Kadestone Capital Corp. Reports Q1 2025 Financial Results
Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - May 26, 2025) - Kadestone Capital Corp. (TSXV: KDSX) (OTCQB: KDCCF) ("Kadestone" or the "Company"), a vertically integrated property company today announced its financial results for the three months ended March 31, 2025.
Financial Results
For the three months ended March 31, 2025, the Company reported a net loss of $858,756, or $0.02 per share, compared to a net loss of $1,103,796, or $0.02 per share, for the same period in the prior year. The decreased loss was primarily driven by operating expenses including salaries and wages of $460,155, consulting fees of $458,083 and interest expense of $257,354. These expenses were partially offset by income from associates totaling $423,704 and income from an investment in a mortgage fund amounting to $115,146.
Net cash used in operating activities also increased, rising to $1,700,161 for the three months ended March 31, 2025, compared to $966,500 in the prior year, reflecting the higher level of operational spending during the period.
The above unaudited financial information, including comparative information, is expressed in Canadian dollars and has been prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, using the accounting policies and methods of application as described in notes 2 and 3 of the Company's audited consolidated financial statements for the years ended December 31, 2024, and 2023.
About Attollo Management Inc.
Attollo Management Inc. is a private real estate development and management firm founded by David Negrin. The company specializes in urban redevelopment projects and is committed to building strong partnerships with Indigenous communities to deliver sustainable, community-driven developments.
About Kadestone
Kadestone was established to pursue the investment in, acquisition, development and management of residential and commercial income producing properties, and procurement and sale of building materials within major urban centres and high-growth, emerging markets in Canada. The Company operates five complimentary business lines spanning building materials procurement and supply, property development and construction, construction finance, asset ownership and property management. These synergistic business lines have solidified Kadestone's vision to become a market leading vertically integrated property company. Additional information can be found at www.kadestone.com.
For further information please contact David Negus, CFO, Kadestone Capital Corp., dnegus@kadestone.com, 604 671-8142
ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD
(signed) "Brent Billey"
President, CEO and Director
Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.
Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward- Looking Statements
Certain information in this press release, including, but not limited to, the Company's ability to identify opportunities and secure additional investments in 2025 and the Company's vision to become a leading vertically integrated property company, may constitute forward looking information (collectively, "forward-looking statements"), which can be identified by the use of terms such as "may," "will," "should," "expect," "anticipate," "project," "estimate," "intend," "continue" or "believe" (or the negatives) or other similar variations. Because of various risks and uncertainties, including those referenced below, actual events or results may differ materially from those reflected or contemplated in such forward-looking statements. As a result, you should not rely on such forward-looking statements. Additional information identifying assumptions, risks and uncertainties relating to Kadestone is contained in Kadestone's filings with the Canadian securities regulators available at www.sedarplus.ca. These risks include those described in the "Risk Factors" section of the Company's final prospectus dated September 2, 2020, and in the Management's Discussion and Analysis for the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023. The forward-looking statements in this press release are applicable only as of the date of this release or as of the date specified in the relevant forward-looking statement. The Company has no intention and undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by applicable law.
NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION TO U.S. NEWSWIRE SERVICES OR FOR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES
To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/253435
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Associated Press
an hour ago
- Associated Press
Florida Panthers-Edmonton Oilers Stanley Cup Final by the numbers
The Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers meet again in the Stanley Cup Final, a cross-continental showdown of the NHL's last teams left standing. The Panthers are aiming to be back-to-back champions, while Oilers captain Connor McDavid is looking to hoist the Cup for the first time in his dominant career. Game 1 is Wednesday night at Edmonton. Here's a look at the series by the numbers: 11 This is the 11th rematch in the final in league history and the first since Pittsburgh and Detroit in 2009. Edmonton and the New York Islanders also had one in 1984. Each of those series saw the result flip from the previous year. The other two rematches since the expansion era began in 1967 were Montreal sweeps of Boston in 1977 and '78 and St. Louis in '68 and '69. 3 The Panthers are in the final for a third consecutive season, matching cross-state rival Tampa Bay's trio of trips from 2020-22. The Lightning won back to back on their first two runs, then lost their third to Colorado. Since Paul Maurice was hired as coach and Florida acquired Matthew Tkachuk in a trade in the summer of 2022, the team has won 10 of 11 playoff series. 51 McDavid and longtime running mate Leon Draisaitl lead all scorers in the playoffs with 26 and 25 points, respectively. This is their seventh playoff run together and the sixth year in a row. Since their postseason debuts in 2017, McDavid has 143 points and Draisaitl 133, first and second of all players in that time. All that is missing is the Stanley Cup. 2.11 Sergei Bobrovsky has again backstopped the Panthers to the final, going 12-5 with a 2.11 goals-against average and .912 save percentage through three rounds. Counterpart Stuart Skinner lost his starting job after allowing 11 goals in Games 1 and 2 of the first round and only got it back in the second when Calvin Pickard was injured. Since returning to the net, Skinner is 6-2 with a 1.73 GAA and a .931 save percentage. 2,543 The 2,543 miles (4,092 kilometers) between Sunrise, Florida, and Edmonton, Alberta, is — for the second year in a row — the longest distance between finalists in NHL history. It's a roughly six-hour flight each way for the teams, which will be especially challenging going back to western Canada for Game 5 without an extra travel day after Game 4. ___ AP NHL playoffs: and

Associated Press
an hour ago
- Associated Press
Blue Jays RHP Scherzer throws live BP, could pitch in minor league game this weekend
TORONTO (AP) — Blue Jays right-hander Max Scherzer threw 40 pitches of live batting practice Tuesday and could pitch in a minor league game this weekend, manager John Schneider said. A three-time Cy Young Award winner, Scherzer left his debut start with the Blue Jays against Baltimore on March 29 after three innings because of soreness in his right lat muscle. The next day, Toronto put Scherzer on the injured list because of inflammation in his thumb. The 40-year-old Scherzer signed a one-year, $15.5 million deal with the Blue Jays in February. He went 2-4 with a 3.95 ERA in nine starts for Texas last season, starting the year on the injured list while recovering from lower back surgery. He also had a stint on the IL with shoulder fatigue and didn't pitch after Sept. 14 because of a left hamstring strain. Scherzer has had two cortisone injections this season to relieve inflammation in his thumb. He was transferred to the 60-day injured list last month, but became eligible to return May 29. Schneider said Scherzer is expected to pitch in either a simulated game or a Florida Complex League game on Sunday. The next step would be a minor league rehab assignment. Scherzer won World Series titles with Washington in 2019 and Texas in 2023. He won his first Cy Young Award after going 21-3 with a 2.90 ERA in 32 starts for Detroit in 2013. The eight-time All-Star earned consecutive NL Cy Young Awards with Washington in 2016 and 2017. Schneider said slugger Anthony Santander had an injection to relieve pain in his sore left shoulder, adding that Santander will take five to seven days off before resuming baseball activity. Santander went on the 10-day IL on Friday . Also Tuesday, the Blue Jays activated infielder Andrés Giménez (right quad) off the 10-day injured list, while catcher Tyler Heineman was activated off the seven-day concussion injured list. To make room on the roster, infielder Michael Stefanic and catcher Ali Sánchez were designated for assignment. ___ AP MLB:


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Sam Bennett is a perfect fit on Panthers, ‘the definition of a playoff player' — would he walk away?
