Disney (DIS) director granted stock and deferred units as board compensation
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
Walt Disney Co director Jeffrey E. Williams received a stock-based award rather than making an open-market purchase. He acquired 954.8 shares or stock units of Disney common stock at $100.80 per share as director compensation. After this grant, his directly held shares and units total 1,109.2, including amounts credited in lieu of cash board fees and as deferred stock units under the company’s stock incentive plan.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
1 transaction reported
Mixed
1 txn
Insider
WILLIAMS JEFFREY E
Role
Director
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grant/Award | Disney Common Stock | 954.8 | $100.80 | $96K |
Holdings After Transaction:
Disney Common Stock — 1,109.2 shares (Direct)
Footnotes (1)
- [object Object]
Key Figures
Stock grant: 954.8 shares/units
Grant price: $100.80 per share
Holdings after grant: 1,109.2 shares/units
+2 more
5 metrics
Stock grant
954.8 shares/units
Grant/award of Disney common stock as director compensation
Grant price
$100.80 per share
Valuation per share for the 954.8 granted shares/units
Holdings after grant
1,109.2 shares/units
Total Disney shares and units held directly after the transaction
Stock units in lieu of fees
310.0 units/shares
Board cash retainer fees taken as stock units or shares
Deferred stock units
644.8 units
Deferred stock units credited as a quarterly grant under the plan
Key Terms
Amended and Restated 2011 Stock Incentive Plan, deferred stock units, stock units
3 terms
Amended and Restated 2011 Stock Incentive Plan financial
"issued under the Amended and Restated 2011 Stock Incentive Plan (the "Plan")"
deferred stock units financial
"644.8 deferred stock units under the Plan credited as a quarterly grant"
Deferred stock units are promises from a company to give an employee shares of stock at a future date, often after certain conditions are met or after leaving the company. They function like a form of delayed compensation, allowing employees to earn shares over time. For investors, they represent potential future ownership in the company, but do not provide immediate voting rights or dividends until the shares are actually received.
stock units financial
"Stock units are issued to the reporting person in the form of shares"
Stock units are individual pieces of ownership in a company, like slices of a pie that together make up the whole business. They matter to investors because each unit represents a claim on the company’s assets, profits and sometimes voting power, and changes in the number or value of these units affect ownership percentages, potential dividends and share dilution — all of which influence an investment’s worth.