50,000 common shares were sold directly by Robert Bailenson on May 11, 2026.
This transaction represented 16.33% of Bailenson's direct common share holdings.
No indirect or derivative participation was reported.
On May 11, 2026, Assured Guaranty Ltd. (NYSE:AGO) Chief Operating Officer Robert Bailenson reported the direct open-market sale of 50,000 common shares for ~$3.93 million, according to a SEC Form 4 filing.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Shares sold (direct) | 50,000 |
| Transaction value | $3.9 million |
| Post-transaction shares (direct) | 256,251 |
| Post-transaction value (direct ownership) | ~$20.12 million |
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average purchase price ($78.59); post-transaction value also based on May 11, 2026 trade-date price ($78.52).
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Revenue (TTM) | $951.00 million |
| Net income (TTM) | $415.00 million |
| Dividend yield | 1.93% |
| 1-year price change | -11.96% |
* 1-year performance calculated using June 3, 2026 as the reference date.
Assured Guaranty Ltd. operates as a specialty insurer with a focus on providing credit protection products to the public finance and structured finance sectors. The company leverages expertise in financial guaranty insurance and asset management to support issuers and investors seeking risk mitigation and capital market access. Its diversified product suite and international reach underpin a resilient business model in the specialty insurance industry.
Bailenson still holds more than 256,000 shares after this sale, so his long-term alignment with the company looks clear. The more useful lens here is what Assured Guaranty actually offers as an investment right now — and the picture is mixed. Municipal credit has held up well through recent rate volatility, and AGO's book — predominantly schools, hospitals, utilities, and transportation debt — is about as defensive as specialty finance gets. The asset management arm, which invests money on behalf of pension funds and other large institutions, adds a secondary revenue stream that smooths out underwriting cycles. But Q1 2026 earnings told a more complicated story: revenue fell sharply year over year and net income was cut roughly in half, which is what drove the stock's recent underperformance against insurance sector peers. The quarter also introduced something new — AGO acquired a UK-based annuity reinsurance business, moving into a segment it hasn't operated in before. That expansion is either a smart diversification or a distraction from the core guaranty model, and it's too early to know which. AGO stock doesn't pass through any tax-exempt benefit to shareholders — if tax-free income is what you're after, you'd need to own the bonds directly or through a muni ETF. I tend to let big strategic moves play out at least a couple of quarters before acting — it gives results time to show whether the change still fits my thesis.
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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.