Welcome to our dedicated page for LIVEWIRE GROUP SEC filings (Ticker: LVWR), 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.
LiveWire Group, Inc. filings document an operating electric-vehicle issuer with common stock and warrants registered on the New York Stock Exchange. The company’s 8-K reports furnish quarterly and annual results, including segment disclosures for Electric Motorcycles and STACYC, unit sales, revenue, operating loss, cash-flow measures and related press-release exhibits.
LiveWire’s proxy materials describe board structure, director matters, stockholder voting items and executive compensation governance. Other filings cover board appointments and resignations, registered securities, and capital-raising arrangements, including an at-the-market common-stock sales agreement supported by an effective shelf registration statement.
LiveWire Group, Inc. reported several corporate actions. The company bought substantially all assets of Dust Motorcycles related to electric motorcycles and powertrain technology, paying $375,000 in cash plus $500,000 in stock, with three $875,000 stock installments and potential stock earn-outs up to $11,250,000.
LiveWire’s subsidiary also signed an amended contract manufacturing agreement with KYMCO, making KYMCO exclusive manufacturer for the Parisian maxi-scooter and future agreed products for five years per product, on FOB pricing terms. At the 2026 annual meeting, all director nominees were elected and a second proposal received 193,641,297 votes in favor.
LiveWire Group, Inc. has acquired the assets of Dust Moto, an electric off‑road motorcycle startup, marking its first acquisition and a strategic move into the electric off‑road segment. The deal brings Dust Moto’s off‑road engineering expertise together with LiveWire’s scale in engineering, manufacturing, and global distribution.
LiveWire plans to advance Dust’s electric dirt bike platform toward production and use its marketing, sales, and service network to accelerate development and go‑to‑market execution. The company expects to share more information about the launch of the off‑road product in the second half of this year and highlights potential benefits and integration risks through detailed forward‑looking statements.
LiveWire Group, Inc. executive Dan Lehrbaum, Head of Product Development & Design, filed an initial ownership report showing holdings of 72,583 shares of common stock. This amount includes multiple grants of restricted stock units that vest between February 2027 and February 2029 on specified schedules.
LiveWire Group, Inc. executive Jeremiah Nienhuis reported beneficial ownership of 121,340 shares of common stock. This amount includes several grants of restricted stock units that vest over time, showing both current holdings and future share delivery tied to continued service.
The position includes 2,050 restricted stock units granted on February 21, 2024 that vest on February 21, 2027; 32,914 units granted on February 19, 2025, with half vesting on each of February 19, 2027 and 2028; and 75,644 units granted on February 19, 2026, vesting in three equal annual installments from February 19, 2027 through 2029.
LiveWire Group, Inc. reported first‑quarter 2026 revenue of $5.1 million, up from $2.7 million a year earlier, driven by growth in both Electric Motorcycles and STACYC. Net loss was $18.1 million, slightly improved from $19.3 million, with basic and diluted loss per share steady at $0.09.
The Electric Motorcycles segment grew revenue to $1.4 million on higher unit sales but still generated a sizeable operating loss of $16.7 million. STACYC revenue rose to $3.7 million and its operating loss narrowed to $1.0 million.
Cash and cash equivalents were $67.5 million, down from $82.8 million at year‑end, after $13.0 million of operating cash use. LiveWire has a $75.0 million related‑party term loan outstanding and $47.8 million of remaining capacity under its at‑the‑market equity program to support ongoing investment in new products and cost‑reduction efforts.
LiveWire Group, Inc. reported strong top-line growth but continued losses for the first quarter of 2026. Consolidated revenue rose to $5.1 million, up 86% from $2.7 million a year earlier, driven by both electric motorcycles and STACYC kids’ products.
Electric motorcycle units increased 176% to 91 with revenue up 236% to $1.4 million, while STACYC units grew 101% to 3,959 and revenue climbed 60% to $3.7 million. The company reported a consolidated operating loss of $(17.7) million, an improvement from $(20.7) million, as gross profit increased and selling, administrative and engineering expenses fell by $1.4 million.
Net loss was $(18.1) million, or $(0.09) per share, essentially flat per-share versus the prior year despite higher interest expense to a related party and lower warrant fair value gains. Free cash flow improved to $(13.6) million from $(18.1) million, and cash and cash equivalents were $67.5 million at March 31, 2026. Management reiterated full-year 2026 guidance and highlighted the planned Spring 2026 launch of the S4 Honcho™.
LiveWire Group, Inc. is holding a virtual 2026 annual meeting on May 21, 2026 to elect seven directors and ratify KPMG LLP as independent auditor for 2026. The slate includes incumbent board members and first‑time stockholder election of director Bryan Niketh.
The company remains a controlled company under NYSE rules, with Harley-Davidson retaining over half the voting power, so its key committees are not fully independent. LiveWire is also an emerging growth company, using reduced JOBS Act disclosures.
Non‑employee directors receive a $60,000 cash retainer plus a $125,000 annual restricted stock unit grant, with additional committee and lead director fees. In 2025, CEO Karim Donnez earned $2.9 million in total compensation, largely from equity awards and performance‑based cash incentives tied to unit sales and cash burn.
The proxy describes committee structures, a clawback and insider trading policy, and an executive severance plan that can provide up to 18 months of salary and benefits for the CEO on certain terminations. KPMG billed $768,333 of audit fees for 2025, and stockholders are asked to ratify its continued appointment.
LiveWire Group, Inc. General Counsel & Board Secretary Gerrard Allen reported two equity transactions in company common stock. On February 19, 2026, he surrendered 16,481 shares at $2.33 per share to the issuer to satisfy tax withholding obligations tied to vesting restricted stock units.
On the same date, he received a grant of 101,395 restricted stock units, each representing one share of common stock upon vesting. One-third of these units vest on each of the first three anniversaries of the grant date, and they are subject to forfeiture until vested. Following these transactions, his direct holdings included 166,827 unvested restricted stock units.
LiveWire Group, Inc. executive Jon Bekefy, Head of Global Sales & Mktg., reported equity compensation changes in the company’s common stock. On February 19, he received a grant of 96,567 restricted stock units (RSUs), each representing one share of common stock upon vesting, with one-third vesting on each of the first three anniversaries of the grant and subject to forfeiture until vested.
To cover tax withholding obligations tied to RSU vesting, he surrendered 16,119 shares on February 19 at $2.33 per share and 2,389 shares on February 21 at $2.21 per share, both classified as tax-withholding dispositions. After these transactions, his reported direct holdings in common stock remain substantial and include 166,188 unvested RSUs that may convert into shares as they vest.
LiveWire Group, Inc. executive Ryan Ragland reported routine equity compensation and related tax withholding activity. He received a grant of 96,567 restricted stock units, each representing one future share of common stock, vesting in three equal annual installments and subject to forfeiture until vested.
To cover tax withholding on vesting restricted stock units, he disposed of 18,356 shares at $2.33 per share and 3,269 shares at $2.21 per share, both by surrendering shares back to the company rather than through open-market sales. After these transactions, he directly owned 216,798 shares of common stock, including 183,224 unvested restricted stock units.