Welcome to our dedicated page for Orion Engineered Carbons S.A. SEC filings (Ticker: OEC), 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 Orion S.A. (NYSE: OEC) SEC filings page on Stock Titan provides direct access to the company’s regulatory disclosures as a Luxembourg-incorporated issuer listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Orion files a range of documents with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, including current reports on Form 8-K that cover earnings announcements, credit agreement amendments, dividend declarations, shareholder meeting results and executive transitions.
Earnings-related filings are a key focus. Orion regularly furnishes press releases announcing its quarterly financial results on Form 8-K under Item 2.02. These filings summarize net sales, net income or loss, segment volumes and profitability, and non-GAAP measures such as Adjusted EBITDA, Adjusted Net Income, Adjusted Diluted EPS and Free Cash Flow, along with reconciliations to GAAP measures. They also describe factors affecting performance, including demand in tire and industrial markets, oil price pass-through, product and regional mix, and timing of raw material cost recovery.
Investors can also review capital structure and financing disclosures, such as Form 8-K filings describing amendments to Orion’s credit agreement. For example, the company has reported incremental revolving facility commitments and changes to leverage ratio covenants, while noting that other loan terms and obligations remain consistent with the existing agreement. These documents help clarify Orion’s borrowing capacity and financial covenants.
Additional filings address governance, dividends and leadership. Form 8-K reports detail annual general meeting voting results, including director elections, approval of financial statements, auditor appointments and share repurchase authorizations. Other 8-Ks describe interim dividend declarations and executive changes, such as the planned retirement of the Chief Financial Officer, the appointment of a successor and related compensation and consulting arrangements.
On Stock Titan, these filings are updated in near real time from EDGAR and are accompanied by AI-powered summaries that highlight the most important points in each document. Users can quickly see what changed in Orion’s financial outlook, capital structure, governance or management without reading every page of the underlying filing, while still having full-text access when deeper review is needed.
Orion S.A. (OEC) – Form 4 insider filing: On 27 June 2025, director Kerry A. Galvin received 12,935 restricted common shares at a grant price of $0. The award will vest the day before the company’s 2026 Annual General Meeting. Following the grant, Galvin’s direct beneficial ownership rises to 65,603 shares. No derivative securities were involved and no shares were sold. The transaction represents a routine equity-based compensation grant that modestly increases insider alignment but is not large enough, in absolute or relative terms, to be considered materially market-moving.
Orion (NYSE:OEC) filed an 8-K reporting results of its June 26 2025 Annual General Meeting.
Shareholders approved all 11 proposals, including re-election of nine directors, 2025 board pay, a 2024 say-on-pay, statutory and consolidated 2024 accounts, reappointment of Ernst & Young for 2025 audits, and a five-year share-repurchase authorization under Luxembourg law.
No item drew more than 7 % opposition, indicating broad investor support and no material governance changes.
Orion S.A. (NYSE:OEC) filed an 8-K reporting the declaration of an interim dividend to be paid in the fourth quarter of 2025. The disclosure appears under Item 8.01 and is supported by a press release attached as Exhibit 99.1. No dividend amount, record date, or payment date is provided in the filing, leaving the financial impact for follow-up communications. Because no financial statements were furnished, investors must rely on future releases for cash-flow implications. The announcement signals board confidence in liquidity and intent to return capital but also introduces near-term cash-use considerations.