Charter Communications (CHTR) director gets $225K restricted stock grant
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
Slaski Carolyn J reported acquisition or exercise transactions in this Form 4 filing.
Charter Communications director Carolyn J. Slaski received a grant of 918 shares of Class A Common Stock as restricted stock. The grant was valued at $225,000 on the April 21, 2026 grant date and will fully vest on the date of the company’s annual meeting of stockholders in 2027. Following this award, she directly holds 2,346 shares.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
1 transaction reported
Mixed
1 txn
Insider
Slaski Carolyn J
Role
null
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grant/Award | Class A Common Stock | 918 | $0.00 | -- |
Holdings After Transaction:
Class A Common Stock — 2,346 shares (Direct, null)
Footnotes (1)
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Key Figures
Restricted stock grant: 918 shares
Grant value: $225,000
Shares held after grant: 2,346 shares
3 metrics
Restricted stock grant
918 shares
Class A Common Stock granted to director on April 21, 2026
Grant value
$225,000
Value of restricted stock on date of grant
Shares held after grant
2,346 shares
Total directly held by Carolyn J. Slaski after award
Key Terms
Restricted Stock, Class A Common Stock, annual meeting of stockholders
3 terms
Restricted Stock financial
"Grant of Restricted Stock (price not applicable) valued at $225,000"
Shares granted to an individual that carry limits on transfer or sale until certain conditions are met, such as staying with the company for a set time or hitting performance targets. Think of them as a locked gift that gradually opens; for investors they matter because they affect how many shares may enter the market later, signal management incentives and potential dilution, and reveal confidence in future company performance.
Class A Common Stock financial
"security_title: "Class A Common Stock""
Class A common stock is a category of a company’s shares that carries a specific set of ownership rights—most commonly defined voting power and claims on dividends—set out in the company’s charter. For investors it matters because the class determines how much influence you have over corporate decisions, the share’s likely dividend and trading behavior, and how it compares in value to other share classes, like choosing a particular seat with different privileges at the company’s decision-making table.
annual meeting of stockholders financial
"to fully vest on the date of the Company's annual meeting of stockholders in 2027"