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SmartCraft ASA — Investor Relations & Filings

Ticker · SMCRT ISIN · NO0011008971 LEI · 5493008ELCGPWZHWUX47 OL Telecommunications, computer programming, consultancy, computing infrastructure, and other information service activities
Filings indexed 501 across all filing types
Latest filing 2024-02-07 Transaction in Own Shar…
Country NO Norway
Listing OL SMCRT

About SmartCraft ASA

https://smartcraft.com/

SmartCraft ASA provides Software as a Service (SaaS) solutions tailored for craftsmen and companies within the construction sector. The company's offerings are designed to enhance operational efficiency, profitability, and overall business control by simplifying work processes. Its software portfolio includes a range of tools for project execution, covering planning, cost control, and progress tracking. SmartCraft also delivers solutions for quality and safety management, which encompass project communication, inspections, and risk management. The platform provides a unified view of business operations to support data-driven decision-making for various segments, including general construction, installation, and specialized contractors.

Recent filings

Filing Released Lang Actions
SmartCraft ASA (SMCRT) - Transactions carried out under the share buy-back program
Transaction in Own Shares Classification · 95% confidence The document text consists almost entirely of tabular data showing trade volumes, prices in NOK, total values, and transaction timestamps/venues (XOSL). This structure strongly suggests a record of stock transactions or market activity. This type of data is characteristic of insider trading reports (Director's Dealing) or general transaction reports. Since the data is raw trade data without explicit context indicating it's a director's personal filing (DIRS) or a general regulatory filing (RNS), and it doesn't fit any other financial reporting category (like 10-K, ER, IR), the most appropriate classification for raw transaction data that might relate to insider activity or significant share movements, in the absence of a specific 'Trade Report' code, is often related to share transactions or insider reporting. However, looking closely at the definitions, 'Director's Dealing' (DIRS) is for personal transactions by directors, and 'Transaction in Own Shares' (POS) is for the company buying/selling its own shares. Since this appears to be general market trade data (volume, price, venue), and not explicitly a company repurchase or a director's filing, it most closely resembles data that would be part of a broader regulatory disclosure or a data dump. Given the options, if this data represents transactions that must be reported, and it's not clearly a company repurchase (POS), it falls into the general regulatory disclosure category. However, if we interpret this as a report detailing transactions that *could* be insider trades, DIRS is a possibility, but the data lacks the required signatory/reporting context. If this is a raw data feed or a supplement, XLSX might apply, but the format is text-based tables. Given the nature of the data (high frequency trades with volume/price), and the lack of a specific 'Trade Report' code, the closest fit among the provided options that covers transaction reporting, especially if it's related to insider activity or significant ownership changes that are being disclosed, is often DIRS or RNS. Since it's raw trade data, and not a formal narrative report, RNS (General regulatory announcements/fallback) is a safe choice, but DIRS specifically relates to share transactions by insiders. Without more context (like a header stating 'Form 4' or 'Director's Transaction'), RNS is the most neutral fallback for raw, non-standard report data. Let's re-evaluate: If this data is extracted from a filing that reports insider trades, it should be DIRS. If it's just general market data, RNS. Given the context of financial document classification, this data strongly suggests a report *about* transactions. Since 'Transaction in Own Shares' (POS) is for the company, and 'Director's Dealing' (DIRS) is for executives, and this looks like raw trade data, I will lean towards RNS as the fallback for non-standard, data-heavy disclosures that don't fit the narrative reports, unless it is explicitly a director's filing. Given the high volume of trades listed across multiple dates, it is more likely a general market data report or a regulatory filing that aggregates trades, making RNS the most appropriate fallback.
2024-02-07 English
SmartCraft ASA (SMCRT) - Transactions carried out under the share buy-back program
Transaction in Own Shares Classification · 100% confidence The document explicitly details 'Transactions carried out under the share buy-back program' for SmartCraft ASA. It provides specific dates, volumes, and prices for the repurchase of own shares. This directly corresponds to the definition of 'Transaction in Own Shares' (POS), which covers share repurchases. Although the document mentions an 'Appendix' is attached, the core content is the transaction report itself, not merely an announcement of a report's publication (which would suggest RPA or RNS). The length (2482 chars) is sufficient to contain the primary data, making POS the most accurate classification over RPA.
2024-02-07 English
