ADCT Auditor History
ADCT — not currently in DredgeCap's filing cache
DredgeCap doesn't have ADCT's SEC filings in its cache yet, so it can't make a auditor identity and history determination for ADCT. Coverage is concentrated on OTC and small/mid-cap issuers — the names where filing-level distress is least surfaced elsewhere — and ADCT sits outside that set for now. Read this as "unknown", not "clear": the absence here is a coverage gap, not a clean result, and it shouldn't be taken as evidence ADCT carries no related risk. ADCT's full filing history is on SEC EDGAR if you need to review the underlying disclosures before DredgeCap covers the name.
View: ADCT on SEC EDGAR.
What ADCT's Auditor Relationship Tells You
The independent auditor signs off on a public company's financial statements every year — issuing an opinion on whether those statements present fairly the company's financial position. Auditor identity, tenure, and opinion type are structural risk signals that institutional investors evaluate before relying on any reported numbers.
Auditor tenure is one of the most-watched signals. Very short tenure (under 3 years) can signal a recent change — sometimes routine, sometimes prompted by audit disagreements or fee disputes. Very long tenure (over 20 years) can raise independence concerns under SEC rotation guidance, though there is no mandatory rotation rule in the United States.
Opinion type is the binary signal. A clean unqualified opinion is what investors expect; any deviation — explanatory paragraph, going-concern doubt, qualified opinion — is a material disclosure that should be read carefully.
For broader context on ADCT's risk profile, see the ADCT Overview, the Going Concern page, or the Dilution page.