EDMONTON, Alberta — For Sam Bennett, appearing in the Stanley Cup Final is no longer a goal. It's become the norm. Bennett has played for the Florida Panthers for four full seasons and parts of five. In the past three, he has reached the Cup Final. On Wednesday night, with the rest of his close-knit teammates, he will begin vying for a second consecutive title in a rematch against childhood teammate, Connor McDavid, and the Edmonton Oilers. Advertisement 'It's just the expectation now,' Bennett said of reaching this moment. 'I think this whole organization, right from the management to the coaches, the players, all the way down to every single guy — the training staff, everyone — we all have that same expectation that we're going to fight for the Stanley Cup. 'Anything less than that is not good enough. That's our whole organization's mindset.' Between comments like that and scenes like the one on the bench near the end of Game 7 in Toronto in the second round, when he told linemate Carter Verhaeghe, 'I wasn't ready to stop playing hockey' and 'I've got at least another month in me,' you have to wonder how Bennett could ever consider leaving what's been an ideal spot for him and his career in less than a month's time. Bennett, if he gets to July 1, will be the most coveted center available as a free agent. There's no doubt he'd command more money on the open market than what Florida can and is willing to pay him. But Bennett has to be considering that success doesn't come easily in the NHL, and if his priority is to keep winning, leaving South Florida is probably not the wisest decision. 'Honestly, since the playoffs have started, it's really just taken a back seat and I haven't really thought too much about anything other than the playoffs and getting here and now the whole focus is on winning the Stanley Cup,' Bennett said Tuesday at Stanley Cup Final media day. 'Everything else is going to be in the background for the next couple weeks.' But Bennett did agree that Florida 'is a good fit' and called Panters coach Paul Maurice 'the best coach I've ever had.' The boys weren't ready to stop playing hockey 😼 — x – Florida Panthers (@FlaPanthers) May 20, 2025 It wasn't a sure thing that he'd find this fit after flaming out in Calgary in the spring of 2021. A healthy scratch down the stretch of the pandemic-shortened 2021 season, Bennett was traded to the Panthers for Emil Heineman and a second-round pick. Since then, Bennett, 28, has posted three 20-goal seasons. And after scoring 12 goals and 29 points in 39 games during the previous two playoff runs, Bennett leads the NHL this postseason with 10 goals — one from tying the Panthers' playoff record for a single season — and is tied for second on his team with 16 points. He had four goals and seven points against the Carolina Hurricanes in the five-game Eastern Conference final. Advertisement Not that he's caught up in the numbers. 'My only goal right now is winning the Stanley Cup,' Bennett said. 'If I can put the puck in the net to help our team win, that's all that matters to me.' Offensively, defensively and physically, Bennett had his way with the Hurricanes. Until Game 5, when Maurice flipped Verhaeghe and Evan Rodrigues in the second period for a spark, the hard-nosed Bennett dominated alongside Verhaeghe and Matthew Tkachuk, especially in a Game 2 blowout, when the trio combined for eight points. Tkachuk calls him 'the definition of a playoff player.' 'He's always had the talent, he's always had the work ethic, he's always had the bite, you know, the jam — everything,' said Tkachuk, who was also teammates with Bennett in Calgary before himself being traded to the Panthers in 2022. 'I think a lot of it's got to do with opportunity. I mean, he didn't get the opportunity in Calgary that he has here with the minutes and how he's utilized and everything. 'Don't know why that is. Maybe that's just a personnel thing or whatever, but he's just taken off as a whole new player here in Florida for everybody to see — even though, in Calgary, I saw it all along and us as players saw it all along.' Tkachuk said he and his Flames teammates 'weren't thrilled' when Bennett got traded to Florida. But at the same time, Tkachuk was happy to see him get a chance to flourish. 'You just see him year after year, playoffs after playoffs — that's where he makes his mark, is in the playoffs,' Tkachuk said. WELCOME TO SOUTH FLORIDA 🌴 In his @FlaPanthers debut, Brad Marchand sets up Sam Bennett for the @Energizer overtime winner! — NHL (@NHL) March 29, 2025 New teammate Brad Marchand sees it, too. He's come around quickly after learning the hard way last year in the Boston Bruins-Panthers second-round series just how good of a 'right hook' Bennett possesses. Marchand and Bennett got to know each other better at the 4 Nations Face-Off, so it wasn't uncomfortable for Marchand to step into Florida's locker room and play alongside Bennett. It makes sense that there would be mutual appreciation. They think about the game the same way, and both are known for playing on the edge of the rulebook, or over it — willing to do anything to win. Advertisement 'Benny, he just does everything,' Marchand said. 'He could skate very well. Really good with the puck. Great shot. And then obviously he brings a physical aspect to the game that, especially this time of year, is, I mean, you can't have enough of it. And those are the guys that make a huge impact on the game, when you have to be aware of them physically on the ice and know where they're at. 