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.
CSX Corporation filings document a Virginia-incorporated public railroad company with common stock listed on the NASDAQ Global Select Market under CSX. Recent Form 8-K reports furnish quarterly financial and operating results and disclose material events, including executive appointments, officer separations, compensatory arrangements and debt financing activity.
CSX proxy materials cover board matters, executive compensation, equity awards and shareholder voting items. Its capital-markets filings and related 8-K disclosures describe shelf registration use, underwriting agreements, prospectus supplements, indenture terms and notes due 2035, while recurring filings identify the company’s registered common stock and public-company governance framework.
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.
CSX Corporation shareholder filed a Form 144 to sell 31,456 common shares. The proposed sale is to be executed through Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC Executive Financial Services on the NASDAQ, with an aggregate market value of $1,215,812.15 based on the filing.
The shares were acquired on 02/03/2026 via a stock option exercise from the issuer, with the purchase price paid in cash on the same date. The filing notes that 1,862,136,956 shares of the issuer’s common stock were outstanding, providing context for the planned sale size.
CSX Corp President and CEO Stephen F. Angel reported an award of 235 units of phantom stock on February 2, 2026. The units, priced at $38.39 each for reporting purposes, are economically equivalent to CSX common shares.
After this grant, 1,002 phantom stock units are beneficially owned through an indirect interest in the CSX Executive Deferred Compensation Plan, where a trustee holds the units and future cash payments will follow Angel’s prior distribution elections.
CSX Corporation executive Diana B. Sorfleet, EVP & CAO, reported selling 66,667 shares of CSX common stock on January 28, 2026. The sale was executed at a weighted average price of $37.48 per share, with individual trades ranging from $37.44 to $37.57.
After this transaction, Sorfleet directly beneficially owns 170,777 shares of CSX common stock. The filing notes that detailed trade-by-trade pricing within the stated range is available upon request to CSX, its security holders, or the SEC staff.
A holder of 66,667 shares of CSX common stock has filed a notice of proposed sale under Rule 144. The shares are to be sold through Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC on or about 01/28/2026, with an aggregate market value of $2,492,012.46, on the NASD exchange.
The shares were originally acquired from the issuer as restricted stock units granted as compensation on several dates between January 2022 and January 2025. CSX had 1,862,136,956 shares outstanding when this notice was prepared, providing scale for the planned sale.
CSX Corp executive vice president Stephen Fortune reported equity compensation activity involving company common stock. On January 23, 2026, he was awarded 2,298 shares at $0 per share under the 2023–2025 Long-Term Incentive Plan. On the same day, 1,026 shares were withheld at $36.64 per share to cover tax obligations.
After these transactions, Fortune directly beneficially owned 82,034 CSX shares. The holding total also reflects prior participation in the CSX Employee Stock Purchase Plan and a correction of earlier Forms 4 where certain holdings had been reported incorrectly.
CSX Corporation executive Diana B. Sorfleet, EVP & CAO, reported routine equity compensation activity. On January 23, 2026, she received 2,298 shares of CSX common stock at $0, awarded under the 2023–2025 Long-Term Incentive Plan.
On the same date, 1,026 shares were withheld at a price of $36.64 to satisfy tax obligations. After these transactions, she directly owned 237,444 CSX shares. The filing notes that her total beneficial ownership figure has been updated because certain shares were previously reported incorrectly on Forms 4 filed in February 2024, and that the total now includes 777 shares acquired through the CSX Employee Stock Purchase Plan on June 30, 2025.
CSX Corp. senior vice president and chief commercial officer Maryclare T. Kenney reported routine equity activity. On January 23, 2026, she received an award of 355 shares of common stock at $0 under the 2023–2025 Long-Term Incentive Plan, increasing her direct holdings.
On the same date, 158 shares were withheld at $36.64 per share to cover tax obligations, leaving her with 7,427 directly held shares. She also holds 3,402 shares indirectly through the CSX Corporation 401(k) plan and 4,154 shares via a joint revocable trust.
CSX Corp executive Angela C. Williams, VP & Chief Accounting Officer, reported routine equity transactions in company common stock. On January 23, 2026, she received 336 shares at $0 under the 2023–2025 Long-Term Incentive Plan and had 150 shares withheld at $36.64 per share to cover taxes.
After these transactions, she directly beneficially owned 39,254 common shares, plus 9,407 equivalent shares held indirectly through the CSX Corporation 401(k)/Savings Thrift Plan. The filing also updates the total beneficial ownership to correct certain amounts that were previously reported on earlier Forms 4.