Welcome to our dedicated page for New York Times SEC filings (Ticker: NYT), 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 New York Times Company filings document the operating results, governance and capital-structure matters of a public media company. Form 8-K reports furnish quarterly and annual financial results, including digital-only subscription revenue, subscriber activity, ARPU, advertising revenue, affiliate and licensing revenue, operating costs and profitability measures.
Proxy and annual-meeting filings cover director elections, auditor ratification, advisory executive compensation votes and the separate voting mechanics of Class A and Class B common stockholders. Other material-event filings describe executive compensation arrangements, including severance-plan and employment-agreement disclosures.
The New York Times Company director Margot Golden Tishler reported acquiring 23 Class A common stock RSUs on 10/23/2025 at $0. These were dividend-equivalent RSUs granted under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan in connection with cash dividends. Dividend-equivalent RSUs tied to vested RSUs are fully vested at grant; those tied to unvested RSUs vest on the date the underlying RSUs vest.
Following the transaction, beneficial ownership was reported as 7,727 shares direct. Indirect holdings by trust were reported as 16,820, 40,500, and 1,400,000 shares. The reporting person disclaims beneficial ownership of the indirect shares except to the extent of any pecuniary interest.
The New York Times Company (NYT) director reported an equity award tied to dividends. On 10/23/2025, the reporting person acquired 61 Class A shares at $0 via dividend equivalent RSUs under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan. Dividend equivalent RSUs granted in respect of vested RSUs are fully vested at grant; those tied to unvested RSUs will vest on the date the underlying RSUs vest, which is the date of the company’s first annual meeting following the initial grant.
Following the transaction, beneficial ownership was listed as 20,459 shares direct. Indirect holdings were disclosed as 1,400,000 shares by trust, 69,518 shares by spouse as trustee, and 42,073 shares by trust.
The New York Times Company (NYT) director Amanpal S. Bhutani reported acquiring 89 shares of Class A Common Stock on 10/23/2025 at $0, recorded as dividend equivalent RSUs under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan.
After this transaction, he beneficially owns 29,620 shares directly. Dividend equivalent RSUs tied to vested RSUs are fully vested at grant; those tied to unvested RSUs will vest on the date the related RSUs vest, the company’s first annual meeting following the initial grant.
The New York Times Company (NYT) reported an insider transaction on a Form 4. Director Manuel Bronstein recorded the acquisition of 54 shares of Class A Common Stock on 10/23/2025 at a price of $0, reflecting Dividend Equivalent RSUs tied to prior RSU awards under the 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan.
Following the transaction, Bronstein’s directly held balance is 17,973 shares. The filing notes that dividend-equivalent RSUs granted on already vested RSUs are fully vested at grant, while those tied to unvested RSUs will vest on the date the related RSUs vest, which is the date of the Company’s first annual meeting following the initial grant.
The New York Times Company (NYT) filed a Form 4 reporting insider activity. Director Beth A. Brooke acquired 59 shares of Class A Common Stock at $0 on October 23, 2025. The shares reflect dividend-equivalent restricted stock units credited under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan when cash dividends were paid.
Following this transaction, Brooke beneficially owns 19,720 shares directly. Dividend-equivalent RSUs tied to vested RSUs are fully vested at grant; those tied to unvested RSUs vest on the same date the underlying RSUs vest, which is the date of the company’s first annual meeting following the initial grant.
The New York Times Company (NYT) disclosed an insider equity change by director Rachel Glaser. On 10/23/2025, the reporting person acquired 100 shares of Class A Common Stock at $0, bringing the total directly held to 33,328 shares.
The filing explains these were Dividend Equivalent RSUs credited under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan, reflecting cash dividends paid on Class A shares. Dividend Equivalent RSUs tied to previously vested RSUs are fully vested at grant. Those tied to unvested RSUs will vest on the same date the underlying RSUs vest, which is the date of the company’s first annual meeting following the initial grant.
The New York Times Company reported an insider equity change. A director acquired 164 Class A common stock RSUs on 10/23/2025 at $0, recorded as dividend-equivalent RSUs under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan.
Following this transaction, the director beneficially owns 57,438 shares directly. Dividend-equivalent RSUs tied to vested RSUs are fully vested at grant; those tied to unvested RSUs vest on the date of the company’s first annual meeting following the initial grant.
The New York Times Company (NYT) reported an insider transaction by Director John W. Rogers Jr. on 10/23/2025. He acquired 96 shares of Class A Common Stock at a price of $0, bringing his directly held position to 52,050 shares.
The filing explains these reflect Dividend Equivalent RSUs under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan. Dividend Equivalent RSUs tied to vested RSUs are fully vested at grant; those tied to unvested RSUs will vest when the related RSUs vest, on the date of the company’s first annual meeting following the initial grant.
The New York Times Company director Rebecca Van Dyck reported an acquisition of 164 shares of Class A Common Stock at $0 on 10/23/2025. The filing shows 54,278 shares beneficially owned following the transaction, held directly.
These shares reflect Dividend Equivalent Restricted Stock Units (RSUs) awarded under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan in connection with cash dividends on Class A Common Stock. Dividend Equivalent RSUs tied to vested RSUs are fully vested at grant. Those tied to unvested RSUs will vest when the related RSUs vest, which occurs on the date of the company’s first annual meeting following the initial grant.
New York Times Company (NYT) — Form 4 insider update: A director reported acquiring 28 shares of Class A Common Stock on 10/23/2025 at a price of $0, recorded as dividend-equivalent restricted stock units (RSUs). Following this transaction, the director beneficially owns 9,573 shares, held directly.
These Dividend Equivalent RSUs were issued under the 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan in connection with cash dividends. RSUs granted in respect of vested awards are fully vested at grant, while those tied to unvested awards will vest when the related RSUs vest, which occurs on the date of the Company’s first annual meeting following the initial grant.