'And then at the same time, I mean, he comes up big in those big moments, and it just seems like he's calm in all situations. And if you know him or if you've talked to him off the ice, that's how he is day-to-day. He brings that to the rink and on the ice. And when you have that combination … he's a player you love to have on your team and then one you hate to play against.' Marchand couldn't see from afar what makes Bennett tick, seeing him as a serious, quiet, reserved, mercurial curmudgeon. 'And once you get to know him, he's actually pretty vocal and really funny and a good guy to be around,' Marchand said. 'But when you see him on the ice, he's so intense and dialed in and very quiet. Like, he doesn't really chirp. You don't hear a peep from him during the game. He's just all business. But I've really grown to appreciate his game over the last few years, I think everybody has. 'In Calgary, I don't think he was put in a position to succeed the way that he was here. You knew he was strong, physical and could skate and stuff like that, but you saw a whole different side of his offensive game. And I think the majority of the year he's been on the second power-play unit, too. I mean, if you see the way he handles the puck, he can shoot the puck and if he's running a half-wall or something like that, he's going to score a lot of goals or a lot of points. And you'd be able to have that luxury here in Florida, to have him in that position and producing the way he does, and then playing with Chuckie and Swaggy, it's a deadly combo all over the place.' One of the big reasons Bennett has thrived in Florida, beyond playing in a consistent top-six role the past few years, is getting back to the middle of the ice. The No. 4 pick in the 2014 draft feels playing center brings out his best assets. When pucks get deep, he can forecheck with the best of them because of his closing speed, and his physicality intimidates even the gutsiest puck retrievers. 'It's a great example of how a player looks so good when he feels good about his game,' Maurice said. 'He's very fast, and he's physically very strong, so he's built for the playoffs — just his stature, and he can handle the heavy going. And I think he and Matthew really do have a really good chemistry. Matthew's hands and his IQ and where he puts pucks and all those things lets Sam run a little bit. I don't mean run around. I mean, let's let him get his speed up. That was the thing that was missing before he got here. He got stuck on the wing and he couldn't carry his feet. He's a very fast player. It might be the underrated part of him is how quickly he can get up the ice.' Advertisement It's probably not in Panthers president of hockey operations and general manager Bill Zito's best interest to pump Bennett's tires right now. Not with talk that teams out there could be prepping to court Bennett with long-term offers in the $8 million to $10 million range. But he adores Bennett and has no problem tossing bouquets his way. 'He doesn't get enough credit,' Zito said. 'I think people from the outside see this warrior, but this is a solid, solid team guy, who does anything for a team. Who's considerate. Who's humble. Very bright. He's a gamer, but it's not just on the ice in the playoffs when it shows up. It's all the things he does in the locker room. It's a guy who's not doing well, and suddenly Benny's there going, 'Hey buddy, come on. We've got you.' 'Players trust him because they know his motives are virtuous and he wants to win.' Bennett knows how good the fit has been. 'I definitely struggled in Calgary for a while,' he said. 'Once I got here, just how the team embraced me — the opportunity the team gave me right from the beginning — was totally different than what I was getting in Calgary. I took that opportunity and found some success early, and our team definitely changed quite a bit. 'Our style changed, but I think it even fit my style of game even more, so that gave me even more confidence to go out and play. Just very fortunate to have some great teammates and linemates and great coaches that believed in me — and it just is a perfect combination to have success.' After the Panthers won the Stanley Cup last year, just days before free agency, Zito figured out a way to finalize an eight-year, $69 million contract with Sam Reinhart. It meant he couldn't afford to re-sign more than a half-dozen other pending free agents, including Brandon Montour. This offseason, PuckPedia has the Panthers with $19 million in cap space, with Bennett, Marchand and Aaron Ekblad being their top free agents and Niko Mikkola eligible for an extension. Advertisement The Panthers do have an internal cap for forwards, so to speak, with nobody making more than Aleksander Barkov's $10 million and Tkachuk's $9.5 million. If Bennett's to re-sign, it's likely that he'll have to come in significantly under Reinhart's $8.625 million and perhaps around Verhaeghe's $7 million. That's probably less than Bennett could get in free agency. So where's this headed? 'We'll talk about the playoffs now and worry about that stuff later,' Zito said, smiling. 'Over time, things get sorted out.' The one thing Bennett will know playing in his third straight Stanley Cup Final with a chance to repeat as champs: The grass isn't always greener elsewhere, and the sun surely isn't brighter anywhere than Sunrise, Fla. VIDEO! Inside the @FlaPanthers radio booth for Sam Bennett's second goal of the night from Thursday's Game 2 win in Raleigh. @560WQAM @RealRadio921 — Doug Plagens (@DougPlagens) May 23, 2025