following:

For the

Year Ended

June 30, 2025

For the

Year Ended

June 30, 2024

Research and development expenses

97,364

205,286

General and administrative expenses

390,678

732,306

Total operating expenses

$ 488,042

$ 937,592

Research and development fees

We enter into agreements with third-party developers for development services.  During the preliminary project stage and prior to the application development stage of the product, we record any costs incurred by third-party developers as research and development expenses.

During the fiscal years ended June 30, 2025 and 2024, we reported research and development fees of $97,364 and $205,286, respectively, a decrease of $107,922, or 53%, primarily due to reduced development efforts.

Interest expense

During the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025, the Company incurred a total interest expense of $41,662, which consists of $21,392 of interest accrued related to the 9% Convertible Debentures, and $20,270 related to the amortized interest expense related to the related-party loan issued with common shares.

General and administrative expenses

During the fiscal years ended June 30, 2025 and 2024, general and administrative expenses amounted to $390,678 and $732,306, respectively, a decrease of $341,628, or 47%, primarily attributed to scaling down expenses related to professional and management fees other general business expenses, primarily related to decreased stock-compensation.  Of this total, for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2025 and 2024, $39,708 and $303,000, respectively, was accounted as a non-cash expense related to the issuance of shares as payment of professional fees to advisors and consultants in lieu of cash.

Net loss

During the fiscal years ended June 30, 2025 and 2024, we reported a net loss of $529,704 and $937,592, respectively, a decrease of $407,888, or 44%.  The decrease in net loss was due to the decreases in research and development and general and administrative expenses discussed above.

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Liquidity, Capital Resources and Plan of Operations

Liquidity is the ability of a company to generate funds to support its current and future operations, satisfy its obligations, and otherwise operate on an ongoing basis.

During the fiscal ended June 30, 2025, the Company issued convertible debentures in the aggregate principal amount of $480,000 in exchange for cash.  The convertible debt is unsecured, bears interest at 9% per annum compounded on the basis of a 365-day year and actual days lapsed due at maturity, and is convertible at the lower of $0.75 per share or 20% below the average VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price) per share of common stock for the ten (10) days prior to the date of conversion, with a minimum price of the common stock at $0.50 per share.  The debentures have a maturity date of two years from date of issuance and are convertible at the option of the holder.

The total amount of these debentures outstanding as of September 30, 2025, is $530,000.  The Company uses the proceeds received from the private placement offering for research and development, general corporate purposes and working capital.

On June 30, 2025, we had a cash balance of $100,470, net working capital of $85,385, a net loss of $529,704, and has no revenues to cover our operating costs.

The ability of the Company to realize its business plan is dependent upon, among other things, obtaining additional financing to continue operations, and development of its business plan.  In response to these requirements, management intends to raise additional funds through private placement and public offerings.  Until such time that the Company implements its growth strategy, we expect to continue to generate operating losses in the foreseeable future, mostly due to corporate overhead, research and development, and costs of being a public company.

We believe that our existing working capital and cash on hand will provide sufficient cash to enable the Company to meet its operating needs and debt requirements for the next six months from the issuance date of this report.

These factors, among others, raise substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern. The accompanying financial statements do not include any adjustments that might result from the outcome of this uncertainty.

Cash Flows from Operating Activities

For the year ended June 30, 2025, net cash used in operating activities was $407,834, which primarily resulted from a net loss of $529,704, plus an increase of $21,392 in accrued interest on convertible debentures; $43,500 in deferred and accrued wages; and a decrease of $3,000 in accounts payable and accrued liabilities.  Net cash used in operating activities is adjusted by $39,708 and $20,270 in amortized, non-cash expenses for prepaid stock-based compensation and a debt discount, respectively.

For the year ended June 30, 2024, net cash used in operating activities was $645,452, which primarily resulted from a net loss of $937,952, adjusted for the stock-based compensation to employees and consultants of $303,000, and a decrease in accounts payable and accrued liabilities of $10,860.

Cash Flows from Investing Activities

For the year ended June 30, 2025, net cash used in investing activities totaled $47,500, paid as partial consideration for the purchase of software.

Cash Flows from Financing Activities

For the year ended June 30, 2025, net cash provided by financing activities totaled $480,000, resulting from the issuance of convertible debenture securities in a private placement offering.  For the year ended June 30, 2024, net cash provided by financing activities was $518,797, resulting primarily from the sale of our common stock in private placements and a registered offering.

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Our ultimate success is dependent on our ability to obtain additional financing and generate sufficient cash flow to meet our obligations on a timely basis.  We will require significant amounts of capital to sustain operations, and we will need to make the investments we need to execute our longer-term business plan to support new technologies and help advance innovation.  Absent generation of sufficient revenue from the execution of our long-term business plan, we will need to obtain debt or equity financing, especially if we experience downturns in our business that are more severe or longer than anticipated, or if we experience significant increases in expense levels resulting from being a publicly-traded company or from operations.  Such additional debt or equity financing may not be available to us on favorable terms, if at all.  We plan to pursue our plans with respect to the research and development of our products and service and strategic acquisitions, which will require resources beyond those that we currently have, ultimately requiring additional capital from third party sources.

Going Concern

We have not attained profitable operations and are dependent upon obtaining financing to pursue any extensive activities.  Accordingly, management believes substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern exists.  For these reasons, our auditors stated in their report on our audited financial statements that there is substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern.

Contractual Obligations

We are a smaller reporting company as defined by Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and are not required to provide the information under this item.

Future Financings

We will continue to rely on equity sales of our common shares and debt proceeds in order to continue to fund our business operations.  Issuances of additional shares will result in dilution to existing stockholders.  There is no assurance that we will achieve any additional sales of the equity securities or arrange for debt or other financing to fund our operations and other activities.

Expected Purchase or Sale of Significant Equipment

We do not anticipate the purchase or sale of any significant equipment, as such items are not required by us at this time or in the next twelve months.

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

We have no significant off-balance sheet arrangements that have or are reasonably likely to have a current or future effect on our financial condition, changes in financial condition, revenues or expenses, results of operations, liquidity, capital expenditures or capital resources that are material to stockholders.

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Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure

Other than the disclosure of uncertainty regarding the ability for us to continue as a going concern which was included in our accountant’s report on the financial statements for the year ended June 30, 2025; dbbmckennon’s report on the financial statements of the Company for the years ended June 30, 2025 did not contain an adverse opinion or a disclaimer of opinion, nor were they qualified or modified as to uncertainty, audit scope, or accounting principles.

In connection with the audit of the financial statements of the Company for year ended June 30, 2025, there were no disagreements on any matter of accounting principles or practices, financial statement disclosures, or auditing scope or procedures, which disagreements if not resolved to their satisfaction would have caused them to make reference in connection with dbbmckennon’s opinion to the subject matter of the disagreement.

In connection with the audited financial statements of the Company for year ended June 30, 2025, there have been no reportable events with the Company as set forth in Item 304(a)(1)(v) of Regulation S-K.

Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates

See Note 2 – Summary of Significant Accounting Policies, in the notes of the financial statements for general policies, none of which we believe are critical based on the Company’s current operations.

Critical accounting estimates relate to the valuation of common stock.  Management determined that the thinly traded price was not believed to be representative of fair value at the time of various transactions, due to the significant spread in bid and ask prices and minimal number of trades to date. Management determined the fair value of common stock considering the thinly traded nature of its stock, the prevailing bid and ask prices, historical sales of stock, and current circumstances of the entity.  Management estimated the fair value to be $0.25 per share during the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025.

I tem 7.A Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk.

We are a smaller reporting company as defined by Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and are not required to provide the information under this item.

Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (PCAOB # 3501 )

F-2

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Balance Sheets

F-3

Statements of Operations

F-4

Statements of Shareholders’ Equity (Deficit)

F-5

Statements of Cash Flows

F-6

Notes to the Financial Statements

F-7

F-1

Table of Contents

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of Nexscient Inc.,

Opinion on the Financial Statements

We have audited the accompanying balance sheets of Nexscient Inc. (the “Company”) as of June 30, 2025 and 2024, and the related statements of operations, stockholders’ equity (deficit), and cash flows for the years then ended, and the related notes (collectively referred to as the financial statements).  In our opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company as of June 30, 2025 and 2024, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the years then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

Going Concern

The accompanying financial statements have been prepared assuming the Company will continue as a going concern. As discussed in Note 3 to the financial statements, the Company has not generated revenues, incurred losses and expects to continue to incur losses, which raises substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern. Management’s plans in regard to these matters are also described in Note 3. The financial statements do not include any adjustments that might result from the outcome of this uncertainty.

Basis for Opinion

These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB) and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. The Company is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting. As part of our audits, we are required to obtain an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion.

Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

/s/ dbbmckennon

We have served as the Company’s auditor since 2023.

Newport Beach, California

September 30, 2025

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Table of Contents

NEXSCIENT, INC.

BALANCE SHEETS

ASSETS

June 30, 2025

June 30, 2024

Current assets

Cash

$ 100,470

$ 75,804

Prepaid expenses

59,792

24,000

Total current assets

160,262

99,804

Right of use asset

6,377

24,579

Software

135,000

-

TOTAL ASSETS

$ 301,639

$ 124,383

LIABILITIES AND STOCKOLDERS’ EQUITY (DEFICIT)

Current liabilities

Accounts payable

$ 15,000

$ 18,000

Deferred wages payable

43,500

-

Right of use liability, current portion

6,377

18,203

Total current liabilities

64,877

36,203

Accrued interest payable

21,392

-

Convertible debentures

480,000

-

Right of use liability

-

6,376

TOTAL LIABILITIES

$ 566,269

$ 42,579

STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY (DEFICIT)

Preferred Stock

10,000,000 shares authorized, $ 0.001 par value, no shares issued and outstanding at June 30, 2025 and 2024

-

-

Common Stock

75,000,000 shares authorized, $ 0.001 par value, 21,323,312 and 20,421,312 shares issued and outstanding at June 30, 2025 and 2024, respectively

21,323

20,421

Additional paid-in capital

1,275,109

1,092,741

Accumulated deficit

( 1,561,062 )

( 1,031,358 )

TOTAL STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY (DEFICIT)

$ ( 264,630 )

$ 81,804

TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY (DEFICIT)

$ 301,639

$ 124,383

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements

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Table of Contents

NEXSCIENT, INC.

STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS

Fiscal Year Ended

June 30, 2025

Fiscal Year Ended

June 30, 2024

REVENUE

Revenues

$ -

$ -

OPERATING EXPENSES

Research and development

97,364

205,286

General and administrative

390,678

732,306

TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES

488,042

937,592

Interest expense

41,662

-

NET LOSS

$ ( 529,704 )

$ ( 937,592 )

BASIC AND DILUTED LOSS PER COMMON SHARE

$ ( 0.03 )

$ ( 0.05 )

WEIGHTED AVERAGE NUMBER OF COMMON SHARES OUTSTANDING – BASIC AND DILUTED

20,681,997

20,025,253

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements

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Table of Contents

NEXSCIENT, INC.

STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY (DEFICIT)

Preferred Stock Shares

Preferred Stock

Common Stock Shares

Common

Stock

Additional

Paid-In

Capital

Subscriptions

Receivable

Accumulated

Deficit

Total

Stockholders'

Equity

(Deficit)

Balance, June 30, 2023

-

$ -

16,528,000

$ 16,528

$ 404,837

$ ( 154,500 )

$ ( 93,766 )

$ 173,099

Stock issued for services

-

-

1,736,000

1,736

325,264

-

-

327,000

Stock issued for cash

-

-

2,157,312

2,157

362,640

154,500

-

519,297

Net loss

-

-

-

-

-

-

( 937,592 )

( 937,592 )

Balance, June 30, 2024

-

$ -

20,421,312

$ 20,421

$ 1,092,741

$ -

$ ( 1,031,358 )

$ 81,804

Stock issued for services

-

-

302,000

302

75,198

-

-

75,500

Stock issued for software

-

-

350,000

350

87,150

-

-

87,500

Stock issued with debt

-

-

250,000

250

20,020

-

-

20,270

Net loss

-

-

-

-

-

-

( 529,704 )

( 529,704 )

Balance, June 30, 2025

-

$ -

21,323,312

$ 21,323

$ 1,275,109

$ -

$ ( 1,561,062 )

$ ( 264,630 )

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements

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Table of Contents

NEXSCIENT, INC.

STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

Fiscal Year Ended

June 30, 2025

Fiscal Year Ended

June 30, 2024

CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES

Net loss for the year

$ ( 529,704 )

$ ( 937,592 )

Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used in operating activities

Shares issued for services and amortization of prepaid stock-based compensation

39,708

303,000

Amortization of debt discount

20,270

-

Changes in operating assets and liabilities:

Accounts payable

( 3,000 )

( 10,860 )

Accrued wages payable

43,500

-

Accrued interest on debentures

21,392

-

NET CASH USED IN OPERATING ACTIVITIES

( 407,834 )

( 645,452 )

CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES

Purchase of software

( 47,500 )

-

NET CASH USED IN INVESTING ACTIVITIES

( 47,500 )

-

CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES

Proceeds from shares issued for cash

-

519,297

Proceeds from convertible debentures issued for cash

480,000

-

Loan proceeds from related party

30,000

-

Repayment of loan from related party

( 30,000 )

( 500 )

NET CASH PROVIDED BY FINANCING ACTIVITIES

480,000

518,797

NET (DECREASE) INCREASE IN CASH

24,666

( 126,655 )

CASH AT BEGINNING OF THE YEAR

75,804

202,459

CASH AT END OF THE YEAR

$ 100,470

$ 75,804

Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:

Cash paid for income taxes

$

-

$

-

Cash paid for interest

$

-

$

-

Supplemental disclosure of non-cash investing and financing activities:

Shares issued for software purchase

$ 87,500

$ -

Shares issued with debt

$ 20,270

$ -

Right of use asset and liability

$ -

$ 27,482

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these audited financial statements.

F-6

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NEXSCIENT, INC.

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

JUNE 30, 2025 AND 2024

NOTE 1 – ORGANIZATION AND DESCRIPTION OF BUSINESS

Nexscient, Inc. (the “Company”) was incorporated in the State of Delaware on March 14, 2023.  The Company is an emerging-growth company that’s building a global collaborative network of AI-enabled Intelligent Enterprise Solutions and technologies through internal development, synergistic acquisitions, and capital investments in companies involved in machine learning, artificial intelligence, and the Industrial Internet of Things technologies.  As part of its growth strategy, the Company also seeks to acquire and integrate synergistic AI and machine learning companies and technologies into our collaborative network, further expanding its service offerings while enhancing shareholder value. The Company’s headquarters are in Los Angeles, California.

NOTE 2 – SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

Risks and Uncertainties

The Company has a limited operating history and has not generated revenue intended operations. The Company's business and operations are sensitive to general business and economic conditions in the U.S. and worldwide along with local, state, and federal governmental policy decisions.  A host of factors beyond the Company's control could cause fluctuations in these conditions, including but not limited to: increased inflation and interest rates; the perceived impact and effect of macroeconomic conditions; the effects of increased competition as well as innovations by new and existing competitors in our market; our ability to attract new clients, including our ability to generate revenue; our ability to attract and retain highly-skilled AI/ML/IT professionals at cost-effective rates; our ability to penetrate new industry verticals and geographies and grow our revenue in targeted industry verticals and geographies; our ability to maintain favorable pricing and utilization rates; our ability to successfully identify acquisition targets, consummate acquisitions and successfully integrate acquired businesses and personnel.  Adverse developments in these general business and economic conditions could have a material adverse effect on the Company's financial condition and the results of its operations.

Basis of Presentation

The accounting and reporting policies of the Company conform to accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“US GAAP”). The Company’s fiscal year is June 30.