SmartCraft ASA (SMCRT) - Invitation to presentation of fourth quarter 2023 results
Report Publication Announcement Classification · 98% confidence The document is an invitation from SmartCraft ASA regarding the publication of its fourth quarter 2023 financial report and an accompanying webcast presentation scheduled for February 14, 2024. It explicitly mentions the release of the 'Q4 2023 presentation material' and invites investors to a 'webcast presentation of the report'. Since the document itself is an announcement about the upcoming release of reports and presentations, and not the full report or the presentation material itself, it fits the definition of a Report Publication Announcement (RPA). The document length (2212 chars) is short, supporting the RPA classification over the full report (10-K or IR).
2024-02-07 English
SmartCraft ASA (SMCRT) - Transactions carried out under the share buy-back program
Transaction in Own Shares Classification · 95% confidence The document text provided is extremely short (275 characters) and consists only of a small table showing trade volumes, prices, values, dates, and venues (XOSL). This format strongly suggests a data feed or a very brief regulatory notification about specific transactions or market activity, rather than a comprehensive report (like 10-K, IR, or ER). Since it does not fit the specific definitions for Director's Dealing (DIRS), Share Issue (SHA), or Transaction in Own Shares (POS), and it is not an announcement of a larger report (RPA), the most appropriate fallback category for miscellaneous, short regulatory data or market notices is Regulatory Filings (RNS).
2024-01-17 English
SmartCraft ASA (SMCRT) - Transactions carried out under the share buy-back program
Transaction in Own Shares Classification · 100% confidence The document explicitly details 'Transactions carried out under the share buy-back program' for SmartCraft ASA. It provides specific dates, volumes, and prices for shares purchased by the company itself. This directly corresponds to the definition of 'Transaction in Own Shares' (POS), which covers share repurchase programs. The document length is short (2430 chars), but it is a direct report of the transaction activity, not merely an announcement that a report is attached, making POS a more specific fit than RPA or RNS.
2024-01-17 English
SmartCraft ASA (SMCRT) - Transactions carried out under the share buy-back program
Transaction in Own Shares Classification · 95% confidence The document consists entirely of tabular data showing trade volumes, prices (in NOK), values, dates, and venues (XOSL). This structure strongly suggests a record of transactions or market activity. None of the provided definitions (10-K, ER, IR, etc.) fit this raw transaction data format. The closest category that might encompass raw, non-narrative financial data, especially if it relates to capital structure or ownership changes (though this looks more like trading data), is difficult to assign definitively. However, since the data shows specific trade executions (Volume, Price, Value) over several days in late December 2023 and early January 2024, it is most likely raw data that would typically be attached to a regulatory filing or provided as supplementary material. Given the options, and recognizing this is not a formal report narrative, it most closely resembles supplementary data, but the format is not explicitly an XLSX file. If this data represents insider trading, it would be DIRS, but without context, it looks like general market activity data. Since it is raw data, and not a formal report announcement, the best fit among the specific categories is difficult. If this data were part of a larger filing detailing share transactions, it might support POS or DIRS. Given the lack of narrative and the tabular nature of trade records, and considering the available codes, this is most likely raw data that would be part of a larger disclosure. Since it is not a formal report, and doesn't fit the specific corporate actions, I will default to the most general data/supplementary category that isn't a narrative report. However, if this data represents insider transactions (Director's Dealing), DIRS would be appropriate. If it represents the company buying back shares (Transaction in Own Shares), POS would be appropriate. Since the data is just raw trade logs without context identifying the buyer/seller as the company or a director, and it is not a formal report, I will classify it as a general Regulatory Filing (RNS) as a fallback for raw, unclassified data, or consider if it strongly implies a specific action. Given the context of financial filings, raw trade logs often relate to insider activity (DIRS) or share repurchases (POS). Without explicit context, RNS is the safest fallback for unclassified raw data, but I will check if it strongly resembles a known data dump. Since it is raw trade data, and not a formal report, I will lean towards RNS as the catch-all for unclassified data dumps, as it doesn't fit the narrative definitions well. Re-evaluating: This looks like a trade log, which is often disclosed as part of insider trading reports (DIRS) or share repurchase reports (POS). Since it lacks context, RNS is the most neutral fallback for raw, unclassified data that isn't a standard report. I will use RNS.
2024-01-08 English

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