Lance Ryan Michael 4
Research Summary
AI-generated summary
ConocoPhillips CEO Lance Ryan Michael Exercises Options, Sells Shares
What Happened
- Lance Ryan Michael, Chairman and CEO of ConocoPhillips (COP), exercised options to acquire 506,800 shares and immediately sold those 506,800 shares in an open-market transaction on March 20, 2026.
- Exercise: 506,800 shares at $49.76 per share for a total exercise cost of $25,215,834.
- Sale: 506,800 shares sold at a weighted-average price of $127.26 per share for total gross proceeds of $64,493,594. The implied gross gain (proceeds minus exercise cost) is about $39.28 million before taxes and fees.
- A corresponding derivative entry shows the option units converted/surrendered (reported as disposed at $0).
Key Details
- Transaction date: March 20, 2026 (reported on Form 4 filed March 23, 2026 — within required reporting window).
- Exercise price: $49.76; sale weighted-average price: $127.26 (range reported $126.24–$127.95 per footnote).
- Shares sold: 506,800; shares acquired by exercise: 506,800; derivative units cancelled: 506,800.
- Shares owned after transaction: not specified in the provided excerpt of the filing.
- Footnotes: F1 notes a transfer of 31,000 shares to the Lance Family Trust. F2 clarifies the sale price is a weighted average across multiple trades (range $126.24–$127.95). F3 notes some units include routine dividend/plan-related acquisitions exempt from Section 16 reporting rules.
- Transaction codes: M = exercise/conversion of derivative; S = open-market sale.
Context
- This is a common “exercise and sell” (cashless) pattern: the insider exercised options, then sold the resulting shares the same day to realize proceeds and cover the exercise cost — a routine liquidity event rather than a clear buy/sell signal about future company prospects.
- Gifts, transfers to family trusts (like the 31,000-share transfer noted) are not direct market sentiment signals.
- For retail investors: purchases can be more informative about insider conviction than routine cashless exercises and sales; this filing documents a large monetization by the CEO but does not, by itself, indicate a change in company fundamentals.