Use of Estimates

In preparing financial statements in conformity with US GAAP, management makes estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosures of contingent assets and liabilities at the dates of the financial statements, as well as the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting periods.  Management makes these estimates using the best information available at the time the estimates are made.  However, actual results could differ materially from those estimates.

Concentrations of Credit Risk

Financial instruments that potentially subject the Company to significant concentrations of credit risk consist principally of cash.  As of June 30, 2025, substantially all of the Company’s cash was held by major financial institutions located in the United States, which at times may exceed federally insured limits.

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Fair Value of Financial Instruments

Certain assets and liabilities of the Company are carried at fair value under GAAP. Fair value is defined as the exchange price that would be received for an asset or paid to transfer a liability (an exit price) in the principal or most advantageous market for the asset or liability in an orderly transaction between market participants on the measurement date. Valuation techniques used to measure fair value must maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs. Financial assets and liabilities carried at fair value are to be classified and disclosed in one of the following three levels of the fair value hierarchy, of which the first two are considered observable and the last is considered unobservable:

·

Level 1 - inputs to the valuation methodology are quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities in active markets.

·

Level 2 - inputs to the valuation methodology include quoted prices for similar assets and liabilities in active markets, and inputs that are observable for the assets or liability, either directly or indirectly, for substantially the full term of the financial instruments.

·

Level 3 - inputs to the valuation methodology are unobservable and significant to the fair value.

For cash and accounts payable, it is management’s opinion that the carrying values are a reasonable estimate of fair value because of the short period of time between the origination of such instruments and their expected realization and if applicable, their stated interest rate approximates current rates available.

Cash

The Company considers all highly liquid investments with original or remaining maturities of three months or less on the purchase date to be cash equivalents.  As of June 30, 2025 and 2024, the Company did not have any cash equivalents.

Leases

The Company determines if an arrangement is a lease at inception.  Operating and financing right-of-use assets and lease liabilities are included on the balance sheet.  Right-of-use assets represent the Company’s right to use an underlying asset for the lease term and lease liabilities represent the Company’s obligation to make lease payments arising from the lease.  Right-of-use assets and liabilities are recognized at commencement date based on the present value of lease payments over the lease term.  The Company uses its incremental borrowing rate, based on the information available at the commencement date, in determining the present value of future lease payments.  Right-of-use assets include any prepaid lease payments and exclude any lease incentives and initial direct costs incurred.

Operating lease expenses are recognized on a straight-line basis over the term of the lease, consisting of interest accrued on the lease liability and depreciation of the right-of-use asset.  The lease terms may include options to extend or terminate the lease if it is reasonably certain the Company will exercise that option.

Software

Software is stated at cost less accumulated amortization and is depreciated using the straight-line method over the estimated useful life of the asset. The estimated useful life of the Company’s current software assets is expected to be three years; however, depreciation of the software will not occur until it has been placed in use.

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Convertible Instruments

GAAP requires companies to bifurcate conversion options from their host instruments and account for them as free-standing derivative financial instruments according to certain criteria. The criteria include circumstances in which (a) the economic characteristics and risks of the embedded derivative instrument are not clearly and closely related to the economic characteristics and risks of the host contract, (b) the hybrid instrument that embodies both the embedded derivative instrument and the host contract is not re-measured at fair value under otherwise applicable generally accepted accounting principles with changes in fair value reported in earnings as they occur and (c) a separate instrument with the same terms as the embedded derivative instrument would be considered a derivative instrument. An exception to this rule is when the host instrument is deemed to be conventional as that term is described under applicable GAAP.

Research and Development

Research and development costs include costs to develop and refine technological processes used to carry out business operations.  Research and development costs charged for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2025 and 2024 were $ 97,364 and $ 205,286 , respectively.

Impairment of Long-Lived Assets

The Company continually monitors events and changes in circumstances that could indicate carrying amounts of long-lived assets may not be recoverable. When such events or changes in circumstances are present, the Company assesses the recoverability of long-lived assets by determining whether the carrying value of such assets will be recovered through undiscounted expected future cash flows. If the total of the future cash flows is less than the carrying amount of those assets, the Company recognizes an impairment loss based on the excess of the carrying amount over the fair value of the assets. Assets to be disposed of are reported at the lower of the carrying amount or the fair value less costs to sell.  There were no impairments for the years ended June 30, 2025 and 2024.

Deferred Offering Costs

The Company complies with the requirements of ASC 340-10-S99-1 with regards to offering costs. Prior to the completion of an offering, offering costs are capitalized.  The deferred offering costs are charged to additional paid-in capital or as a discount to debt, as applicable, upon the completion of an offering or to expense if the offering is not completed.

Segments

In accordance with criteria under ASC 280, which establishes standards for companies to report in their financial statement information about operating segments, products, services, geographic areas, and major customers, the Company’s chief operating decision maker (“CODM”) has been identified as the Chief Executive Officer.  The Company’s CODM reviews results to assess performance, make decisions, and allocates operating and capital resources of the Company as a whole, therefore, there is only one reportable segment.  The CODM does not distinguish its principal business activities for the purpose of internal reporting and uses net loss to allocate resources in the annual budgeting and forecasting process, along with using that measure as a basis for evaluating financial performance quarterly.

Significant segment expenses that are provided to CODM on a regular basis and are included within reported measure of segment profit or loss are research and development and general and administrative.

The statements of operations for the years ended June 30, 2025 and 2024, reflect the significant segment expenses and other segment items, as well as the balance sheets as of June 30, 2025 and 2024, for the one reportable segment.

Income Taxes

The Company uses the asset and liability method of accounting for income taxes pursuant to ASC 740 “Income Taxes”.  ASC 740 requires an asset and liability approach for financial accounting and reporting for income taxes and allows recognition and measurement of deferred tax assets based upon the likelihood of realization of tax benefits in future years.  Under the asset and liability approach, deferred taxes are provided for the net tax effects of temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amounts used for income tax purposes.  Valuation allowances are provided for deferred tax assets if it is more likely than not these items will either expire before the Company is able to realize their benefits, or that future deductibility is uncertain.  The provision for income taxes represents current taxes payable net of the change during the period in deferred tax assets and liabilities.

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Stock-Based Compensation

The Company accounts for stock-based compensation in accordance with ASC 718, Compensation – Stock Compensation. The Company measures all stock-based awards granted to employees, directors and non-employee consultants based on the fair value on the date of the grant and recognizes compensation expense for those awards over the requisite service period, which is generally the vesting period of the respective award.  For awards with service-based vesting conditions, the Company records the expense for using the straight-line method.  For awards with performance-based vesting conditions, the Company records the expense if and when the Company concludes that it is probable that the performance condition will be achieved.  The Company classifies stock-based compensation expense in its statement of operations in the same manner in which the award recipient’s costs are classified.

The assumptions used in calculating the fair value of stock-based awards represent management’s best estimates and involve inherent uncertainties and the application of management’s judgment.  As a result, if factors change and management uses different assumptions, stock-based compensation expense could be materially different for future awards.

Earnings (Loss) per Share

Basic earnings (loss) per share is computed by dividing income (loss) available to common shareholders by the weighted-average number of common shares outstanding during the period.  Diluted earnings (loss) per share is computed similar to basic earnings (loss) per share except that the denominator is increased to include the number of additional common shares that would have been outstanding if the potential common shares had been issued and if the additional common shares were dilutive. Potentially dilutive securities are excluded from the computation of the diluted net earnings (loss) per share if their inclusion would be anti-dilutive.

The Company has convertible debentures outstanding as of June 30, 2025, for which the maximum number of shares issuable upon conversion is 960,000 shares based on a floor conversion price of $ 0.50 per share. These shares were excluded from diluted calculations as they were anti-dilutive.

Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements

Management does not believe that any recently issued, but not yet effective, accounting standards could have a material effect on the accompanying financial statements.  As new accounting pronouncements are issued, the Company will adopt those that are applicable under the circumstances.

NOTE 3 – GOING CONCERN

The financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis which assumes the Company will be able to realize its assets and discharge its liabilities in the normal course of business for the foreseeable future.

