Oil States International, Inc. filings document an operating company that supplies manufactured products and services to energy, military and industrial customers. Its 8-K reports furnish quarterly operating results, segment data, non-GAAP reconciliations, backlog and bookings commentary, restructuring charges, debt levels and cash-flow measures tied to its oilfield products and services businesses.
The company’s regulatory record also includes material-agreement disclosures for its cash-flow based credit facilities, capital-structure matters involving convertible senior notes, and governance filings covering executive succession, board appointments, compensation and annual proxy voting matters. These documents describe liquidity arrangements, secured borrowing terms, shareholder governance and risk-related disclosures for OIS as a public operating company.
OIL STATES INTERNATIONAL, INC executive Matthew Earl Autenrieth filed an initial insider statement showing ownership of 23,768 shares of Common Stock. This position includes multiple equity awards granted between 2023 and 2026, with portions already fully vested and additional shares scheduled to vest through 2028.
Moses Philip Scott reported acquisition or exercise transactions in this Form 4 filing.
Oil States International, Inc. executive vice president and chief operating officer Philip Scott Moses received a grant of 13,357 shares of common stock as a service-based restricted stock award. The shares were granted at $0.0000 per share as equity compensation.
The award vests in three equal annual installments beginning on May 1, 2027, tying full ownership to continued service over time. Following this grant, Moses directly holds a total of 737,343.688 shares of common stock.
HAJDIK LLOYD A reported acquisition or exercise transactions in this Form 4 filing.
OIL STATES INTERNATIONAL, INC President & CEO Lloyd A. Hajdik received a grant of 66,785 shares of common stock as equity compensation. The award is service-based restricted common stock under the company’s Second Amended and Restated Equity Participation Plan and was issued at no cash cost to him.
The restricted shares vest in three equal annual installments beginning on May 1, 2027, aligning the CEO’s compensation with longer-term company performance. Following this grant, he directly holds a total of 737,390 shares of common stock.
POTTER ROBERT L reported acquisition or exercise transactions in this Form 4 filing.
Oil States International director Robert L. Potter received a stock award as compensation. He was granted 1,074 shares of common stock at a reference value of $11.64 per share under the company’s Second Amended and Restated Equity Participation Plan, and the award vests immediately upon grant.
Following this award, Potter directly holds 208,318 shares of Oil States International common stock, reflecting routine equity-based compensation for his role as non-executive chairman of the board.
Oil States International director Darrell E. Hollek sold 42,511 shares of Common Stock in an open-market transaction. The sale occurred on March 31, 2026 at a weighted average price of $11.61 per share, with trade prices ranging from $11.51 to $11.70 according to the footnote.
After this transaction, Hollek directly holds 104,073 shares of Oil States International common stock, indicating he retains a substantial equity position in the company despite the sale.
OIS submitted a Form 144 notice reporting a proposed sale of 42,511 shares of common stock. The filing lists restricted stock grants of 19,470 shares (05/09/2022), 19,470 shares (05/08/2023) and 3,571 shares (05/06/2019). The brokerage listed is Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC and the exchange shown is NYSE.
Oil States International is asking stockholders to vote at a fully virtual 2026 annual meeting on three items: electing two Class I directors, an advisory say-on-pay vote, and ratifying Deloitte & Touche LLP as independent auditor for 2026.
The Board has nominated Lawrence R. Dickerson, an independent former CEO of Diamond Offshore, and incoming President and CEO Lloyd A. Hajdik for three-year terms ending in 2029, following long‑time CEO and director Cindy Taylor’s retirement on May 1, 2026. The Board recommends voting FOR all three proposals.
The proxy highlights a governance framework with an independent Chair, six of seven directors deemed independent, robust committee structure, stock ownership guidelines, anti‑hedging and clawback policies, and an enterprise risk management process. It also outlines a pay‑for‑performance philosophy, with most executive compensation at risk through short‑ and long‑term incentives.
For 2025, the company reports revenues of $669 million, Adjusted EBITDA of $83 million (12.5% margin), cash flow from operations of $105 million, and free cash flow of $94 million. Management emphasizes a 40% increase in offshore backlog to $435 million, purchase of $70 million of 4.75% convertible notes (leaving year‑end debt at $55 million and cash of $70 million), and $17 million of share repurchases, equal to about 5% of shares outstanding at the start of 2025.
Oil States International Inc: This Schedule 13G/A (Amendment No. 16) filed by The Vanguard Group states that, following an internal realignment, certain Vanguard subsidiaries will report holdings separately. The filing shows 0 shares beneficially owned and 0 of the class as reported by The Vanguard Group on 03/27/2026.
Oil States International, Inc. filed an amended annual report to correct the date in the independent auditor’s report; the amendment does not update prior disclosures. For 2025, the company generated $668.988 million in revenue, down from $692.588 million in 2024, and reported a net loss of $109.377 million compared with an $11.258 million loss a year earlier.
Results were heavily affected by non-cash charges, including $91.0 million of long-lived asset impairments in the Downhole Technologies segment, part of total 2025 impairment and related charges of $132.637 million. Despite the loss, operating activities provided $105.123 million of cash, supporting $70.440 million of repurchases of 4.75% convertible notes and $16.608 million of share buybacks, reducing year-end total debt to $55.040 million and stockholders’ equity to $573.191 million.