On April 29, 2026, Powell sold 18,723 shares at a weighted average price of $20.03 (with individual trades ranging from $20.00 to $20.05), for total proceeds of approximately $375,000. The sale was executed under a 10b5-1 trading plan
The sale represented 90.0% of Powell's direct holdings, reducing his position from 20,803 to 2,080 shares.
All shares traded were held directly; no indirect entities or derivative transactions were involved in this disposition.
This sale leaves Powell with a minimal remaining direct stake, reflecting a sharp reduction in available capacity rather than a shift in cadence.
Charles William Powell, Chief Revenue Officer of Slide Insurance Holdings (NASDAQ:SLDE), disclosed the sale of 18,723 shares of common stock for a total consideration of approximately $375,000, according to an SEC Form 4 filing.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Shares traded (direct) | 18,723 |
| Transaction value | ~$375,000 |
| Post-transaction shares (direct) | 2,080 |
| Post-transaction value (direct ownership) | ~$38,000 |
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average purchase price ($20.03); post-transaction value based on April 29, 2026 market close ($18.41).
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Revenue (TTM) | $1.26 billion |
| Net income (TTM) | $490.98 million |
| Dividend yield | None |
| Price change from IPO | 8.41% |
* Price change calculated from June 18, 2025 IPO price of $17.00 as of May 4, 2026.
Slide Insurance Holdings is a Tampa-based insurance holding company specializing in property and casualty coverage for residential clients. The company leverages its underwriting expertise and risk analytics to serve the single-family and condominium insurance market.
Slide Insurance went public at $17 a share on June 18, 2025, which means the standard 180-day post-IPO lockup expired right around mid-December. Powell adopted his 10b5-1 trading plan on December 15, 2025 — essentially the first day he was permitted to schedule sales — and this April 29 transaction is the result. That timing matters. A first-window sale by a newly public-company executive isn't the same signal as a long-tenured insider unloading after years on the cap table; it's the first chance most post-IPO executives get to convert paper wealth into actual money. The 90% reduction in directly held shares looks dramatic in isolation, but direct holdings are typically a small slice of total executive equity at a recently public company — the bulk usually sits in unvested restricted stock units (RSUs) and options that don't appear on a Form 4. Powell sold at a weighted average of $20.03, above the $17 IPO price but a bit below where the stock had been trading earlier this spring. The more useful question for investors isn't this single filing — it's whether other Slide executives file similar 10b5-1 plans in the coming quarters. Clustered officer-level selling is worth tracking. One CRO cashing in on his first real liquidity window is not.
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Seena Hassouna has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.