The Company has generated no revenues since inception and incurred losses since inception resulting in an accumulated deficit of $ 1,561,062 , as of June 30, 2025, and further losses are anticipated in the development of its business.  Accordingly, there is substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern.

The ability to continue as a going concern is dependent upon the Company generating profitable operations in the future and/or to obtain the necessary financing to meet its obligations and repay its liabilities arising from normal business operations when they come due.  Management intends to finance operating costs over the twelve months with existing cash on hand and loans from directors, private placement of common stock, and/or a registered offering of its common stock.

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NOTE 4 – CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURES

On July 1, 2024, the Board authorized a private placement offering to accredited investors of an unsecured 9 % Convertible Debenture with a twenty-four month maturity in the principal amount of up to $ 5,000,000 (the “Debentures”), which Debentures will be convertible into shares of the Company’s common stock at the lower price of $0.75 per share or 20% below the average VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price) per share of common stock for the ten (10) days prior to the date of conversion, with a minimum conversion price of $0.50 per share. The debentures have a maturity date of two years from date of issuance and are convertible at the option of the holder and are subject to certain lock-up and leak-out provisions.  The total amount of these debentures outstanding as of June 30, 2025, is $ 480,000 .

Interest expense on the convertible debentures for the year ended June 30, 2025 and 2024 was $ 21,392 and $ 0 , respectively.

NOTE 5 – STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY (DEFICIT)

The Company’s authorized capital consists of eighty-five million ( 85,000,000 ) shares, comprised of: (i) seventy-five million ( 75,000,000 ) shares of Common Stock, par value $ 0.001 per share (the “Common Stock”); and (ii) 10,000,000 shares of blank check Preferred Stock, par value $ 0.001 per share (the “Preferred Stock”).

In relation to the below value of common stock issued, management estimated the fair market value of the Company’s common stock considering the thinly traded nature of its stock, the prevailing bid and ask prices, historical sales of stock, and current circumstances of the entity.  Management determined that the thinly traded price was not believed to be representative of fair value at the time of these transactions, due to the significant spread in bid and ask prices and minimal number of trades to date.  Management estimated the fair value to be $ 0.25 per share during the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025.

During the period from January through April 2025, as compensation to members of its Advisory Board, the Company issued a total of 32,000 shares of its common stock, having an aggregate value of $ 8,000 based on a share price of $ 0.25 per share. Services for these shares is to be rendered over a one-year period.

During the period from March through June 2025, the Company issued a total of 270,000 shares of its common stock to consultants as compensation in lieu of cash, for consulting services having an aggregate value of $ 67,500 , based on a share price of 0.25 per share. Services for these shares is to be rendered over a one-year period.

In February 2025, the Company issued 350,000 shares of its common stock as partial compensation in the purchase of software.  The shares were valued at $ 87,500 , based on the share price of $ 0.25 per share.  Also in February 2025, the Company issued 250,000 shares of its common stock to its chief executive officer pursuant to terms of a promissory note related to a zero-interest loan made to the Company (Note 7).

NOTE 6 – COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES

Lease Commitments

In May 2024, the Company entered into a lease agreement for office space. The lease commenced on May 1, 2024 and expires on October 31, 2025 with monthly of $ 1,609 throughout the lease term. The Company recognized a right of use asset and liability of $ 27,482 using a discount rate of 7.5 %.

The following is a summary of future annual minimum lease payments as of June 30, 2025:

Fiscal 2026

6,436

Total minimum lease payments

6,436

Less: Imputed interest

( 59 )

Total lease obligations

6,377

Less: current portion

6,377

Long-term portion of lease obligations

-

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Contingencies

The Company may be subject to pending legal proceedings and regulatory actions in the ordinary course of business. The results of such proceedings cannot be predicted with certainty, but the Company does not anticipate that the final outcome, if any, arising out of any such matters will have a material adverse effect on its business, financial condition or results of operations.

NOTE 7 – RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

Related party transactions are measured at the exchange amount, which is the amount of consideration established and agreed to by the related parties.  Related parties are natural persons or other entities that have the ability, directly, or indirectly, to control another party or exercise significant influence over the party in making financial and operating decisions.  Related parties include other parties that are subject to common control or that are subject to common significant influences.

In February 2025, pursuant to terms of a promissory note the Company issued 250,000 shares of its common stock to its chief executive officer as an accommodation for advancing the Company a zero-interest loan in the amount of $ 30,000 .  The loan was repayable within 30 days from date of issuance.  The Company determined the relative fair value of the debt and equity.  Accordingly, the debt was discounted by $ 20,270 , which was accreted up through the maturity date.  As of June 30, 2025, the Company had paid back the loan.

NOTE 8 – INCOME TAXES

Deferred taxes are recognized for temporary differences between the basis of assets and liabilities for financial statement and income tax purposes.  The differences relate primarily to capitalization of research and development costs for tax purposes, stock compensation and net operating loss carryforwards.  As of June 30, 2025 and 2024, the Company had net deferred tax assets before valuation allowance of approximately $ 298,000 and $ 169,000 , respectively.

The Company recognizes deferred tax assets to the extent that it believes that these assets are more likely than not to be realized.  In making such a determination, the Company considers all available positive and negative evidence, including future reversals of existing taxable temporary differences, projected future taxable income, tax-planning strategies, and results of recent operations.  The Company assessed the need for a valuation allowance against its net deferred tax assets and determined a full valuation allowance is required due to cumulative losses through June 30, 2025.  Therefore, a valuation allowance of $ 287,000 and $ 169,000 was recorded as of June 30, 2025 and 2024, respectively. Valuation allowance increased by $ 129,000 and $ 154,000 during fiscal 2025 and 2024, respectively.  Deferred tax assets were calculated using the Company’s combined effective tax rate, which it estimated to be approximately 28 %.  The effective rate is reduced to 0% due to the full valuation allowance on its net deferred tax assets.

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The Company’s ability to utilize net operating loss carryforwards will depend on its ability to generate adequate future taxable income.  At June 30, 2025, the Company had net operating loss carryforwards available to offset future taxable income in the amounts of approximately $ 1,065,000 , which can be carried forward indefinitely.  Certain changes in ownership can result in a limitation on the amount of net operating loss and tax credit carryovers that can be utilized each year.  As of June 30, 2024, management has not determined the extent of any such limitations, if any.

The Company has evaluated its income tax positions and has determined that it does not have any uncertain tax positions.  The Company will recognize interest and penalties related to any uncertain tax positions through its income tax expense.

The Company is subject to taxation in the U.S. and state jurisdictions.  The Company is not presently subject to any income tax audit in any taxing jurisdiction, though all tax years from Inception remain open to examination.

NOTE 9 – SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

During July 2025, the Company issued additional convertible debentures in return for total cash proceeds of $ 50,000 .  The terms of the convertible debentures are disclosed in Note 4.

On August 2, 2025, the Company entered into a non-binding Letter of Intent (the “LOI”) to purchase an AI data annotation and labelling company operating in the Philippines.  The total consideration for the acquisition is, comprised of an upfront cash payment of $ 600,000 , a three-year convertible debenture in the principal amount of $ 450,000 , and the issuance of 6,520,000 restricted shares of Nexscient’s common stock, $ 0.001 par value per share.  Completion of the transaction is subject to standard due diligence, negotiation and execution of definitive documentation, receipt of necessary board approvals, and any third-party consents.  The LOI contains standard representations, warranties, covenants, and conditions as well as mutual confidentiality and exclusivity provisions.

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Item 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure

None.

Item 9.A Controls and Procedures.

Disclosure Controls and Procedures

Under the supervision of and with the participation of our management, including our principal executive officer and our principal financial officer, we conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures as of June 30, 2025, the end of the period covered by this report on Form 10-K.  The term “disclosure controls and procedures,” as set forth in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Exchange Act, means controls and other procedures of a company that are designed to provide reasonable assurance that information required to be disclosed by a company in the reports that it files or submits under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported, within the time periods specified in the rules and forms promulgated by the SEC.  Disclosure controls and procedures include, without limitation, controls and procedures designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed by a company in the reports that it files or submits under the Exchange Act is accumulated and communicated to the Company’s management, including its principal executive and principal financial officers, as appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.

