Welcome to our dedicated page for Carlisle SEC filings (Ticker: CSL), 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.
The Carlisle Companies Incorporated (NYSE: CSL) SEC filings page on Stock Titan provides access to the company’s official U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission disclosures, offering a detailed view of its building products business and financial position. Carlisle’s common stock is registered under Section 12(b) of the Exchange Act and trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol CSL.
Carlisle regularly files Form 8-K current reports to disclose material events. Recent 8-Ks include items on quarterly financial results, leadership appointments, share repurchase authorizations, and capital markets transactions such as public offerings of senior notes. These filings outline segment performance for Carlisle Construction Materials (CCM) and Carlisle Weatherproofing Technologies (CWT), as well as information on new debt, underwriting agreements, and other material definitive agreements.
Investors can also use this page to locate Carlisle’s periodic reports, such as annual reports on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, which provide more extensive detail on its building envelope products and solutions, risk factors, segment information, and accounting policies. In addition, the SEC database linked through this page includes other filings that may cover topics like share repurchase programs, dividend declarations, and governance matters.
Stock Titan enhances these regulatory documents with AI-powered summaries that explain key points from lengthy filings, helping users quickly understand the significance of results announcements, new debt offerings, or board-approved programs. Real-time updates from EDGAR mean that new CSL filings, including Forms 8-K, 10-K, 10-Q, and any insider transaction reports on Form 4, become accessible as they are posted, giving investors a structured way to review Carlisle’s regulatory history and ongoing disclosure practices.
Carlisle Companies director Sheryl Palmer reported acquiring 1 deferred stock unit as a grant tied to the company’s quarterly dividend. Each deferred stock unit is economically equivalent to one share of Carlisle common stock and will be settled in cash when her service as a director ends.
Payment will be made either in a lump sum or in quarterly installments over ten years, based on the closing price of Carlisle’s common stock on each payment date. This filing reflects routine director compensation rather than an open-market stock purchase or sale.
Collins Jonathan R. reported acquisition or exercise transactions in this Form 4 filing.
Carlisle Companies director Jonathan R. Collins received a grant of 16 restricted stock units tied to the company’s quarterly dividend. Each unit represents one share of common stock, bringing his directly held restricted stock units to 5,902. The units were fully vested at grant, with shares to be delivered when his board service ends.
Frias James D reported acquisition or exercise transactions in this Form 4 filing.
Carlisle Companies director James D. Frias reported receiving an additional award of 24 restricted stock units. These units were credited as a result of a quarterly dividend declared and paid by the company, and each unit represents the right to receive one share of common stock.
The restricted stock units were fully vested on the grant date, and delivery of the underlying shares will occur when Frias’s service as a director ends. Following this grant, he directly holds 8,643 restricted stock units.
Carlisle Companies director Maia Hansen reported an acquisition of additional restricted stock units tied to the company’s quarterly dividend. The filing shows a grant of 1 restricted stock unit, bringing her directly owned total to 333 units. These units were fully vested at grant, and the underlying shares will be delivered after her service as a director ends.
Carlisle Companies Inc. director Corrine D. Ricard acquired 20 restricted stock units (RSUs) as a grant classified as a “grant, award, or other acquisition.” These additional RSUs arose from the company’s quarterly dividend and bring her directly held RSU balance to 7,098 units.
The RSUs were fully vested on the grant date. Under the award terms, the underlying common shares will be delivered to Ricard when her service as a director ends. Each RSU represents the right to receive one share of Carlisle common stock.
Carlisle Companies director Jesse G. Singh reported awards of additional equity-based units tied to the company’s quarterly dividend. He acquired 11 restricted stock units, each representing one share of common stock, bringing his restricted stock unit holdings to 4,041 units.
The restricted stock units were fully vested on the grant date and will be settled in shares when he leaves the board. He also acquired 9 deferred stock units, each economically equivalent to one share, bringing his deferred stock unit balance to 9 units. These deferred stock units will be paid in cash in a lump sum or quarterly over ten years after his board service ends, based on the stock’s closing price on each payment date. No open-market stock purchases or sales were reported.
Andrew C. Easton, VP & Chief Accounting Officer of Carlisle Companies, reported option exercises and a share sale. On February 19, 2026, he exercised 300 employee stock options, acquiring 300 shares of common stock at $150.00 per share, following the vesting schedule that began on February 2, 2022.
On the same date, he then sold 233 shares of common stock in an open-market transaction at $407.57 per share. After these transactions, his directly owned common stock holdings totaled 926 shares.
Carlisle Companies reported 2025 revenues of $5,019.9 million, slightly above 2024, with operating income of $1,002.5 million and diluted earnings per share from continuing operations of $17.16, down from $18.34 as margins softened.
Carlisle Construction Materials grew revenue to $3,721.7 million, supported by commercial re‑roofing and the MTL acquisition, but its operating margin fell to 26.8% on higher costs and R&D. Carlisle Weatherproofing Technologies revenue was stable at $1,298.2 million, while its operating margin declined to 7.8% due to lower volumes and higher unit costs.
The company generated $1,101.8 million in operating cash flow and ended the year with $1,112.1 million in cash. It repurchased $1.3 billion of stock, paid $181.1 million in dividends, and issued new 5.25% 2035 and 5.55% 2040 notes, increasing long‑term debt to $2,881.6 million while emphasizing its Vision 2030 strategy focused on energy‑efficient building products, innovation and disciplined capital deployment.
Carlisle Companies executive Stephen Schwar, Vice Chair of CCM, reported several stock transactions. On February 12, 2026, he exercised an employee stock option for 1,500 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $108.72 per share, increasing his direct holdings to 14,589 shares.
That same day, Schwar executed two open-market sales of Carlisle common stock. He sold 1,500 shares at a price of $417.16 per share, then sold an additional 4,549 shares at $417.42 per share. After these sales, he directly owned 8,540 Carlisle common shares.