Qnity Electronics, Inc.·4

Feb 3, 9:53 PM ET

CURTIN TERRENCE R 4

Research Summary

AI-generated summary

Updated

Qnity (Q) Director Terrence R. Curtin Receives Stock Awards

What Happened

  • Terrence R. Curtin, a director of Qnity Electronics (Q), received equity awards and reported gift transfers. He was granted 273.465 shares at $79.23 on 2025-11-26 (value $21,667) and 112.636 shares at $96.18 on 2026-01-30 (value $10,833), for total award value of $32,500. The filing also lists two gift transactions on 2025-11-06 showing 500 shares disposed and 500 shares acquired at $0.00 (no cash exchange reported).

Key Details

  • Transaction dates and amounts:
    • 2025-11-06: Gift — 500 shares disposed @ $0.00; 500 shares acquired @ $0.00.
    • 2025-11-26: Award/Grant — 273.465 shares @ $79.23 (value $21,667).
    • 2026-01-30: Award/Grant — 112.636 shares @ $96.18 (value $10,833).
  • Total value of reported awards: $32,500.
  • Shares owned after the transactions: not specified in the excerpt provided; footnote F1 indicates the filing reflects the balance as of the transaction date and amends subsequent Form 4s.
  • Footnotes:
    • F1: Reflects balance as of the transaction date and updates previously filed Form 4s after Nov 6, 2025.
    • F2: Includes shares acquired via dividend reinvestment.
  • Filing timeliness: Form filed on 2026-02-03 while the report period includes transactions from Nov 6 and Nov 26, 2025 and Jan 30, 2026 — the filing date is more than the typical 2-business-day reporting window for Form 4, so it appears to have been reported late.

Context

  • The two "A" transactions are grants/awards (company compensation or similar), which are acquisitions rather than open-market purchases; they indicate the company issued shares to the director.
  • The November gift entries (G) show zero-dollar transfers and do not, by themselves, indicate the director buying or selling for cash or revealing market sentiment.
  • For retail investors: awards and dividend-reinvestment increases are routine forms of insider compensation/holding changes; gifts usually reflect personal transfers. The filing’s late submission may delay public visibility of these changes.