In designing and evaluating our disclosure controls and procedures, management recognizes that disclosure controls and procedures, no matter how well conceived and operated, can provide only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the objectives of the disclosure controls and procedures are met.  Additionally, in designing disclosure controls and procedures, our management necessarily was required to apply its judgment in evaluating the cost-benefit relationship of possible disclosure controls and procedures.  The design of any system of controls also is based in part upon certain assumptions about the likelihood of future events, and there can be no assurance that any design will succeed in achieving its stated goals under all potential future conditions; over time, controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or the degree of compliance with policies or procedures may deteriorate.  Because of the inherent limitations in a control system, misstatements due to error or fraud may occur and not be detected.

As of June 30, 2025, we carried out an evaluation, under the supervision and with the participation of our management, including our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness of the design and operation of our disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rule 13a-15(e)) pursuant to Rule 13a-15 of the Exchange Act.  Based upon that evaluation, our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures are not effective.

Management’s Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 13a-15(f) or Rule 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act). Our management assessed the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting as of June 30, 2025. In making this assessment, our management used the criteria established in Internal Control – Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission, or COSO Framework. Our management has concluded that, as of June 30, 2025 our internal control over financial reporting was not effective based on these criteria because of the material weaknesses described below.

Material weaknesses relate to the absence of a formal policies and procedures manual that governs reporting and oversight functions.  Our size prevents us from being able to employ sufficient resources to a properly functioning reporting system; which also results in segregation of duties deficiencies.    To the extent reasonably possible given our limited resources, we intend to take measures to cure the aforementioned weaknesses, including, but not limited to, increasing the capacity of our qualified financial personnel to ensure that accounting policies and procedures are consistent across the organization and that we have adequate controls over our Exchange Act reporting disclosures.

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Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting

There have been no changes in our internal control over financial reporting subsequent to the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025, which were identified in connection with our management’s evaluation required by paragraph (d) of rules 13a-15 and 15d-15 under the Exchange Act, that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.

The Company is not required by current SEC rules to include, and does not include, an auditor's attestation report.  The Company's registered public accounting firm has not attested to Management's reports on the Company's internal control over financial reporting.

Limitations of the Effectiveness of Disclosure Controls and Internal Controls

Our management, including our Principal Executive Officer and Principal Financial Officer, does not expect that our disclosure controls and internal controls will prevent all errors and all fraud.  A control system, no matter how well conceived and operated, can provide only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the objectives of the control system are met. Further, the design of a control system must reflect the fact that there are resource constraints, and the benefits of controls must be considered relative to their costs.  Because of inherent limitations in all control systems, no evaluation of controls can provide absolute assurance that all control issues and instances of fraud, if any, within the Company have been detected.  These inherent limitations include the realities that judgments in decision-making can be faulty, and that breakdowns can occur because of a simple error or mistake.  Additionally, controls can be circumvented by the individual acts of some persons, by collusion of two or more people, or by management override of the control.

The design of any system of controls is also based in part upon certain assumptions about the likelihood of future events, and there can be no assurance that any design will succeed in achieving our stated goals under all potential future conditions; over time, a control may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.  Because of inherent limitations in a cost-effective control system, misstatements due to error or fraud may occur and not be detected.

Item 9.B Other Information

Not applicable.

Item 9.C Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdiction the Prevent Inspection

Not applicable.

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PART III

I tem 10. Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance

Identification of Directors and Executive Officers

The following table sets forth the names and ages of our current directors and executive officers as of September 30, 2025:

Name and Age

Position(s) Held

Date of Appointment

Other Public Company Directorships

Fred E. Tannous, 59

Director, President & Chief Executive Officer, Treasurer, Secretary

March 14, 2023

None

Tarek Shoufani, 45

Director, Chief Operating Officer

March 14, 2023

None

Michael Portera, 67

Director, Chief Financial Officer

July 12, 2023

None

Eric Manlunas, 57

Director

April 19, 2023

None

Term of Office

Should a vacancy exist, the Company’s Board of Directors has the power to nominate and appoint a director or directors to fill such vacancy, and each shall hold office until the next annual meeting of stockholders and until his/her successor shall have been duly elected and qualified.

Background and Business Experience

Fred E. Tannous, MSEE, MBA – Director, President & Chief Executive Officer, Treasurer and Secretary

As President and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Tannous is responsible for overseeing all aspects of Nexscient’s vision, strategy, and product development.  Mr. Tannous has over thirty-five years of experience in finance, engineering and new business development and previously held senior level positions at Fortune 500 companies and several start-ups.  Over the past fifteen years, he has worked extensively with development stage and emerging companies to improve performance, enhance enterprise value and maximize returns.  Mr. Tannous has also helped effect transactions valued at more than $1.2 billion as well as launching several of his own start-ups in several industries, including mobile and wireless communications and networking technologies.  One of his previous start-up companies partnered with Los Alamos National Laboratories to commercialize a declassified military technology for continuous remote sensing and monitoring applications.  Previously, from 2000 to 2005, Mr. Tannous co-founded and was the Chief Executive Officer of Health Sciences Group, an innovative life sciences company, where he was instrumental in successfully taking it public by effecting a self-underwritten public offering (IPO) of its equity securities and growing its market value to more than $100 million.  Prior, Mr. Tannous held the position of Senior Analyst at corporate treasury for Hughes Aircraft Company, a government contractor, before transitioning to the position of Manager of Investments & Acquisitions at DIRECTV, where he worked with the CFO in financial operations and was responsible for valuing, structuring and executing strategic investments and overseeing the company’s portfolio having a market valuation of over $1 billion.  From 1996 to 1999, as CFO of Colorado Casino Resorts, a gaming and hospitality concern, Mr. Tannous was instrumental in obtaining its listing and trading on NASDAQ and raising over $65 million in combined private equity and debt financing to expand its operations.  Mr. Tannous started his career as an electrical engineer at Hughes Aircraft, where he worked on advanced radar signal and data processing techniques for electronic counter-counter-measures used in radar systems onboard F-14, F-15 and F-18/A fighter aircraft.  He has co-authored several papers on proprietary and unconventional methods for detecting and countering radar jamming.  Mr. Tannous holds a Master of Business Administration (MBA) in Finance and Banking from the University of Chicago (Booth) Graduate School of Business (1994) as well as a Master of Science (1990) and a Bachelor of Science (1988) in Electrical Engineering from the University of Southern California.

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Tarek N. Shoufani – Director, Chief Operating Officer

Mr. Shoufani has over twenty-five years of experience at the forefront of new and innovative technology sectors where he has focused on implementing corporate strategy into daily operations to meet key objectives.  Since 2010, as Managing Director of SinoAmerican Global Fund, Mr. Shoufani is involved in various stages of the Fund’s portfolio companies spanning across a broad spectrum of industries globally.  Mr. Shoufani brings extensive management experience in the technology industry as well as valuable know-how and expertise in market development and finance structuring within various industry sectors throughout the Americas, Asia, Europe, and Middle East.  While working with IZP (2012-2015), a leading global big data company in Shenzhen, China, Mr. Shoufani was instrumental in helping expand their financial and logistical transactions segment across Asia-Pacific, Latin America, Europe and Middle East.  As a key liaison with MPR Tech (2010-2012), China’s equivalent to eBay, Mr. Shoufani worked with management to streamline online auction management operations and improve top line revenues while helping realize savings in operating expenses.  As a key member of 4PX (2008-2010), an e-commerce solutions provider based in Shanghai, China, Mr. Shoufani worked with designers and engineers to implement custom supply chain systems and software services that delivered efficiencies across multiple levels including installation, training, maintenance, and security.  Mr. Shoufani holds a Bachelor of Arts (BA) from University of California in Business Economics and Marketing, and is fluent in English, Arabic and French.

