EQT Corp (NYSE: EQT) officer logs tax withholding share disposals
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
EQT Corp’s Chief Legal & Policy Officer William E. Jordan reported two tax-related share dispositions. On February 13, 2026, EQT withheld 3,366 and 2,095 shares of common stock at $58.70 per share to cover taxes upon vesting of prior restricted stock unit awards.
Footnotes state these were tax-withholding transactions with no market trades. After these withholdings, Jordan directly held about 497,871 shares of EQT common stock, with the holdings figure noted as including accrued dividends.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
2 transactions reported
Mixed
2 txns
Insider
Jordan William E.
Role
CHIEF LEGAL & POLICY OFFICER
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tax Withholding | Common Stock | 3,366 | $58.70 | $198K |
| Tax Withholding | Common Stock | 2,095 | $58.70 | $123K |
Holdings After Transaction:
Common Stock — 499,966 shares (Direct)
Footnotes (1)
- Reflects tax withholding in connection with the vesting of a portion of the Restricted Stock Unit award previously granted to the reporting person on February 13, 2023. There was no transaction in the market. Includes accrued dividends. Reflects tax withholding in connection with the vesting of a portion of the Restricted Stock Unit award previously granted to the reporting person on February 13, 2025. There was no transaction in the market.
FAQ
What insider transactions did EQT (EQT) report for William E. Jordan?
EQT reported that Chief Legal & Policy Officer William E. Jordan had shares withheld for taxes, not open-market sales. On February 13, 2026, 3,366 and 2,095 EQT common shares were withheld to satisfy tax obligations tied to vesting restricted stock units.
Were the EQT (EQT) insider transactions open-market sales?
No, the transactions were not open-market sales. Footnotes explain they reflect tax withholding when restricted stock units vested, with no transaction in the market. Shares were effectively surrendered to cover tax liabilities, a common administrative mechanism for equity awards.