GLOBE LIFE INC.·4

Feb 13, 6:01 PM ET

Haworth Jennifer Allison 4

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Globe Life (GL) EVP Jennifer Haworth Exercises Options, Sells 10K

What Happened
Jennifer Haworth, EVP & Chief Marketing Officer of Globe Life (GL), exercised 10,000 option-derived shares at $50.64 each (cost $506,400) on Feb 12, 2026 and sold a total of 10,000 shares in three open-market transactions the same day for aggregate proceeds of $1,431,355. The filing also shows a disposition of 10,000 derivative shares at $0.00. The pattern—exercise followed by same-day sales—effectively looks like a cashless exercise where the shares acquired were sold the same day; sales are commonly routine (e.g., to cover exercise cost or taxes) and do not by themselves signal a change in company outlook.

Key Details

  • Transaction date: 2026-02-12 (Form 4 filed 2026-02-13). Filing appears timely (next-day filing).
  • Option exercise: 10,000 shares acquired at $50.64 each = $506,400. (Code M)
  • Market sales (same day): 1,592 shares @ $142.21 = $226,397; 4,130 shares @ $142.89 = $590,124; 4,278 shares @ $143.72 = $614,834. Total sale proceeds = $1,431,355. (Codes S)
  • Net proceeds (sales minus exercise cost): ~ $924,955 (pre-tax).
  • Additional line: 10,000 derivative shares listed as disposed at $0.00 — the Form does not explain this item in detail.
  • Footnotes: F1 notes the reporting person will provide full per-share sale breakdown on request. F2–F4 give sale price ranges: $141.595–$142.45; $142.505–$143.20; $143.34–$144.075.
  • Shares owned after the transactions: not disclosed in the provided filing.

Context

  • For options exercises, it’s common for executives to immediately sell some or all shares to cover the exercise cost and tax obligations—this filing shows the exercise and same-day sales, which is consistent with a cashless or sell-to-cover transaction.
  • The recorded $0.00 derivative disposition and the footnote offering more detail mean interested parties (SEC staff, issuer, or holders) can request a fuller breakdown from the reporting person for clarity.
  • Sales by executives are often routine and not definitive statements about company prospects; purchases are typically more informative about insider sentiment.