HONEYWELL INTERNATIONAL INC·4

Feb 18, 7:04 PM ET

Kapur Vimal 4

Research Summary

AI-generated summary

Updated

Honeywell (HON) CEO Vimal Kapur Exercises RSUs

What Happened
Vimal Kapur, CEO of Honeywell International (HON), had restricted stock units (RSUs) convert to common stock in mid-February 2026. On Feb 14 he acquired 689 shares (302 shares withheld for taxes), and on Feb 16 he acquired 5,994 shares (2,604 withheld). The withheld shares were surrendered to cover tax withholding (total withheld value reported = $72,809 + $627,798 = $700,607). Net delivered to Kapur were 3,777 shares (6,683 gross minus 2,906 withheld), roughly valued at ~$910,600 at $241.09/share. These transactions reflect vesting/conversion of awards, not an open-market buy or sale.

Key Details

  • Transaction dates: 2026-02-14 (689 RSUs vested; 302 shares withheld) and 2026-02-16 (5,994 RSUs vested; 2,604 shares withheld).
  • Withholding price used: $241.09/share; withholding amounts $72,809 and $627,798 respectively (total $700,607).
  • Gross shares converted: 6,683; shares withheld for taxes: 2,906; net shares received: 3,777.
  • Instrument: Restricted Stock Units that convert one-for-one to common stock (per filing footnotes).
  • Grants/vesting: RSUs granted under Honeywell’s 2016 Stock Incentive Plan; applicable vesting schedules noted in filing (Feb 14 and Feb 16 vesting tranches).
  • Other notes from filing: RSUs were adjusted for the Solstice Advanced Materials spin-off (Oct 30, 2025); dividend equivalents were reinvested into additional RSUs (footnotes).
  • Shares owned after transaction: not disclosed in the provided filing summary.
  • Filing date: 2026-02-18 (no late-filing flag shown in the supplied data).

Context
These entries reflect routine vesting/settlement of RSUs with share withholding to satisfy tax liabilities (share-for-tax/cashless withholding). That’s common for executives receiving equity compensation and does not represent a discretionary open-market purchase or sale expressing a new investment view. Retail investors typically view purchases or open-market buys as stronger signals than routine vesting.