Michael J. Portera – Director, Chief Financial Officer

Mr. Portera joined the Company as a Director and Chief Financial Officer on July 12, 2023.  With over forty years of experience in finance, sales, and business development, he is responsible for overseeing the financial operations of the Company, liaising with investment banks and financial institutions on fundraising initiatives, advising on merger and acquisition transactions, and implementing industry best practices for the Company’s finances and overall financial health.  Over the past fifteen years, Mr. Portera has worked with seasoned executives, entrepreneurs, and start-up businesses to successfully consummate thousands of transactions on a global basis.  As a former Managing Director with NYPPEX Private Markets (2000-2011), he assisted accredited investors achieve liquidity for over half a billion dollars in illiquid securities in secondary markets with venture capital and private equity funds and was instrumental in raising capital for founders and management teams of early-stage startups.  Previously, as Senior Vice President of Investments at Gilford Securities (1995-1999), Mr. Portera worked with Fortune 500 CEOs, Forbes 400 members, and high-net-worth individuals and institutions in various financings and investment-related initiatives.  Over the course of his early career as a registered representative, Mr. Portera held senior-level positions at several investment banking firms, including Smith Barney (1992-1995), UBS (1988-1992), and Drexel Burnham Lambert (1983-1987).  Early in his career, as a Certified Public Accountant (CPA), Mr. Portera served as a senior auditor at Deloitte & Touche in New York City.  Mr. Portera holds a Bachelor of Science (BS) in Economics with a concentration in Accounting from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.

Eric Manluna s – Director

Mr. Manlunas has over thirty years of experience in various aspects of financing and building new enterprise.  He is a valuable member of our Board due to his depth of operating, strategic, and transactional experience.  As a recognized business leader, Mr. Manlunas excels in demanding and fluid environments, often across multiple markets, continents, and cultures.  Over the past twenty years, as founder and Managing Partner of Wavemaker Partners (2003 – Present), a cross-border venture capital firm with offices in Los Angeles and Singapore, Mr. Manlunas has been part of over 450 investments in early-stage businesses.  He is adept at assimilating high levels of complexity, balancing competing factors, and quickly forming sensible and workable strategies to achieve stability and deliver sustainable outcomes.  Prior to becoming a venture capitalist, from 1999 to 2003, Mr. Manlunas founded, built and successfully sold two businesses, an e-commerce and Internet Service Provider, to strategic buyers.  During the early part of his career, he started as a consultant with Arthur Andersen’s Retail Management Group.  Mr. Manlunas holds a Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Pepperdine University (1995) and earned a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Communications from Florida International University (1990).

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Term of Office

Each director serves for a term of one year and until his successor is elected at the Annual Shareholders’ Meeting and is qualified, subject to removal by the shareholders.  Each officer serves for a term of one year and until his successor is elected at a meeting of the Board of Directors and is qualified.

Employees

We have three executive officers.  These individuals are not obligated to devote any specific number of hours to our matters and intend to devote only as much time as they deem necessary to our affairs.  Our officers are devoted full time to the Company; the amount of time they will devote in any time period will vary based on the stage of the business and progress the company is making.  Accordingly, once we are beyond the developmental phase our management will spend more time on our affairs.

Limitation of Liability and Indemnification Matters

Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, we have been advised that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act, and is, therefore, unenforceable.

Identification of Significant Employees

We have no significant employees other than the aforementioned Officers and Directors.

Family Relationship

Tarek N. Shoufani is the brother-in-law of Fred E. Tannous.  Other than the foregoing, we currently do not have any officers or directors of our Company who are related to each other.

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Involvement in Certain Legal Proceedings

During the past ten years no director, executive officer, promoter or control person of the Company has been involved in the following:

(1) A petition under the Federal bankruptcy laws or any state insolvency law which was filed by or against, or a receiver, fiscal agent or similar officer was appointed by a court for the business or property of such person, or any partnership in which he was a general partner at or within two years before the time of such filing, or any corporation or business association of which he was an executive officer at or within two years before the time of such filing;

(2) Such person was convicted in a criminal proceeding or is a named subject of a pending criminal proceeding (excluding traffic violations and other minor offenses);

(3) Such person was the subject of any order, judgment, or decree, not subsequently reversed, suspended or vacated, of any court of competent jurisdiction, permanently or temporarily enjoining him from, or otherwise limiting, the following activities:

i.

Acting as a futures commission merchant, introducing broker, commodity trading advisor, commodity pool operator, floor broker, leverage transaction merchant, any other person regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, or an associated person of any of the foregoing, or as an investment adviser, underwriter, broker or dealer in securities, or as an affiliated person, director or employee of any investment company, bank, savings and loan association or insurance company, or engaging in or continuing any conduct or practice in connection with such activity;

ii.

Engaging in any type of business practice; or

iii.

Engaging in any activity in connection with the purchase or sale of any security or commodity or in connection with any violation of Federal or State securities laws or Federal commodities laws;

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(4) Such person was the subject of any order, judgment or decree, not subsequently reversed, suspended or vacated, of any Federal or State authority barring, suspending or otherwise limiting for more than 60 days the right of such person to engage in any activity described in paragraph (f)(3)(i) of this section, or to be associated with persons engaged in any such activity;

(5) Such person was found by a court of competent jurisdiction in a civil action or by the Commission to have violated any Federal or State securities law, and the judgment in such civil action or finding by the Commission has not been subsequently reversed, suspended, or vacated;

(6) Such person was found by a court of competent jurisdiction in a civil action or by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to have violated any Federal commodities law, and the judgment in such civil action or finding by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission has not been subsequently reversed, suspended or vacated;

(7) Such person was the subject of, or a party to, any Federal or State judicial or administrative order, judgment, decree, or finding, not subsequently reversed, suspended or vacated, relating to an alleged violation of:

i.

Any Federal or State securities or commodities law or regulation; or

ii.

Any law or regulation respecting financial institutions or insurance companies including, but not limited to, a temporary or permanent injunction, order of disgorgement or restitution, civil money penalty or temporary or permanent cease-and-desist order, or removal or prohibition order; or

iii.

Any law or regulation prohibiting mail or wire fraud or fraud in connection with any business entity; or

(8) Such person was the subject of, or a party to, any sanction or order, not subsequently reversed, suspended or vacated, of any self-regulatory organization (as defined in Section 3(a)(26) of the Exchange Act (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(26))), any registered entity (as defined in Section 1(a)(29) of the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1(a)(29))), or any equivalent exchange, association, entity or organization that has disciplinary authority over its members or persons associated with a member.

Independence of Directors

The Board of Directors is currently composed of four members.  Mr. Fred E. Tannous, Mr. Tarek N. Shoufani, Mr. Michael J. Portera, and Mr. Eric Manlunas.  Messrs. Tannous, Shoufani and Portera do not qualify as independent Directors in accordance with the published listing requirements of the NASDAQ Global Market as they each hold officer positions.  Mr. Eric Manlunas does qualify as an independent director as he is not an officer of the Company.  The NASDAQ independence definition includes a series of objective tests, such as that the Director is not, and has not been for at least three years, one of the Company’s employees and that neither the Director, nor any of his family members has engaged in various types of business dealings with us.  In addition, the Board of Directors has not made a subjective determination as to each Director that no relationships exist which, in the opinion of the Board of Directors, would interfere with the exercise of independent judgment in carrying out the responsibilities of a Director, though such subjective determination is required by the NASDAQ rules.  Had the Board of Directors made these determinations, the Board of Directors would have reviewed and discussed information provided by the Directors and the Company with regard to each Director’s business and personal activities and relationships as they may relate to the Company and its management.

Committees

We do not currently have an audit, compensation or nominating committee.  The Board of Directors as a whole currently acts as our audit, compensation and nominating committees.  We intend to establish an audit, compensation and nominating committee of our Board of Directors once we expand the Board to include one or more independent directors and intend to adopt a charter for each committee.

