LifeMD, Inc. 8-K
Research Summary
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LifeMD Inc. CFO Resigns; Atul Kavthekar Named New CFO
What Happened
- LifeMD announced on March 16, 2026 that CFO Marc Benathen will depart to pursue a new opportunity, remaining employed through March 31, 2026 to support the handover. Benathen and the company agreed he will provide post-employment transition advisory services for 6–12 months at $38,117 per month; the company will also reimburse his COBRA costs through no later than April 1, 2027. The filing states Benathen did not resign due to any disagreement with the company.
- On the same date LifeMD appointed Atul Kavthekar as its new Chief Financial Officer, effective March 16, 2026. Kavthekar’s employment agreement sets a $500,000 base salary, a target annual discretionary bonus equal to 50% of base salary, and a grant of 675,000 restricted stock units (RSUs) — 337,500 time-based (112,500 vesting each year for three years) and 337,500 performance-based.
Key Details
- Marc Benathen will remain employed through March 31, 2026 and then provide advisory services for 6–12 months at $38,117/month. Unvested RSUs as of March 31, 2026 will be forfeited; vested RSUs retained subject to the company’s recovery policy.
- Atul Kavthekar’s pay package: $500,000 base salary, target bonus 50% of base, and 675,000 RSUs (337,500 time-based; 337,500 performance-based). Time-based RSUs vest 112,500 on each of the first three anniversaries; special vesting rules apply on termination or change of control.
- Company publicly also promoted Jessica Friedeman to Chief Business Officer and Chris Pisano to Chief Marketing Officer (press release filed as Exhibit 99.1).
Why It Matters
- A CFO change is material: investors should note leadership continuity steps (transition services) intended to limit disruption to financial operations and reporting. The advisory payments and COBRA reimbursement represent near-term cash/expense items; the RSU grant and sizable equity award to the new CFO could have long-term dilution implications if fully issued and vested.
- The new CFO’s pay structure — significant equity tied to performance and time-based vesting — aligns his incentives with company performance and retention, which matters for strategy execution and future financial results. The filing states no related-party transactions or family relationships between Kavthekar and company insiders.
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