Browse the full management transaction log of Worksport Ltd, a publicly traded company based in United States. Shares trade on US US, under the oversight of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Industry sector, Worksport Ltd has recorded 11 reports. Market capitalisation: €17.6m. The latest transaction was disclosed on 4 January 2022 — Attribution. Among the most active insiders: Rossi Steven F.. Every trade is openly available.
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Worksport Ltd. is a U.S.-based industrial company listed on the NASDAQ under ticker WKSP, with operations centered in West Seneca, New York, United States. For French-, Belgian- and Swiss-based investors, the company is best understood as a manufacturing-led transition story: it began as a specialist in pickup-truck bed covers and has been adding a clean-energy layer to its product portfolio. Its core business remains the design, development and production of tonneau covers, spanning both soft and hard cover formats, while newer initiatives extend into solar-integrated truck accessories and portable energy systems. Worksport’s history dates back to the early 2000s, and the company is commonly described as having been founded in 2003. Over time, it has worked to rebuild and expand its North American manufacturing footprint, especially through its West Seneca facility in New York State. That domestic manufacturing base matters strategically: it gives Worksport tighter control over quality, supply-chain resilience and product lead times, while also supporting a “made in America” positioning that resonates in the U.S. aftermarket and with certain OEM and distribution partners. On the product side, Worksport sells truck-bed covers designed for a wide range of mainstream pickup platforms, including models from major U.S. and Japanese brands. The company’s differentiation strategy is not limited to traditional auto accessories. It has introduced SOLIS, a solar tonneau cover, and COR, a portable power system designed to complement solar generation and expand the use case of the truck bed as a mobile energy platform. Worksport also emphasizes its intellectual-property portfolio, including patents and trademarks, as a means of protecting its technology and reinforcing its market position. In competitive terms, Worksport remains a small-cap company operating in a crowded aftermarket and light-vehicle accessories market, where scale, brand recognition and distribution reach are critical. Its relative edge is based on innovation, domestic manufacturing, clean-energy integration and an increasingly diversified go-to-market model that includes consumer sales, dealers, master distributors and OEM conversations. The company is trying to move from being a niche accessory vendor to a broader platform for truck utility and mobile energy. Recent developments have been important. Worksport has highlighted ISO 9001 certification at its U.S. factory, ramping production, and the commercial shipping of SOLIS and COR. Management has also pointed to expanding B2B distribution relationships and ongoing discussions with larger retailers and vehicle manufacturers. For investors tracking SEC Form 4 insider transactions, these disclosures matter because they frame insider activity in a context of operational execution and management confidence. Even so, the stock remains high-risk and execution-dependent, as is typical for an emerging industrial micro/small cap.