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Our audit committee shall be primarily responsible for reviewing the services performed by our independent auditors, evaluating our accounting policies and our system of internal controls.  Our compensation committee shall assist the Board in reviewing and approving the compensation structure, including all forms of compensation, relating to our directors and executive officers and periodically reviewing and approving any long-term incentive compensation or equity plans, programs or similar arrangements.  Our nominating committee shall assist the Board in selecting individuals qualified to become our directors and in determining the composition of the Board and its committees.

Compliance with Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act

Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires our directors and executive officers and persons who beneficially own more than ten percent of a registered class of our equity securities to file with the SEC initial reports of ownership and reports of change in ownership of our common stock and other equity securities. Officers, directors and greater than ten percent stockholders are required by SEC regulations to furnish us with copies of all Section 16(a) forms they file.  Since inception, we have not had a class of equity securities registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.  Hence, compliance with Section 16(a) thereof by our officers and directors is not required.

Risk Oversight

Effective risk oversight is an important priority of the Board of Directors. Because risks are considered in virtually every business decision, the Board of Directors discusses risk throughout the year generally or in connection with specific proposed actions.  The Board of Directors’ approach to risk oversight includes understanding the critical risks in the Company’s business and strategy, evaluating the Company’s risk management processes, allocating responsibilities for risk oversight among the full Board of Directors, and fostering an appropriate culture of integrity and compliance with legal responsibilities.

Corporate Governance

The Company promotes accountability for adherence to honest and ethical conduct; endeavors to provide full, fair, accurate, timely and understandable disclosure in reports and documents that the Company files with the SEC and in other public communications made by the Company; and strives to be compliant with applicable governmental laws, rules and regulations.  The Company has not formally adopted a written code of business conduct and ethics that governs the Company’s employees, officers and Directors as the Company is not required to do so.

In lieu of an Audit Committee, the Company’s Board of Directors is responsible for reviewing and making recommendations concerning the selection of outside auditors, reviewing the scope, results and effectiveness of the annual audit of the Company's financial statements and other services provided by the Company’s independent public accountants.  The Board of Directors reviews the Company's internal accounting controls, practices and policies.

Code of Ethics

Our Board of Directors has not adopted a code of ethics.  We anticipate that we will adopt a code of ethics when we increase either the number of our directors or the number of our employees.

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Item 11. Executive Compensation

Name and Principal Position

Fiscal Year

Ended June 30

Salaries

($)

Bonus

($)

Stock Awards

($)

Option Awards

($)

All Other Compensation

($)

Total

($)

Fred E. Tannous (1)

2025

87,500

-

-

-

62,500

150,000

Director, President & Chief Executive Officer, Treasurer, Secretary

Tarek N. Shoufani (1)

2025

77,000

-

-

-

-

77,000

Director, Chief Operating Officer

Michael J. Portera (1)

2025

41,000

-

-

-

-

41,000

Director, Chief Financial Officer

Eric Manlunas

2025

-

-

-

-

-

-

Director (2)

(1) Officers received a nominal salary during the year, however, a portion of their salary was deferred and accrued; there are no formal employment contracts in place for their employment.

(2) Our outside board member did not receive any compensation. There are no arrangements for any future compensation.

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Narrative Disclosure to Summary Compensation Table

There are no formal contracts in place for employment of any officers.  In addition to the foregoing, there are no employment contracts, compensatory plans or arrangements, including payments to be received from the Company with respect to any executive officer, that would result in payments to such person because of his resignation, retirement or other termination of employment with the Company, or its subsidiaries, any change in control, or a change in the person’s responsibilities following a change in control of the Company.

Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End

There are no current outstanding equity awards to our executive officers.

Long-Term Incentive Plans

There are no arrangements or plans in which we provide pension, retirement or similar benefits for directors or executive officers.

Compensation of Directors

Our directors receive no annual salary or bonus for their service as members of the Company’s board of directors.

Security Holders Recommendations to Board of Directors

Shareholders can direct communications to our Chief Executive Officer, Fred E. Tannous, at our executive offices.  However, while we appreciate all comments from shareholders, we may not be able to individually respond to all communications.  We attempt to address shareholder questions and concerns in our press releases and documents filed with the SEC so that all shareholders have access to information about us at the same time.  Mr. Tannous collects and evaluates all shareholder communications.  All communications addressed to our directors and executive officers will be reviewed by those parties unless the communication is clearly frivolous.

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Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholders Matters

The following table sets forth certain information concerning the number of shares of our common stock owned beneficially as of June 30, 2025, by: (i) each of our directors; (ii) each of our named executive officers; and (iii) each person or group known by us to beneficially own more than 5% of our outstanding shares of common stock, par value $0.001 per share.  Unless otherwise indicated, the shareholders listed below possess sole voting and investment power with respect to the shares they own.  Unless otherwise specified, the address of each of the persons set forth below is care of the Company at the address 2029 Century Park East, Suite 400, Los Angeles, CA 90067.

Beneficial ownership has been determined in accordance with Rule 13d-3 under the Exchange Act.  Under this rule, certain shares may be deemed to be beneficially owned by more than one person (if, for example, persons share the power to vote or the power to dispose of the shares).  In addition, shares are deemed to be beneficially owned by a person if the person has the right to acquire shares (for example, upon exercise of an option or warrant) within 60 days of the date as of which the information is provided.  In computing the percentage ownership of any person, the amount of shares is deemed to include the amount of shares beneficially owned by such person by reason of such acquisition rights.  As a result, the percentage of outstanding shares of any person as shown in the following table does not necessarily reflect the person’s actual voting power at any particular date.

Name and Address of Beneficial Owner

Title of Class

Amount and Nature

of Beneficial

Ownership (1)

Percent (%) of Class (2)

Fred E. Tannous (3)

Common

6,250,000

29.3 %

Tarek N. Shoufani (4)

Common

3,000,000

14.1 %

Eric Manlunas (5)

Common

1,773,000

8.3 %

Michael J. Portera (6)

Common

1,500,000

7.0 %

All Officers, Directors and Beneficial Owners as a Group (4 persons )

Common

12,523,000

58.7 %

(1) The number and percentage of shares beneficially owned is determined under rules of the SEC and the information is not necessarily indicative of beneficial ownership for any other purpose.  Under such rules, beneficial ownership includes any shares as to which the individual has sole or shared voting power or investment power and also any shares, which the individual has the right to acquire within 60 days through the exercise of any stock option or other right.  The persons named in the table have sole voting and investment power with respect to all shares of common stock shown as beneficially owned by them, subject to community property laws where applicable and the information contained in the footnotes to this table.

(2) Based on 21,323,312 issued and outstanding shares of common stock as of June 30, 2025.

(3) Fred E. Tannous is a Director and the Company's President, CEO, Secretary, and Treasurer.  His beneficial ownership includes 6,250,000 common shares.

(4) Tarek Shoufani is a Director and the Company’s Chief Operating Officer.  His beneficial ownership includes 3,000,000 common shares.

(5) Eric Manlunas is member of the Company’s Board of Directors.  His beneficial ownership includes 1,773,000 common shares directly owned.

(6) Michael J. Portera is a Director and the Company’s Chief Financial Officer.  His beneficial ownership includes 1,500,000 common shares directly owned.

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Changes in Control

There are no present arrangements or pledges of the Company’s securities, which may result in a change in control of the Company.

I tem 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence

Related Party Transactions

Related party transactions are measured at the exchange amount, which is the amount of consideration established and agreed to by the related parties.  Related parties are natural persons or other entities that have the ability, directly, or indirectly, to control another party or exercise significant influence over the party in making financial and operating decisions.  Related parties include other parties that are subject to common control or that are subject to common significant influences.

In February 2025, pursuant to terms of a promissory note the Company issued 250,000 shares of its common stock to its chief executive officer as an accommodation for advancing the Company a zero-interest loan in the amount of $30,000.  The loan was repayable within 30 days from date of issuance.  The Company determined the relative fair value of the debt and equity.  As of June 30, 2025, the Company had paid back the loan.

Other than the foregoing, none of the directors or executive officers of the Company, nor any person who owned of record or was known to own beneficially more than 5% of the Company’s outstanding shares of its Common Stock, nor any associate or affiliate of such persons or companies, has any material interest, direct or indirect, in any transaction that has occurred during the past fiscal year, or in any proposed transaction, which has materially affected or will affect the Company.

