Virtuix Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ:VTIX) said its chief executive officer, Jan Roger Goetgeluk, sold a total of $91,079 of company shares in two separate transactions completed on April 8 and April 9, 2026. The sales were carried out under a pre-arranged Rule 10b5-1 trading plan, which permits insiders to sell shares according to a predetermined schedule.
On April 8, Goetgeluk disposed of 6,534 shares of Class A common stock at a per-share price of $6.20. A follow-up sale on April 9 involved 7,889 shares sold at $6.41 per share. After these transactions, Goetgeluk directly holds 4,475,305 shares of Virtuix Holdings.
The insider sales occurred while VTIX was trading at $6.12 per share, a level the company notes is 73% lower than where the stock stood a year earlier. The company also referenced an InvestingPro analysis that characterizes the stock as appearing overvalued at current levels and notes the availability of 10 additional tips for investors seeking more detailed perspective.
Apart from the insider transactions, Virtuix disclosed a number of corporate developments that signal continued investment in its virtual reality and robotics applications. The company entered into a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) with the Naval Postgraduate School to evaluate the Omni One virtual reality system for military training use. Under the agreement, Virtuix will deliver an Omni One system to the Naval Postgraduate School’s Modeling, Virtual Environments, and Simulation Institute, where researchers will study the company’s omni-directional navigation technology.
In a separate corporate filing, Virtuix amended existing warrants held by Streeterville Capital, LLC. The amendment extends the period during which a reduced exercise price of $6.00 per share applies for an additional 90 days, with the extension running through June 10, 2026. The change affects three specific warrants as set out in the company’s SEC submission.
Virtuix also announced a board appointment: Brett Moyer, currently the chief financial officer of Datavault AI, has been named to Virtuix’s board of directors. The company noted Moyer’s leadership background in explaining the appointment.
Finally, Virtuix reported a partnership with the University of Central Florida’s Institute for Simulation & Training to demonstrate a real-time humanoid robot control capability using its Omni One treadmill. The demonstration enables a human operator to control a humanoid robot’s movements through the treadmill platform, illustrating an application that combines virtual-reality locomotion hardware with robotics control.
Taken together, the transactions and corporate updates described above outline both an instance of insider selling executed under a Rule 10b5-1 plan and a series of operational initiatives aimed at expanding Virtuix’s market applications in training, simulation and robotics.