Powell Industries, Inc. filings document a public operating company that designs and services custom-engineered electrical energy distribution, control and monitoring systems for heavy industrial, utility and transportation-related markets. The filing record includes Form 8-K reports for quarterly and annual operating results, dividend declarations and amendments to the company’s certificate of incorporation affecting common-stock structure and authorized shares.
Powell’s proxy materials and annual-meeting reports disclose board elections, executive-compensation advisory votes, committee leadership and other governance matters. Exhibits attached to current reports include press releases and charter amendments, while financial-result disclosures describe revenue trends, orders, backlog, margins and liquidity in the context of the company’s engineered electrical equipment business.
Thomas W. Powell reported the sale of common stock. The filing lists multiple dispositions: 02/12/2026 — 14,911 shares for $8,960,349.43; 02/11/2026 — 10,285 shares for $6,094,528.97; 02/24/2026 — 1,159 shares for $650,706.87; and 02/13/2026 — 120 shares for $72,007.60.
Thomas W. Powell reported sales of Common stock under Form 144. The filing lists shares sold on 02/11/2026 (10,285 shares for $6,094,528.97), 02/12/2026 (14,911 shares for $8,960,349.43) and 02/13/2026 (120 shares for $72,007.60). The notice also records earlier restricted stock vesting entries from 06/15/2011 (1,000 shares) and 06/16/2011 (159 shares).
Powell Industries director James W. McGill reported receiving a grant of 200 shares of common stock as compensation for serving on the company’s Board of Directors under the Non-Employee Director Equity Incentive Plan. The shares are restricted and vest on the earlier of the first anniversary of the grant date or the company’s 2027 annual stockholder meeting.
Following this award, McGill directly holds 10,360 common shares, which include shares subject to time-based vesting provisions. Footnotes explain that related restricted stock units convert into common stock on a one-for-one basis at vesting.
Powell Industries director Katheryn Baucom received an equity grant of 200 shares of common stock as compensation for board service. The award is structured as restricted stock under the Non-Employee Director Equity Incentive Plan at a reference price of $0.01 per share.
These restricted shares vest on the earlier of the first anniversary of the grant date or the company’s 2027 annual stockholder meeting. After this grant, Baucom directly holds a total of 5,960 common shares, some of which are subject to time-based vesting provisions and convert to common stock on a one-for-one basis at vesting.
Powell Industries director Mohit Singh received an equity grant of company stock. He was awarded 200 shares of restricted common stock at a stated price of $0.01 per share as compensation for serving on the Board under the Non-Employee Director Equity Incentive Plan.
After this grant, he directly holds 1,360 common shares, some of which have time-based vesting provisions. The restricted shares vest on the earlier of the first anniversary of the grant date or the Company’s 2027 Annual Stockholder Meeting, and RSUs convert into common stock on a one-for-one basis at vesting.
Powell Industries director Mark W. Smith received an equity grant of 200 shares of common stock as compensation for serving on the company’s Board of Directors. The award is in the form of restricted stock under the Non-Employee Director Equity Incentive Plan at a stated price of $0.01 per share.
After this grant, Smith directly holds 430 common shares, including shares that have time-based vesting provisions. The restricted shares vest on the earlier of the first anniversary of the grant date or the company’s 2027 Annual Stockholder Meeting, and the related RSUs convert into common stock on a one-for-one basis at vesting.
Powell Industries director Alaina K. Brooks received an equity grant of 200 shares of common stock as compensation for serving on the company’s Board of Directors. The shares are structured as restricted stock under the Non-Employee Director Equity Incentive Plan at a stated price of $0.01 per share.
These restricted shares vest on the earlier of the first anniversary of the grant date or the company’s 2027 Annual Stockholder Meeting. According to the filing, restricted stock units convert into common stock on a one-for-one basis at vesting, and Brooks now holds 3,760 shares of common stock directly, including shares subject to time-based vesting provisions.
Powell Industries director Stacey John received a grant of 200 shares of common stock as equity compensation. The shares were awarded at a stated value of $0.01 per share and increase his directly owned holdings to 6,160 shares after the transaction.
The award consists of restricted stock under the Non-Employee Director Equity Incentive Plan. These shares vest on the earlier of the first anniversary of the grant date or the company’s 2027 annual stockholder meeting, and the related RSUs convert into common stock on a one-for-one basis when they vest.
Powell Industries director Richard E. Williams received a grant of 200 shares of restricted common stock as compensation for serving on the company’s board under the Non-Employee Director Equity Incentive Plan. These shares vest on the earlier of the first anniversary of the grant or the company’s 2027 annual stockholder meeting.
The filing notes that related RSUs convert into common stock on a one-for-one basis at vesting and that his holdings include shares with time-based vesting provisions. After this award, Williams directly holds 14,960 common shares.
Powell Industries, Inc. held its annual stockholder meeting on February 18, 2026. Stockholders re-elected Alaina K. Brooks and Katheryn B. Curtis as directors, with 8,671,860 and 8,529,636 votes cast in favor, respectively, and no broker non-votes reported.
Stockholders also approved, on an advisory basis, the Company’s say-on-pay proposal on executive compensation, with 9,051,989 votes for, 121,383 against, and 25,855 abstentions. Following the meeting, the Board appointed Mark W. Smith as chair of the Audit Committee, succeeding Christopher E. Cragg at the end of his term.