TLDR
- GFAI authorizes a $5M buyback for one year, effective immediately on Feb 20
- The board cites valuation gap and secured logistics revenue, while backing AI growth
- Repurchases may use open market buys, block trades, or negotiated private deals
- The program stays discretionary, so management can pause, modify, or end it anytime
- Guardforce AI pairs logistics flow with ICP-driven automation, robotics, and AI
Guardforce AI (GFAI) shares announced a one-year share repurchase authorization on February 20, 2026, and set a $5 million cap in total. Guardforce AI stock traded at $0.49 in Friday Nasdaq trading at the time of reporting after the update. The board said the program supports long-term value and reflects confidence in secured logistics revenue and technology growth.
Guardforce AI Co., Limited, GFAI
Buyback authorization sets terms for GFAI shares
The board authorized purchases of outstanding ordinary shares, and it made the program effective immediately this week. The authorization remains valid for up to one full year from February 20, 2026, unless the board changes it. Management described the current valuation as below intrinsic value, so the company plans disciplined capital allocation for shareholders.
Guardforce AI can buy shares in open market transactions, and it can also use other legally permitted methods when needed. The company may execute block trades or privately negotiated transactions, and it can choose timing case by case. Accordingly, the program allows flexible execution when prices and liquidity support efficient repurchases across multiple sessions.
The authorization does not require any minimum number of shares, and it does not guarantee continuous buying activity at launch. Guardforce AI can modify, suspend, or discontinue the program at any time, based on internal assessments and funding needs. Therefore, the final repurchase total will depend on market conditions, regulatory limits, and available capital over time.
Capital structure context includes GFAI shares and GFAIW warrants
Guardforce AI trades on Nasdaq under GFAI, and it also lists warrants under GFAIW alongside the common listing. However, the authorization covers ordinary shares, and the company did not announce a separate warrant repurchase plan for now. As a result, the program focuses on the share count and potential per-share metrics, not derivative instruments.
The company stated it may buy shares through negotiated transactions, which can reduce market impact during execution periods. It also allowed open market purchases, which can spread activity across sessions and different liquidity windows over months. Meanwhile, the company retained discretion over timing, so it can align purchases with trading policies and compliance rules.
Guardforce AI did not publish a day-by-day schedule publicly, and it did not provide a target average purchase price range. The company also did not state a percentage-of-float objective, so scale will vary across the one year. Even so, the authorization sets a clear ceiling, and it signals an intent to act when valuation appears attractive.
Secured logistics revenue supports expansion in automation and AI services
Guardforce AI operates a secured logistics business that supports cash handling and retail service operations across several markets. The company described that legacy segment as a stable revenue base, and it positioned it as a foundation for expansion. Management can pursue technology investments while maintaining operational cash generation and disciplined cost control in practice.
The company develops automation and robotics offerings, and it delivers products through its Intelligent Cloud Platform for customers. It applies that platform across cash management, retail automation, and connected device deployments that support workflow efficiency in stores. The firm markets agent-based AI software that integrates with its broader automation roadmap and service operations.
Guardforce AI has also discussed travel planning as one newer application area within its broader smart solutions strategy. The company said it aims to balance recurring logistics income with higher-growth technology lines that can scale across sectors. In turn, the repurchase program frames capital returns as complementary to investment, not a replacement for growth spending over time.


