Forward-Looking Statements
Last updated: 2026-06-12 ยท Effective: 2026-06-12
1. Words that signal forward-looking statements
Words such as "plan", "expect", "target", "intend", "believe", "estimate", "project", "roadmap", "may", "could", "should", "designed to", "potentially", and similar terms identify statements that are not historical facts.
Forward-looking statements may appear in public pages, investor decks, distributor materials, roadmap pages, press materials, demos, videos, presentations, emails, and data-room summaries. The format of the statement does not change its status: a chart, animation, quote, KPI card, or scenario model can still be forward-looking.
2. Important risks
- Code-review, engineering, testing, AHJ, and product-approval timelines may change.
- Manufacturing, tooling, raw-material, labor, logistics, and quality systems may not scale as planned.
- Capital availability, investor qualification, securities-law compliance, and definitive documents may affect financing outcomes.
- Market adoption by builders, home buyers, distributors, governments, insurers, lenders, and strategic partners is uncertain.
- Future financing or mortgage-related tools require licensed partners, consumer-finance compliance, and counsel review.
Illustrative models may use assumptions about block pricing, demand, conversion, margins, licensing, territory economics, adoption speed, project timing, or exit valuation. Those models are tools for discussion, not promises that any order, territory, distribution, dividend, liquidity event, or valuation will occur.
3. No duty to update
Lok-N-Blok does not undertake any obligation to update a forward-looking statement except as required by law or by a signed agreement. Current investor materials, product documents, and signed agreements control over older public pages.
4. Investor and partner reliance
Prospective investors, distributors, builders, strategic partners, lenders, and customers should not rely on public roadmap language alone. Final decisions should be based on current diligence materials, signed contracts, technical review, counsel review, financial advice, and the counterparty's own independent investigation.