Welcome to our dedicated page for Csx SEC filings (Ticker: CSX), 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 CSX Corporation (CSX) SEC filings page on Stock Titan provides access to the company’s regulatory disclosures as filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. CSX is a Virginia-incorporated transportation company based in Jacksonville, Florida, operating a Class I railroad network in the eastern United States. Its common stock is listed on the NASDAQ Global Select Market under the symbol CSX, and its filings offer detailed insight into its rail, intermodal and rail-to-truck transload operations.
Through this page, users can review current reports on Form 8-K that CSX files to describe material events. Recent 8-K filings have addressed topics such as leadership transitions in the President and Chief Executive Officer role, appointments of the Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, promotions of senior commercial executives, quarterly financial and operating results, and public offerings of notes due 2035 under the company’s shelf registration statement and long-standing indenture.
In addition to 8-Ks, investors can locate annual reports on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, which CSX references in its current reports and press releases. These filings typically contain information on the company’s financial condition, results of operations, risk factors and details about its rail network that connects major metropolitan areas, ports and more than 240 short-line railroads.
Stock Titan enhances these documents with AI-powered summaries that highlight key points from lengthy filings, helping users quickly understand the significance of new debt issuances, executive employment agreements, severance arrangements, or results of operations disclosures. Real-time updates from the EDGAR system ensure that new CSX filings, including Forms 8-K, 10-K, 10-Q and related exhibits, appear promptly, while insider and governance-related information disclosed in proxy materials and other documents can also be explored through this page.
CSX reports a Form 144 notice to sell 90,000 common shares to be sold on 02/19/2026 in connection with a stock option exercise through the issuer for cash. The filing also lists a prior sale of 66,667 shares on 01/28/2026 for $2,498,679.16.
CSX Corporation VP & Chief Accounting Officer Angela C. Williams reported three tax-related share disposals of common stock on February 13, 2026. A total of 811 shares were withheld to cover tax obligations at $40.87 per share, classified as “payment of exercise price or tax liability by delivering securities.” After these transactions, she held 38,495 CSX common shares directly. She also had 9,418 equivalent shares held indirectly through the CSX Corporation Savings Thrift (401(k)) Plan, where a trustee holds assets and values fluctuate with the plan’s CSX Stock Fund.
CSX CORP executive Diana B. Sorfleet reported tax-related share dispositions of company stock. On February 13, 2026, she had three Form 4 transactions coded "F," each described as a tax-withholding disposition of CSX common stock at $40.87 per share.
The transactions withheld 2,010 shares, 1,711 shares, and 1,856 shares to satisfy tax obligations, rather than open-market sales. After these filings, she directly owned 165,613 CSX shares, and the footnotes note additional shares accumulated through dividend reinvestment on prior restricted stock unit awards.
CSX Corporation senior vice president and chief commercial officer Maryclare T. Kenney reported tax-related share dispositions. On February 13, 2026, she surrendered 294, 198, and 441 CSX common shares at $40.87 per share to satisfy tax obligations tied to equity awards.
After these transactions, she held 6,543 shares directly, plus indirect holdings of 3,429 shares through the CSX Corporation 401(k) Plan and 4,154 shares in a Joint Revocable Trust, which include shares accumulated via dividend reinvestment.
CSX CORP executive vice president Stephen Fortune reported tax-related share dispositions, not open-market sales. On February 13, 2026, he used CSX common stock to satisfy tax obligations in three separate transactions coded “F,” including 2,010 shares at $40.87 per share.
After these tax-withholding dispositions, Fortune directly owned 76,869 shares of CSX common stock, according to the filing. Footnotes clarify the transactions were specifically to cover tax liabilities and that his holdings also reflect shares accumulated through dividend reinvestment on prior restricted stock unit awards.
CSX CORP executive Cory Michael A., the company’s EVP & COO, reported three transactions in CSX common stock on February 13, 2026. Each was a tax-withholding disposition, using shares to cover tax obligations tied to equity compensation rather than open-market sales.
The dispositions involved 1,172, 1,296, and 1,406 shares, all valued at $40.87 per share. After these transactions, he continued to hold 80,750 CSX shares directly, which include additional shares acquired through automatic dividend reinvestment on prior restricted stock unit grants.
CSX Corp executive Michael S. Burns, SVP – CLO & Corporate Secretary, reported several tax-withholding dispositions of CSX common stock on February 13, 2026. Shares were withheld at $40.87 per share to satisfy tax obligations rather than sold in open-market trades.
After these transactions, Burns directly held 50,774 CSX common shares. He also indirectly held 1,773 equivalent shares through the CSX Corporation 401(k)/Savings Thrift Plan, whose value is tied to the daily net asset value of the CSX Stock Fund.
CSX Corporation EVP & CFO Kevin S. Boone reported tax-related share dispositions of common stock. On February 13, 2026, he completed three Form 4 code F transactions described as payment of tax obligations by delivering shares at $40.87 per share, rather than open-market sales. After these dispositions, he directly held 193,381 shares of CSX common stock. Indirect holdings included 1,753 shares through the CSX Corporation 401(k) plan and 1,500 shares held in his spouse’s IRA.
CSX Corporation reported 2025 revenue of $14.1 billion, down 3% from 2024, as weakness in export coal and some merchandise markets more than offset pricing gains and higher intermodal volume. Operating income fell 14% to $4.5 billion and operating margin declined to 32.1% from 36.1%.
Net earnings were $2.9 billion and earnings per diluted share dropped 14% to $1.54, pressured by higher operating costs and a $164 million goodwill impairment at Quality Carriers. Merchandise generated $8.8 billion of revenue, intermodal $2.1 billion, coal $1.9 billion and trucking $816 million. Free cash flow before dividends decreased to $1.8 billion from $2.8 billion, while safety metrics and train velocity showed modest improvement.
CSX Corp executive Stephen Fortune, EVP - CD & TO, reported an option exercise and share sale. On February 3, 2026, he exercised 31,456 options for CSX common stock at $31.67 per share, increasing his direct holdings to 113,490 shares.
On the same date, he sold 31,456 CSX common shares at a weighted average price of $38.65 per share, leaving him with 82,034 directly held shares. The option, originally exercisable at $31.67, was part of a grant vesting in three equal installments on February 15, 2024, 2025, and 2026.