With regard to any future related party transaction, we plan to fully disclose any and all related party transactions in the following manner:

·

Disclosing such transactions in reports where required;

·

Disclosing in any and all filings with the SEC, where required;

·

Obtaining disinterested directors’ consent; and

·

Obtaining shareholder consent where required.

Review, Approval or Ratification of Transactions with Related Persons

Given our small size and limited financial resources, we have not adopted formal policies and procedures for the review, approval or ratification of transactions, such as those described above, with our executive officers, Directors and significant stockholders.  However, all of the transactions described above were approved and ratified by our Board of Directors.  In connection with the approval of the transactions described above, our Board of Directors, took into account several factors, including their fiduciary duties to the Company; the relationships of the related parties described above to the Company; the material facts underlying each transaction; the anticipated benefits to the Company and related costs associated with such benefits; whether comparable products or services were available; and the terms the Company could receive from an unrelated third party.

We intend to establish formal policies and procedures in the future, once we have sufficient resources and have appointed additional Directors, so that such transactions will be subject to the review, approval or ratification of our Board of Directors, or an appropriate committee thereof.  With regard to any future related party transaction, we plan to fully disclose any and all related party transactions in the following manner:

·

Disclosing such transactions in reports where required;

·

Disclosing in any and all filings with the SEC, where required;

·

Obtaining disinterested directors’ consent; and

·

Obtaining shareholder consent where required.

Director Independence

Quotations for the Company’s common stock are entered on the Over-the-Counter Bulletin Board inter-dealer quotation system, which does not have director independence requirements.  For purposes of determining director independence, the Company applied the definitions set out in NASDAQ Rule 4200(a)(15).  Under NASDAQ Rule 4200(a)(15), a director is not considered to be independent if he or she is also an executive officer or employee of the corporation.  As a result, the Company has one independent director, Eric Manlunas, as our other directors, Fred E. Tannous, Michael Portera, and Tarek Shoufani, are each also an executive officer of the Company.

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Table of Contents

I tem 14. Principal Accountant Fees and Services

Year Ended

June 30, 2025

Year Ended

June 30, 2024

Audit Fees

$ 48,500

$ 54,075

Audit Related Fees

-

-

Tax Preparation

-

-

Other

-

-

Total

$ 48,500

$ 54,075

Audit Fees consist of fees billed for professional services rendered for the audit of our financial statements and review of the interim financial statements included in quarterly reports and services that are normally provided by the above auditors in connection with statutory and regulatory fillings or engagements.

Audit-Related Fees are fees for assurance and related services by the principal accountant that are traditionally performed by the principal accountant and which are reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of the registrant's financial statements and fees attributed to the audit.

In the absence of a formal audit committee, the full Board of Directors pre-approves all audit and non-audit services to be performed by the independent registered public accounting firm in accordance with the rules and regulations promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.  The Board of Directors pre-approved 100% of all services rendered the audit by the independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal periods ended June 30, 2025 and June 30, 2024. There were no non-attest services provided by dbbmckennon.

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Table of Contents

PART IV

I tem 15. Exhibits and Financial Statements.

Exhibit

Number

Description

3.1

Certificate of Incorporation filed with the Delaware Secretary of State on March 14, 2023 (1)

3.2

Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation dated May 9, 2023 (1)

3.3

Bylaws (1)

10.1

Bookkeeping Services Agreement with David E. Tannous, dated March 23, 2023 (2)

10.2

Board Member Consulting Agreement Eric Manlunas, dated May 17, 2023 (2)

10.3

Consulting Agreement with MJP Consulting, LLC, dated June 1, 2023 (2)

10.4

Software Development Agreement with CORSAC Technologies dated October 2, 2023 (2)

10.5

Consulting Agreement with Craig Truempi, dated January 10, 2024 (3)

10.6

Software Support Agreement with i2 Analytics, Inc., dated _February 13, 2025 (*)

10.7

Software Purchase Agreement with i2 Analytics, Inc., dated February 13, 2025 (*)

31.1

Certification of the Principal Executive Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (¥)

31.2

Certification of the Principal Accounting Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (¥)

32.1

Certification of the Principal Executive Officer pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (¥)

32.2

Certification of the Principal Accounting Officer pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (¥)

101.INS

Inline XBRL Instance Document

101.SCH

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document

101.CAL

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document

101.LAB

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Labels Linkbase Document

101.PRE

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document

101.DEF

Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document

104

Cover Page Interactive Data File (formatted as Inline XBRL and contained in Exhibit 101)

(1)

Previously filed as an exhibit to Registration Statement on Form S-1 filed with SEC on September 21, 2023, incorporated herein by reference.

(2)

Previously filed as an exhibit to Registration Statement, as amended, on Form S-1/A filed with the SEC on October 19, 2023, incorporated herein by reference.

(3)

Previously filed as an exhibit to the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, filed with the SEC on October 1, 2024, incorporated herein by reference.

(*)

Filed herewith.

(¥)

This exhibit is being furnished and shall not be deemed to be “filed” for purposes of Section 18 of the Exchange Act, or otherwise subject to the liability of that section, nor shall such exhibit be deemed to be incorporated by reference in any registration statement or other document filed under the Securities Act or the Exchange Act, except as otherwise stated in such filing.

Item 16. Form 10-K Summary

None.

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Table of Contents

S IGNATURES

In accordance with Section 13 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act, the registrant caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

Nexscient, Inc.

Date: September 30, 2025

By:

/s/ Fred E. Tannous

Fred E. Tannous

Chief Executive Officer

(Principal Executive Officer)

Date: September 30, 2025

By:

/s/ Michael J. Portera

Michael J. Portera

Chief Financial Officer

(Principal Accounting Officer)

38

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Part IItem 1. BusinessItem 1. A Risk FactorsItem 1. B Unresolved Staff CommentsItem 2. PropertiesItem 3. Legal ProceedingsItem 4. Mine Safety DisclosuresPart IIItem 5. Market For Registrant S Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases Of EquityItem 6. [reserved]Item 7. Management S Discussion and Analysis Of Financial Condition and Results Of OperationsItem 7. A Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market RiskItem 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary DataNote 1 Organization and Description Of BusinessNote 2 Summary Of Significant Accounting PoliciesNote 3 Going ConcernNote 4 Convertible DebenturesNote 5 Stockholders Equity (deficit)Note 6 Commitments and ContingenciesNote 7 Related Party TransactionsNote 8 Income TaxesNote 9 Subsequent EventsItem 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial DisclosureItem 9. A Controls and ProceduresItem 9. B Other InformationItem 9. C Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdiction The Prevent InspectionPart IIIItem 10. Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate GovernanceItem 11. Executive CompensationItem 12. Security Ownership Of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholders MattersItem 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director IndependenceItem 14. Principal Accountant Fees and ServicesPart IVItem 15. Exhibits and Financial StatementsItem 16. Form 10-k Summary

Exhibits

3.1 Certificate of Incorporation filed with the Delaware Secretary of State on March 14, 2023(1) 3.2 Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation dated May 9, 2023(1) 3.3 Bylaws(1) 10.1 Bookkeeping Services Agreement with David E. Tannous, dated March 23, 2023(2) 10.2 Board Member Consulting Agreement Eric Manlunas, dated May 17, 2023(2) 10.3 Consulting Agreement with MJP Consulting, LLC, dated June 1, 2023(2) 10.4 Software Development Agreement with CORSAC Technologies dated October 2, 2023(2) 10.5 Consulting Agreement with Craig Truempi, dated January 10, 2024(3) 10.6 Software Support Agreement with i2 Analytics, Inc., dated _February 13, 2025(*) 10.7 Software Purchase Agreement with i2 Analytics, Inc., dated February 13, 2025(*) 31.1 Certification of the Principal Executive Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002() 31.2 Certification of the Principal Accounting Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002() 32.1 Certification of the Principal Executive Officer pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002() 32.2 Certification of the Principal Accounting Officer pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002()