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ATLANTA, April 17, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Vaycaychella, Inc. (OTC Pink: VAYK) ("VAYK") management announced today that the company has amended its annual report to correct a major clerical error, now reporting $668K in operating revenue for the fiscal year 2024. The amended report was filed yesterday.
"We acquired a renovation service company in 2024 and were supposed to consolidate its financials," explained Stephanie Anderl, Interim CEO of VAYK. "However, in the final hours of meeting the deadline, some people mistakenly gave a draft version the same file name as the correct version, and then another person uploaded that version into our filing. The reported version, hence, did not consolidate the new acquisition."
The amended disclosure reported approximately $668,000 in revenue for the year 2024, with an operating profit of approximately $71,000. Additionally, the company realized approximately $320K profit from selling its legacy assets in Cuba. After deducting costs, the company reported approximately $309,000 in net profit.
This marks the second consecutive year that the company has reported a net profit since its new management took over.
Several Other Key Points
Anderl highlighted several other key points contained in the annual report:
"First of all, the company has increased its total assets to about $2.9 million, compared to $1.8 million a year ago. That is a $1.1 million increase. Meanwhile, our liabilities only increased by approximately $367,000. In short, we were able to grow our business with less borrowing."
"Secondly, the company has restructured its debt and significantly decreased its interest expense. It paid only about $81K in interest in 2024, compared to $236K in interest payments in 2023."
"Our cash position has also moderately improved," says Anderl. "By the end of 2024, we had $27K cash in our hands. In comparison, we had zero cash in our bank account by the end of 2023."
A Huge Turnaround
"This is a huge turnaround," emphasized Anderl. "Three years ago, this company was a sinking ship, in deep debt of over $3 million and at risk of completely losing its overseas investment. Since the new management team took over, we have eliminated $2.55 million in debt, of which about $2.37 million was complete forgiveness or cancellation; we have sold our legacy investment overseas for a $320K profit; we have secured a joint-venture agreement to renovate and operate the famous Rufus Rose House, a downtown Atlanta historic landmark; and, we have closed an acquisition of a property renovation company with over $600K in annual revenue. Most importantly, we have achieved all of this without using any toxic debt financing. In particular, we have not issued any free trade shares for more than three years."