Company: FGMCU
Filing Date: 2025-11-13
Form Type: 425
Source: 0001104659-25-111079
Chunk: 1

Company: FG Merger II Corp.
Filing Date: 2025-11-13
Form: 425
Chunk 1
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 billion combination
in August. Galiano explains how BOXABL has found an edge in how it ships its modular homes, and how it hopes to eventually manufacture
them at a rate of one house per minute.

Larry explains how BOXABL’s a unique crowdfunding
path, gives FG Meger II to confidence in the company's journey after listing, and how adding a financial services angle to the platform
could potentially take it to the next level. Take a listen.

So Galiano. How did the idea for your Casitas
first come about, and how have they evolved since you got this thing going?

Galiano Tiramani: Well, we have a really
big vision to fix housing, and it goes far beyond the Casita. Our plan is to mass produce housing on an epic scale, in a factory or an
assembly line. But we see that that's how all modern products are manufactured, for the most part, except housing. Housing is still being
done by craftsmen in a custom manner, one by one onsite.

Very inefficient, very slow. The goal for BOXABL
really is to put out one house per minute, because that's what they do with automobiles. A Ford factory or a Tesla factory is putting
out one car per minute, and it's harder to build a car than a house. So, all the technology is out there. And if we can make it work with
housing, we think it leads to dramatically lower cost and housing for people and increase supply and frankly, a really big win and a really
big upside.

Nick Clayton: And Larry, so what drew you
to BOXABL after your earlier SPAC deals were largely in financial services?

Larry Swets Jr.:Yeah. Great question.
I actually have a passion for affordable housing and just kind of housing in general. And so it was something I've always had an interest
in. In fact, the first time I ever met the BOXABL folks was at the builders convention in Vegas right before Covid in 2020. I was there
working on another project that was actually a board member of a publicly traded homebuilder, and I just became fascinated with product
when I saw it.

I had an interest in kind of modular homes and
shipping containers utilizing shipping containers in the building process. And, you know, personally, I actually built my own addition
to my house in 2000. And I was blown away by the fact that I used a textbook from 1950 to build