Welcome to our dedicated page for Vistra SEC filings (Ticker: VST), 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.
Vistra Corp. (NYSE: VST) regularly files reports and disclosures with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that shed light on its integrated retail electricity and power generation business. These SEC filings cover topics such as acquisitions of generation assets, long-term power purchase agreements, financing transactions, credit facilities, capacity market participation, and quarterly financial results.
Form 8-K filings provide detailed information on Vistra’s material events. For example, multiple 8-Ks describe the company’s acquisition of seven modern natural gas plants from Lotus Infrastructure Partners and the definitive agreements to acquire Cogentrix Energy, a portfolio of 10 natural gas generation facilities. Other 8-Ks outline 20-year power purchase agreements for carbon-free power from Vistra’s nuclear plants, including PPAs with Meta for 2,609 megawatts of capacity from PJM nuclear units and a separate 20-year PPA for 1,200 megawatts from the Comanche Peak Nuclear Power Plant in Texas.
Additional filings detail Vistra’s capital structure and liquidity. These include descriptions of private offerings of senior secured notes by Vistra Operations Company LLC, amendments to the company’s commodity-linked credit agreement, and information about revolving credit facilities and collateral arrangements. Earnings-related 8-Ks furnish quarterly financial results, segment performance, and guidance ranges, while other filings discuss participation in capacity auctions such as PJM’s 2027/2028 planning year auction.
On this SEC filings page, you can review Vistra’s 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly reports, 8-K current reports, and other disclosures as they become available from EDGAR. Stock Titan’s tools can help summarize lengthy documents, highlight key sections on topics like acquisitions, nuclear PPAs, debt offerings, and tax receivable agreements, and surface insider and capital structure information from Forms 3, 4, and related filings. This allows investors and analysts to quickly understand how Vistra finances its operations, grows its generation fleet, and manages risk in competitive power markets.
Vistra Corp., through subsidiary Vistra Operations Company LLC, completed a private offering of $2.250 billion in senior secured notes. This includes $1.0 billion of 4.700% notes due 2031 and $1.250 billion of 5.350% notes due 2036, both fully guaranteed by certain subsidiaries and secured by a first‑priority lien on substantial assets.
The Issuer received approximately $2.225 billion in net proceeds, to be used with cash on hand to fund part of the Cogentrix Energy acquisition, for general corporate purposes including repaying existing debt, and to pay related fees and expenses. The notes feature optional redemption, change‑of‑control and specified tax‑related repurchase rights, and covenants limiting liens, mergers and major asset sales.
Vistra Corp. has entered into 20-year power purchase agreements with Meta Platforms to supply a total of 2,609 MW of carbon-free power and capacity from Vistra’s PJM nuclear plants. Deliveries of operating energy and capacity are expected to begin on a partial basis in late 2026, reaching full delivery by year end 2027, while uprate-related deliveries are expected to phase in starting in 2031 and reach full delivery by year end 2034.
To support the planned uprates, Vistra expects capital spending from 2026 through 2034, with less than 20% of the aggregate spend projected by year end 2028. Based on expected payments and its after-tax spend profile, the company anticipates these investments will meet or exceed its publicly communicated mid-teens levered return target. At full delivery and assuming its 2026 Adjusted Free Cash Flow before Growth from Ongoing Operations guidance, Vistra projects incremental Adjusted Free Cash Flow before Growth accretion of approximately 8%-10% from operating energy and capacity and an additional approximately 5%-7% from uprate energy and capacity, converting incremental Adjusted EBITDA to incremental Adjusted Free Cash Flow before Growth at a weighted average ratio of approximately 80%.
Vistra Corp. agreed to acquire 100% of Q-Generation, LLC through a cash-and-stock transaction coupled with a merger of a Vistra subsidiary into a Q-Generation affiliate. At closing, Vistra and its buyer subsidiary expect to pay approximately $2.3 billion in cash, net of an estimated $1.5 billion of assumed indebtedness, plus 5,000,000 Vistra common shares valued by the parties at $185 per share.
The buyer obtained a commitment from Goldman Sachs Bank USA for up to $2.0 billion of senior secured bridge loans to help fund the cash portion. Closing is conditioned on multiple regulatory approvals, including the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Hart-Scott-Rodino clearance, and specific state utility regulators in New Hampshire, Texas, and Connecticut.
