Welcome to our dedicated page for Carters SEC filings (Ticker: CRI), 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.
Carter’s, Inc. filings document the financial reporting, governance and capital structure of a public children’s apparel company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under CRI. Its 8-K reports furnish operating results for the U.S. Retail, U.S. Wholesale and International segments, including sales, margins, outlook updates, dividends and other material events.
The company’s filings also cover proxy governance, executive compensation, director matters, leadership appointments and officer departures. Debt and financing disclosures include The William Carter Company’s senior notes, asset-based revolving credit facility, subsidiary guarantees and related covenant terms, along with registered common stock and preferred stock purchase rights.
Scanlon Emily DeHaven Evert reported acquisition or exercise transactions in this Form 4 filing.
Carter’s Inc chief strategy officer Emily DeHaven Evert Scanlon reported receiving two equity awards of common stock on March 2, 2026. The awards, recorded at no cash cost per share, were classified as grants or awards rather than open‑market purchases.
The filing describes these as restricted shares subject to time-based and performance-based vesting conditions. Some vest in four equal annual installments beginning one year after grant, while others cliff vest after three years based on achieving specified performance targets.
Carter’s Inc. executive Allison Peterson, Chief Retail & Digital Officer, reported acquiring company common stock through two equity awards. One grant covered 7,440 restricted shares, and another covered 11,160 restricted shares, both at a stated price of $0.00 per share as they are compensation awards, not open-market purchases.
Footnotes explain that some shares are time-based restricted stock that vest in four equal annual installments beginning one year from the grant date, while other shares are performance-based restricted stock that cliff vest three years from the grant date if specified performance targets are met.
Carter's Inc reported that Chief Marketing Officer Sarah Crockett acquired company stock through equity awards rather than open-market purchases. On the reported date, she received a total of 18,600 restricted shares of common stock at no purchase price, increasing her direct holdings to 44,232 shares.
The awards consist of restricted shares subject to time-based vesting that lapse in four equal annual installments beginning one year after grant, as well as performance-based restricted shares that cliff vest after three years if specified performance targets are achieved.
Carters Inc Chief Brand Officer David B. Tichiaz Jr. reported equity awards of company common stock. On March 2, 2026, he acquired 26,040 restricted shares and an additional 11,160 restricted shares at a price of $0.00 per share.
Some restricted shares are subject to time-based vesting, with restrictions lapsing in four equal annual installments beginning one year from the grant date. Other restricted shares cliff vest three years from the grant date based on the achievement of specified performance targets, and some awards combine both time-based and performance-based conditions.
Carter’s Inc. Chief Sales Officer Julie D’Emilio reported two automatic tax-withholding share dispositions tied to restricted stock vesting. On February 27 and February 28, she disposed of 602 and 442 shares of common stock, respectively, at $33.55 per share to cover tax obligations. After these transactions, she directly held 52,519 shares, some of which remain subject to time- or performance-based restrictions.
Carter's Inc. executive Antonio Robinson reported two small share dispositions related to tax withholding on vested restricted stock, not open-market sales. On February 28, 374 common shares were withheld at $33.55 per share, and on February 27, 414 shares were withheld at the same price.
These transactions satisfied tax obligations triggered by restricted stock vesting, as described in the footnotes. After these withholdings, Robinson directly owned 35,795 shares of Carter's common stock, some of which remain subject to time- or performance-based restrictions.
Carter’s Inc. Chief Supply Chain Officer Karen Marie Smith reported two tax-related share dispositions in company stock. On February 27, 602 shares of common stock at $33.55 per share were withheld to satisfy tax obligations from restricted stock vesting. On February 28, an additional 442 shares at the same price were withheld for the same purpose, according to the footnotes. After these transactions, she directly owned 38,410 shares of Carter’s common stock, some of which remain subject to time- or performance-based restrictions.
Carter’s Inc. executive Richard F. Westenberger, the company’s CFO & COO, reported two tax-related share dispositions tied to vesting of restricted stock. On February 27 and 28, he surrendered 1,166 and 1,020 shares of common stock, respectively, at $33.55 per share to satisfy tax withholding obligations.
These are tax-withholding dispositions, not open-market sales, and follow the vesting of restricted stock awards. After these transactions, Westenberger directly owned 137,275 Carter’s shares, some of which remain subject to time-based or performance-based restrictions.
Antonio Robinson, a Carter's executive, reported a tax-withholding disposition of 1,448 shares of common stock at $42.07 per share on restricted stock vesting. After this transaction, he directly owned 36,583 common shares, some of which remain subject to time- or performance-based restrictions.
Carter’s Inc. executive Allison Peterson reported a tax-related share disposition tied to restricted stock vesting. On the reported date, 1,711 shares of common stock were withheld at a price of $42.07 per share to satisfy tax withholding obligations triggered by the vesting of restricted stock awards. This was not an open-market sale, but an automatic share withholding. After this transaction, Peterson directly owned 49,123 shares of Carter’s common stock, some of which remain subject to time-based vesting restrictions.