Welcome to our dedicated page for Chubb SEC filings (Ticker: CB), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
Chubb Limited filings document regulatory disclosures for a Swiss-domiciled global insurer whose common shares trade on the New York Stock Exchange under CB. Recent Form 8-K reports furnish quarterly and year-end results, financial supplements, investor presentation materials, amendments to governing documents, and executive officer or director matters.
Proxy filings cover annual general meeting items, including approval of management and financial reports, dividend allocation, discharge of the board, auditor elections, board and compensation committee elections, and independent proxy appointments. The filing record also identifies registered securities, including common shares and guarantees of Chubb INA Holdings LLC senior notes listed on the NYSE.
Chubb Ltd director David H. Sidwell reported routine equity compensation and related tax withholding. He received a grant of 757 Common Shares as a restricted stock award for director fees under a Chubb long-term incentive plan that meets Rule 16b-3 requirements. The restricted stock will vest on the day of the next annual shareholders meeting, assuming he remains a director. To cover tax liability, 193 Common Shares were withheld at a reference price of $330.26 per share. After these transactions, he directly holds 15,514 Common Shares.
HUGIN ROBERT J reported acquisition or exercise transactions in this Form 4 filing.
Chubb Ltd director Robert J. Hugin received a restricted stock award of 1,135 common shares as director fees under a Chubb long-term incentive plan that meets Rule 16b-3 requirements. These restricted shares will vest on the day of the next annual Chubb shareholders meeting, assuming he is still a director on that date.
After this grant, Hugin directly holds 21,626 common shares. The filing also reports indirect holdings of 110 and 225 common shares held by his son, and states that Hugin disclaims beneficial ownership of those securities.
Chubb Ltd director Nancy Buese reported routine equity compensation and related tax withholding in Common Shares. On May 21, 2026, she received a restricted stock award of 1,135 Common Shares as director fees under a Chubb Limited long-term incentive plan. This grant carries a vesting condition: the restricted stock will vest on the day of the next annual Chubb Limited shareholders meeting, assuming she is a director on that date.
On the same date, 321 Common Shares were withheld to pay tax liability, classified as a tax-withholding disposition rather than an open-market sale. Following these transactions, Buese directly held 4,067 Common Shares of Chubb Ltd.
Chubb Ltd director Olivier Steimer reported routine equity compensation activity. He received a grant of 681 Common Shares as a restricted stock award under a Chubb long-term incentive plan, with no cash paid per share. On the same date, 41 Common Shares were withheld to cover tax liability at a price of $330.26 per share. After these transactions, he directly holds 26,160.51 Common Shares.
Chubb Ltd Chairman & CEO Evan G. Greenberg reported non-market share changes related to compensation awards. On Common Shares, 73,555 shares were disposed of at $330.26 per share to cover tax liabilities, and 11,253 restricted shares were forfeited because performance criteria were only partially met. After these entries, he directly holds 535,346 common shares, with additional indirect holdings of 41,564 shares through a daughter’s trust and 136 shares held by his wife.
Chubb Ltd director Michael P. Connors reported routine equity compensation activity. He received a restricted stock award of 681 common shares as director fees under a Chubb Limited long-term incentive plan. These restricted shares will vest on the day of the next annual Chubb Limited shareholders meeting, assuming he remains a director on that date.
To cover related tax liability, 193 common shares were withheld, a non-market tax-withholding disposition at a reference price of $330.26 per share. After these transactions, Connors directly holds 18,496 Chubb common shares.
Chubb Ltd Senior Vice President Bryce L. Johns reported a disposition of 243 common shares on May 21, 2026, representing restricted stock forfeited back to the issuer due to partial satisfaction of performance-based criteria under the Chubb Limited 2016 Long-Term Incentive Plan.
Following this forfeiture, Johns directly holds 24,527 common shares of Chubb Ltd.
Chubb Ltd director Shasta Theodore reported routine equity compensation activity. On May 21, 2026, Theodore received an award of 681 Common Shares as director fees under a Chubb Limited long-term incentive plan, with the restricted stock scheduled to vest on the day of the next annual shareholders meeting, assuming continued board service.
On the same date, 193 Common Shares were withheld at a reference price of $330.26 per share to cover tax liabilities related to the award, a non-market, tax-withholding disposition rather than an open-market sale. After these transactions, Theodore directly owned 16,262 Common Shares of Chubb Ltd.
Chubb Ltd Executive Vice President Joseph F. Wayland reported two non-market transactions in Common Shares. On May 21, 2026, 12,164 shares were withheld to cover tax liabilities, and 1,797 restricted shares were forfeited due to only partial satisfaction of performance-based criteria under the 2016 Long-Term Incentive Plan.
Chubb Ltd Executive Vice President Timothy Alan Boroughs reported routine equity compensation adjustments involving company common shares. On May 21, 2026, 930 restricted shares were returned to the issuer at no value after only partial satisfaction of performance-based criteria under the Chubb Limited 2016 Long-Term Incentive Plan.
On the same date, 4,751 common shares were withheld at $330.26 per share to cover tax liabilities, a standard non-open-market event. The filing also lists indirect holdings through a wife’s trust, another trust, and a family foundation, reflecting various forms of beneficial ownership rather than new market purchases or sales.