Company: BUDZ
Filing Date: 2025-03-31
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0001096906-25-000350
Chunk: 93

Company: WEED, INC.
Filing Date: 2025-03-31
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 1A
Chunk 93
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 and could cause us to spend substantial sums on legal fees even if we are eventually successful
in the litigation.

We have several opportunities
that we may not be able to take advantage of or close without substantial funding.

As detailed elsewhere in
this Annual Report we have several business opportunities that we either cannot continue or cannot begin without raising substantial funds
either in this Offering or through other sources. Notably, we have closed on the golf course property in New York and we have an opportunity
to enter the hemp and infused beverage market since the property has water extraction rights. However, like our other business opportunities
we will need to raise substantial funds to execute on these business plans.

Our common stock has
been thinly traded and we cannot predict the extent to which a trading market will develop.

Our common stock is traded
on the OTC Markets’ “OTCQB” tier. Our common stock is thinly traded compared to larger more widely known companies.
Thinly traded common stock can be more volatile than common stock trading in an active public market. We cannot predict the extent to
which an active public market for our common stock will develop or be sustained after this Offering.

Because we are subject
to the “penny stock” rules, the level of trading activity in our stock may be reduced.

Our common stock is traded
on the OTC Markets’ “OTCQB” tier. Broker-dealer practices in connection with transactions in “penny stocks”
are regulated by certain penny stock rules adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Penny stocks, like shares of our common
stock, generally are equity securities with a price of less than $5.00, other than securities registered on certain national securities
exchanges or quoted on NASDAQ. The penny stock rules require a broker-dealer, prior to a transaction in a penny stock not otherwise exempt
from the rules, to deliver a standardized risk disclosure document that provides information about penny stocks and the nature and level
of risks in the penny stock market. The broker-dealer also must provide the customer with current bid and offer quotations for the penny
stock, the compensation of the broker-dealer and its salesperson in the transaction, and, if the broker-dealer is the sole market maker,
the broker-dealer must disclose this fact and the broker-dealer’s presumed control over the market, and monthly account statements
showing the market value of each penny stock held in the customer’s account. In addition, broker-dealers who sell these securities
to persons other than established customers