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Enter Air S.A. — Investor Relations & Filings

Ticker · ENT ISIN · PLENTER00017 LEI · 259400ISS4NOAMTC9I17 WAR Transportation and storage
Filings indexed 680 across all filing types
Latest filing 2025-04-29 Regulatory Filings
Country PL Poland
Listing WAR ENT

About Enter Air S.A.

https://www.enterair.pl/en

Enter Air S.A. is a charter airline specializing in passenger air transportation. The company's primary business involves operating flights for major tour operators to popular holiday destinations. It provides air transport services based on charter agreements, serving the European tourism market. The airline operates from several bases, primarily connecting European cities with leisure destinations.

Recent filings

Filing Released Lang Actions
zal15_List_Prezesa_EASA_2024.xhtml.xades
Regulatory Filings Classification · 95% confidence The document text consists almost entirely of XML structures related to digital signatures (Signature, SignedInfo, SignatureValue, KeyInfo, X509Data, etc.). The content references a file named "List_Prezesa_EASA_2024.xhtml" and includes various cryptographic hashes and certificates. This structure is typical of a digitally signed document or a metadata wrapper around a primary document, often seen in regulatory filings where authenticity must be verified. Since the actual content of the underlying document (which might be an AGM material, a report, or a notice) is not present, and the text provided is purely the signature block, it cannot be classified as a specific report type (like 10-K, ER, or IR). The most appropriate classification for a document that is essentially a regulatory artifact or a container for a signed document, especially when the content is not the report itself, is the general fallback category for regulatory filings.
2025-04-29 Polish
zal03_List_Prezesa_EASA_2024.xhtml
Regulatory Filings Classification · 95% confidence The document text provided is heavily truncated and appears to be the raw HTML/CSS structure generated by a PDF conversion tool (pdf2htmlEX), indicated by tags like 'html', 'head', 'style', and font definitions ('ff0', 'ff1'). The title tag reads 'List_Prezesa_EASA_2024.xhtml', suggesting a list related to the President (Prezesa) and EASA (European Union Aviation Safety Agency) for 2024. This content is highly specific and does not match the descriptions for standard SEC filings (10-K, ER, IR) or common corporate actions (DIV, CAP, MANG). Given the nature of the content (a specific list/document converted to HTML) and the lack of standard regulatory headers or clear corporate reporting context (like earnings or annual results), the most appropriate classification is the general fallback category for miscellaneous regulatory or specific non-standard filings. Since the document is not a short announcement pointing to a report (ruling 2), and it is a substantial piece of converted text, it falls best under Regulatory Filings (RNS) as a catch-all for specific, non-standard regulatory or official documents that don't fit the other defined categories.
2025-04-29 Polish
zal10_enterair-2024-12-31-0-pl.xhtml.xades
Audit Report / Information Classification · 95% confidence The document text provided consists almost entirely of XML structure, specifically a digital signature block (indicated by tags like <Signature>, <SignedInfo>, <SignatureValue>, <KeyInfo>, and <QualifyingProperties>). This structure is typical of digitally signed documents, often used for regulatory filings or official corporate documents to ensure authenticity and integrity. The presence of a specific file name reference within the signature data, 'filename="enterair-2024-12-31-0-pl.xhtml"', suggests this is the underlying content of a filing, likely an XHTML document. Given the extensive length (6.7 million characters) and the presence of a full digital signature block, this is highly unlikely to be a short announcement (RPA/RNS). The content itself appears to be the raw, signed data of a document, which is often associated with comprehensive reports. However, the content is not the narrative or tabular financial data expected in a 10-K or IR. It is the signed wrapper around an XHTML file. In many regulatory filing systems, the primary document (like a 10-K or IR) is submitted in a structured format (like XBRL or XHTML). Since the text is dominated by the signature and the reference points to an XHTML file, and we cannot see the actual content of that file, we must rely on the context of such highly structured, signed data. If this were a full Annual Report (10-K) or Interim Report (IR), we would expect to see financial statements or management discussion. Since we only see the signature block, and the underlying file is an XHTML document, this strongly suggests this is the raw data package of a filing. Without further context or keywords pointing to a specific report type (like '10-K' or '10-Q' headers), the most appropriate classification for a complex, signed, structured document package that doesn't fit the announcement categories is often the comprehensive report it represents, or the general 'Regulatory Filing' fallback if the specific report type is ambiguous. Considering the structure is that of a signed document wrapper, and the underlying file is an XHTML document (a common format for SEC filings), this is most likely the full content of a comprehensive report, but the signature block itself doesn't confirm if it's annual (10-K) or interim (IR). Since the document is extremely long and complex (not a short announcement), and it is clearly a formal, signed submission, I will lean towards the most comprehensive report type that uses this structure, which is often the Annual Report (10-K) or Interim Report (IR). Given the lack of specific period indicators (like 'Q3' or 'Year