Skipworth Michael 4
Research Summary
AI-generated summary
Wingstop (WING) CEO Michael Skipworth Exercises RSUs, Sells Shares for Taxes
What Happened Michael Skipworth, President & CEO and a director of Wingstop (WING), had performance/restricted stock units (RSUs) convert into common stock on March 7 and March 9, 2026. On March 7, 2,384 RSUs converted and 939 shares were withheld/sold to cover taxes at $229.17 per share (proceeds $215,191). On March 9, 3,481 RSUs converted and 1,370 shares were withheld/sold at $224.28 per share (proceeds $307,264). Total shares withheld for taxes: 2,309; total proceeds: ~$522,455. These transactions reflect RSU vesting and tax withholding (not an open-market discretionary sale).
Key Details
- Transaction dates and prices:
- 2026-03-07: 2,384 RSUs converted (code M); 939 shares withheld/settled for taxes at $229.17 (code F) — $215,191.
- 2026-03-09: 3,481 RSUs converted (code M); 1,370 shares withheld/settled for taxes at $224.28 (code F) — $307,264.
- Codes: M = exercise/conversion of derivative (here, RSU conversion to shares); F = payment of exercise price or tax liability (here, share withholding for taxes).
- Shares withheld total: 2,309 shares; total cash value ≈ $522,455.
- Shares owned after the transactions: not disclosed in the provided excerpt.
- Footnotes of note:
- F1/F3/F4: These were RSUs granted under the 2015 Omnibus Incentive Plan (grants from March 7, 2024 and March 9, 2023) that vest in three equal annual installments.
- F2: Withholding occurred automatically upon vesting to satisfy tax liabilities; the reporting person did not make a separate investment decision for the withholding.
- Filing timeliness: Form 4 filed March 10, 2026. This appears timely relative to the March 9 transactions (no late-filing indication in the provided data).
Context These entries reflect RSU vesting and net settlement/withholding to cover tax obligations (a routine administrative action). The 0.00-dollar "acquired" or "disposed" derivative entries represent the conversion of RSUs into common stock before withholding. Because the withheld shares were to satisfy taxes and occurred automatically, they should not be read as a discretionary sale signaling a change in the insider’s view of the company.