Welcome to our dedicated page for Oshkosh Truck SEC filings (Ticker: OSK), 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.
Oshkosh Corporation filings document the financial results, governance matters, financing arrangements and risk disclosures of a public manufacturer of purpose-built vehicles and equipment. Form 8-K reports furnish quarterly earnings releases, conference-call materials and operating commentary for the company’s Access, Vocational and Transport businesses.
Oshkosh proxy materials cover annual shareholder voting, director elections, auditor ratification, executive compensation votes and shareholder proposals. Other filings record material agreements such as revolving credit facilities and describe risk factors tied to cyclical end markets, including access equipment, municipal fire apparatus, refuse and recycling collection vehicles, airport products and defense-related demand.
Oshkosh Corp executive Jayanthi Iyengar reported equity compensation and related share movements. On February 16, 2026, she received a grant of 3,800 Restricted Stock Units, which vest in one-third annual increments starting February 16, 2027. Each unit represents a contingent right to receive one share of Oshkosh common stock.
On February 17, 2026, 1,123.313 RSUs were exercised and converted into 1,123.313 shares of common stock at a reported price of $168.47 per share. In a separate tax-withholding disposition the same day, 517 shares of common stock were delivered at $168.47 per share to cover tax obligations, leaving her with 23,510.313 shares of common stock held directly after these transactions.
Oshkosh Corp executive James C. Freeders reported multiple equity transactions. On February 16, 2026, he received a grant of 2,397 Restricted Stock Units, each representing a contingent right to one Oshkosh common share, vesting in one-third annual increments starting February 16, 2027.
On February 17, 2026, he exercised 1,225.616 RSUs, converting them into the same number of common shares at $168.47 per share, and disposed of 548 shares to cover tax obligations. After these transactions, he directly held 9,946.331 common shares and 3,453.257 RSUs.
Oshkosh Corp Executive VP & CFO Matthew Field reported multiple equity compensation moves. On February 16, 2026, he received a grant of 5,553 Restricted Stock Units (RSUs), each representing one share of common stock, vesting in one-third annual increments beginning February 16, 2027.
On February 17, 2026, 2,751.053 RSUs were converted into the same number of common shares at a reference price of $168.47 per share, and 1,318 shares of common stock were withheld at $168.47 per share to cover tax obligations, leaving him with 9,818.102 common shares directly owned.
Oshkosh Corp executive Ignacio A. Cortina reported multiple equity award transactions. On February 16, 2026, he was granted 4,823 Restricted Stock Units (RSUs) under the company’s stock plan, each representing a contingent right to one share of common stock. This RSU award vests in one-third annual increments starting on February 16, 2027.
On February 17, 2026, 2,593.039 RSUs were converted into the same number of Oshkosh common shares, tied to an earlier award that vests in one-third annual increments commencing on February 17, 2026. To cover tax obligations, 1,246 common shares were disposed of through a tax-withholding transaction at $168.47 per share. After these transactions, Cortina directly held 4,823 RSUs and 46,914.136 common shares, with totals including shares previously acquired via dividend reinvestments.
Oshkosh Corp SVP & Chief Marketing Officer Bryan K. Brandt reported multiple equity award transactions. On February 16, 2026, he received a grant of 1,608 Restricted Stock Units (RSUs), each representing a contingent right to one Oshkosh common share, vesting in one-third annual increments starting February 16, 2027.
On February 17, 2026, he exercised 864.009 RSUs, acquiring the same number of common shares at 168.4700 per share, and disposed of 386 shares to satisfy tax obligations through a share withholding transaction. After these moves, he directly held 10,354.602 common shares and 1,608 RSUs.
Oshkosh Corporation filed its annual report describing a diversified industrial business built around three segments: Access, Vocational and Transport, which generated 43%, 36% and 20% of 2025 net sales, respectively. About 20% of net sales in both 2025 and 2024 came from U.S. government customers, mainly multi‑year defense vehicle contracts.
The company highlights recent portfolio moves, including the $804.6 million AeroTech acquisition in 2023 and the $114.5 million purchase of Spanish equipment maker AUSA in 2024, alongside smaller divestitures. It emphasizes technology leadership in electrification, autonomy and connectivity, with products such as electric refuse trucks and the USPS Next Generation Delivery Vehicle program, where 51,500 vehicles have been ordered under a contract allowing purchases of up to 165,000 units over ten years.
Key risks center on cyclical construction, fire, refuse and airport markets, heavy reliance on government budgets, execution on the USPS contract, supply chain and labor constraints and sharply higher tariffs, which added approximately $35 million of cost in 2025 and are estimated at about $200 million in 2026.
Oshkosh Corporation senior vice president and chief marketing officer Bryan K. Brandt reported a bona fide gift of 600 shares of Oshkosh common stock on February 11, 2026. The shares were transferred at a reported price of $0 per share as a charitable-style gift transaction.
After this transfer, Brandt directly beneficially owned 9,876.593 shares of Oshkosh common stock. This total includes shares acquired through dividend reinvestments in exempt transactions that are not required to be separately reported under Section 16(a).
Oshkosh Corporation furnished an earnings news release for the quarter and year ended December 31, 2025 and held a conference call covering results and its outlook for 2026, with related materials available on its website. The company emphasizes that all forward-looking statements, including financial targets for 2028, are only targets and may not be achieved.
The filing expands on key risks, including performance under its U.S. Postal Service Next Generation Delivery Vehicle contract, where deferred contract costs exceeded expected future profits on existing orders by approximately $135 million as of December 31, 2025. Oshkosh reports that tariffs implemented by the U.S. in 2025 increased its costs by about $35 million in 2025 and are estimated at approximately $200 million in 2026, which could pressure margins and pricing.
Approximately 20% of 2025 net sales were to the U.S. government, exposing the company to budget, procurement and policy risks, including a recent executive order affecting defense sourcing and potential capital allocation constraints. The company also discloses consolidated gross receivables of $1.5 billion and customer indebtedness guarantees of $559 million, with estimated maximum exposure of $93 million, highlighting credit and collection risk in weaker economic conditions.
Oshkosh Corporation officer Jackie L. Nystrom, SVP & CHRO, reported her beneficial ownership as of 01/01/2026. She directly owns 2,672.356 shares of Oshkosh common stock.
She also holds several restricted stock unit (RSU) awards that convert into common shares at no exercise price. These include 508.934 RSUs expiring on 02/20/2026 that vest in one-third annual increments starting 02/20/2024, 1,107.174 RSUs expiring on 02/19/2027 vesting in one-third increments starting 02/19/2025, and 1,651.036 RSUs expiring on 02/17/2028 vesting in one-third increments starting 02/17/2026.
Oshkosh Corporation’s Executive VP and CFO Matthew Field reported equity compensation and a share sale. On 12/16/2025, he was granted 15,411.554 shares of common stock at $128.52 per share under Oshkosh’s 2024 Incentive Stock and Awards Plan.
The same day, he also disposed of 7,244 common shares at $128.52 per share. Separately, he received a restricted stock unit (RSU) award for 15,411.554 units, bringing his total RSU holdings to 30,824.127 units. These RSUs vest in one-third annual increments starting 12/16/2025. The disclosure notes that his beneficial share ownership includes stock acquired through dividend reinvestments.