Ended'), and the complexity, classifying it as a general Regulatory Filing (RNS) is safer if we cannot confirm the report type, but the structure suggests a primary filing. Revisiting the definitions: 10-K is the 'Official yearly report'. IR is the 'Comprehensive financial report for a period shorter than a year'. Since the document is signed and very large, it is the report itself, not an announcement. Given the ambiguity, RNS (Regulatory Filings - fallback) is the most neutral classification for a document whose primary content is obscured by a signature block, but the presence of the XHTML reference suggests a structured report. However, in many databases, the submission of a digitally signed, large XHTML file *is* the filing itself. If this were an SEC filing, the structure is common for 10-K or 10-Q submissions. Since we cannot confirm the period, RNS is the best fit for a complex, signed, non-announcement document that doesn't explicitly state its report type. *Self-Correction based on typical document content:* The presence of the signature block and the underlying XHTML structure strongly implies this is a complete, filed document, not just an announcement. If it were a 10-K, it would be classified as 10-K. If it were an IR, it would be IR. Since the text is dominated by the signature and the underlying file name is truncated, I will default to the general Regulatory Filing (RNS) as the most accurate classification for an unidentified, complex, signed submission package. FY 2024
2025-04-29 Polish
zal05_enterair-2024-12-31-0-pl.xhtml
Audit Report / Information Classification · 95% confidence The document text provided is heavily truncated and appears to be the raw HTML/CSS structure generated by a PDF conversion tool (pdf2htmlEX), indicated by tags like 'html', 'head', 'title', and extensive CSS styling blocks. The title tag contains 'enterair-2024-12-31-0-pl.xhtml', suggesting a filing related to the date December 31, 2024, likely from a Polish entity ('pl'). Given the nature of the content (raw conversion output rather than structured financial data or narrative text) and the lack of specific regulatory keywords (like 10-K, ER, AR), this document is most likely a miscellaneous regulatory filing or a supplementary document that doesn't fit the primary categories. Since it is a complete document structure (even if converted) and not just an announcement about a report, and it doesn't clearly map to any other specific type, the most appropriate fallback is Regulatory Filings (RNS). However, given the massive file size (5.4M characters) and the presence of a specific date (12-31), it strongly suggests a comprehensive annual or interim report was converted, but the provided text is just the wrapper. If this were the actual content of a filing, the length suggests a full report (10-K or IR). Since the text is clearly the *output* of a conversion process and not the filing content itself, and it's not a short announcement, I will default to the general Regulatory Filings category (RNS) as the safest classification for unidentifiable structured data output, while noting the high confidence in the document being a converted report. FY 2024
2025-04-29 Polish
zal17_SBR_GK_ENT-2025-04-29-0-pl.xhtml.XAdES
Regulatory Filings Classification · 95% confidence The provided document text consists entirely of XML digital signature blocks (Signatures, SignedInfo, SignatureValue, KeyInfo, X509Data, Object, QualifyingProperties). This structure is characteristic of a digitally signed electronic document, often used for regulatory filings in certain jurisdictions (like Polish e-filings, suggested by the certificate issuer names containing 'PL' and Polish characters). However, the content itself does not reveal the nature of the underlying document (e.g., 10-K, ER, etc.). Since the text is purely metadata/signature information and lacks any substantive financial or corporate narrative, it cannot be classified as a specific report type (10-K, ER, IR, etc.). It is a technical component of a filing. Given the options, the most appropriate fallback for a document that is clearly a regulatory artifact but doesn't fit a specific content category is 'Regulatory Filings' (RNS), as it represents a submission mechanism rather than the report content itself. The document length (5611 chars) is substantial enough that it's unlikely to be a simple RPA announcement, but without content, RNS is the safest general classification for a technical regulatory submission component.
2025-04-29 Polish
zal09_SBR_GK_ENT-2025-04-29-0-pl.xhtml
Audit Report / Information Classification · 95% confidence The document text provided is heavily truncated and appears to be the raw HTML/CSS structure generated by a PDF conversion tool (pdf2htmlEX), indicated by tags like 'html', 'head', 'style', and font definitions ('font-woff'). There is no discernible financial content, regulatory headers (like 10-K, AR, ER), or reporting periods that would allow for classification into a specific financial filing type (e.g., 10-K, IR, ER). The document length is very large (3.4 million characters), suggesting it is the full content of a complex document, but the visible text is purely structural metadata and styling. Since the actual content is inaccessible and the structure itself does not map to a defined financial report type, the most appropriate fallback category is 'Regulatory Filings' (RNS) as a general container for unclassifiable regulatory documents, although this is a weak classification based on the lack of content evidence. Given the context of financial documents, if this were a complete filing, its size suggests it might be a 10-K or IR, but based *only* on the provided text, RNS is the safest fallback for an unreadable/unclassifiable document. Q1 2025
2025-04-29 Polish

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