Bracken Cristin C. 4
Research Summary
AI-generated summary
Gates (GTES) Chief Legal Officer Cristin Bracken Receives Shares via PBRSU Vesting
What Happened
- Cristin Bracken, Chief Legal Officer of Gates Industrial (GTES), had performance-based restricted stock units (PBRSUs) convert to ordinary shares following certification of performance.
- The Form 4 reports a conversion (code M) of 46,866 PBRSUs into ordinary shares (acquired at $0.00), a tax/withholding disposition (code F) of 17,873 shares at $23.76 per share (total reported value $424,662), and a separate conversion/disposition entry for 29,200 shares (reported as a derivative disposition at $0.00).
- This was not an open-market purchase or sale by the insider but the settlement/vesting of equity awards; the tax withholding was satisfied by withholding shares rather than a cash payment.
Key Details
- Transaction date: February 4, 2026 (Form filed Feb 6, 2026 — appears timely).
- Reported entries:
- M: 46,866 shares acquired @ $0.00 (conversion of PBRSUs).
- F: 17,873 shares withheld/disposed @ $23.76 => $424,662 withheld for taxes/withholdings.
- M: 29,200 shares reported as a derivative disposition @ $0.00.
- Footnotes in the filing: Vesting was for PBRSUs granted Mar 1, 2023, after certification that performance equaled 160.5% of target; shares withheld to satisfy tax and par value withholdings; each PBRSU = one ordinary share.
- Shares owned following the transaction are not specified in the provided data.
- Codes explained: M = exercise/conversion of derivative (PBRSU conversion); F = shares withheld for tax/withholding.
Context
- PBRSU conversions reflect compensation tied to performance (here, 3-year metrics including TSR and adjusted ROIC) rather than insider buying/selling based on market views. The withholding of shares to cover taxes is a routine part of vesting settlements and does not necessarily signal a change in sentiment.
- Because the conversions were reported as $0 exercise price entries, no cash was paid to acquire the vested shares; the tax obligation was satisfied via share withholding.