Vistra will file a resale registration statement for the stock consideration within five business days after closing, and the seller agreed not to transfer the shares for about three months after closing. The agreements include outside termination dates, extension rights tied to regulatory approvals, and reverse termination fees of $77,839,364 and $72,160,636 if the buyer fails to close after conditions are met.
Vistra Corp. reported results from the PJM capacity auction for planning year 2027/2028, clearing about 10,566 MW at a weighted average price of $333.44 per megawatt-day. This is the amount of generation capacity that PJM will rely on from Vistra in that future period in return for capacity payments at the auction price.
The cleared capacity is spread across multiple PJM zones, including RTO, COMED, DEOK, EMAAC, MAAC, ATSI, and DOM, each at the same clearing price of $333.44 per megawatt-day. These forward capacity commitments help underpin future revenue associated with keeping Vistra’s natural gas, nuclear, coal, solar, and battery assets available to support grid reliability.
Vistra Corp president and CEO James A. Burke filed an amended insider transaction report detailing recent stock option exercises, share sales, gifts, and previously unreported indirect holdings. On December 11 and 12, 2025, he exercised company stock options for 22,251 and 27,749 shares at an exercise price of $14.03 per share.
Burke sold 22,251 common shares at $162.05 on December 11, including approximately 4,158 shares sold for a cashless option exercise and 18,043 shares sold to cover taxes, and made a bona fide gift of 27,745 shares. After these transactions, he directly held 298,002 Vistra shares. He also reports indirect ownership of 701,514 shares through JAMEB, LP, 34,000 shares via the James A. Burke 2012 Irrevocable Trust, and 259 shares via the Marti E. Burke 2012 Irrevocable Trust. The trades were made under a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted June 12, 2025, and this amendment primarily adds indirect holdings omitted from the original filing.
Vistra Corp. reported insider transactions by its President and CEO, who is also a director. On December 11, 2025, he exercised employee stock options for 22,251 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $14.03 per share and then sold 22,251 shares at $162.05 per share, after which 297,998 shares were shown as beneficially owned directly for that line.
On the same day he also made a gift of 27,745 shares, and on December 12, 2025 he exercised additional options for 27,749 shares at $14.03 per share. These transactions were carried out under a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted on June 12, 2025, and the remaining 2016 employee stock option referenced has an expiration date of October 11, 2026.
Vistra Corp. insider James A. Burke has filed a Form 144 notice to sell 22,251 shares of common stock through Fidelity Brokerage Services on the NYSE. The shares to be sold have an aggregate market value of $3,605,774.55, compared with 338,825,490 Vistra common shares outstanding. The shares were acquired on 12/11/2025 by exercising stock options originally granted on 10/11/2016, with the purchase price paid in cash.
Over the prior three months, Burke has reported multiple open-market sales of Vistra common stock. These include transactions such as 43,074 shares sold on 09/11/2025 for gross proceeds of $8,991,625.77, along with numerous additional sales in September, October, and November 2025, each disclosing the number of shares sold and total proceeds. By signing the notice, he represents that he is not aware of undisclosed material adverse information about Vistra’s operations.
Vistra Corp. executive reports charitable stock transfer. The company’s EVP and General Counsel reported a transaction involving Vistra common stock on 11/28/2025. The filing shows a disposition of 3,602 shares of common stock coded as “G,” indicating the shares were given as a gift at a stated price of $0 per share. After this transaction, the executive directly holds 76,252 shares of Vistra common stock. This is a routine insider ownership update rather than an operational or financial performance event for the company.
Vistra Corp. (VST) executive vice president and general counsel reported a stock sale in a Form 4 filing. On 11/24/2025, the officer sold 8,219 shares of Vistra common stock at a price of $173.35 per share.
After this transaction, the reporting person beneficially owns 79,854 shares of Vistra common stock, held directly. The filing is a routine insider transaction disclosure required for company officers.
Vistra Corp. executive reports routine share withholding for taxes. A Vistra Corp. (VST) officer, the EVP and Chief Administrative Officer, reported that on 11/20/2025 the company withheld 182 shares of common stock at a price of $174.69 per share to cover taxes due on restricted stock units. After this administrative transaction, the officer beneficially owns 218,057 shares of Vistra common stock directly. The filing notes that both the timing and amount of the withholding were set by the terms of the restricted stock unit award and were not controlled by the reporting person.