Summary of transaction
Owen Thomas, Chief Executive Officer of BXP, Inc. (NYSE:BXP), sold 1,198 shares of common stock on February 13, 2026, a transaction disclosed in a Form 4 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The shares were sold at a weighted average price of $61.2196, producing total proceeds of $73,341. Reported sale prices ranged between $61.17 and $61.26.
Context from the filing
The Form 4 also records earlier acquisitions that are held indirectly through Glenowen Holdings, LLC: 990 shares purchased on December 15, 2025, and 208 shares purchased on December 26, 2025. After the February 13 sale, the filing shows Thomas directly owns 11,474.57 shares of BXP.
Market moves and investor backdrop
Shares of BXP have traded lower over the last week, slipping about 8.7% and trading near $61.54 at the time referenced in the filing. The stock’s recent weakness comes even as company disclosures and third-party data point to underlying strengths.
Financial indicators and third-party assessments
Data cited from InvestingPro notes BXP has paid dividends for 29 consecutive years and currently yields 4.7%. The same source characterizes BXP as appearing undervalued against its Fair Value assessment and notes that the firm’s liquid assets exceed short-term obligations. InvestingPro’s coverage also indicates the company is expected to be profitable this year, and that analyst price targets for the stock range from $65 to $91.
Recent operating performance
BXP reported fourth-quarter 2025 earnings per share of $1.56, significantly above a forecasted $0.49. That outperformance was highlighted in corporate results for the period. Despite the EPS beat, the company’s shares declined in the most recent trading session noted in the filing, suggesting a mixed investor reaction to the results.
Other corporate developments
The available disclosures include no updates on mergers or acquisitions. Analyst firms have not registered any recent upgrades or downgrades for BXP’s stock in the period referenced.
Takeaway
The filed sale by BXP’s CEO represents a routine insider transaction of modest size relative to total market capitalization and was disclosed on Form 4. The company’s recent quarterly performance and measures cited by InvestingPro provide complementary data points: a long-running dividend record, an above-4% yield, liquidity that covers short-term obligations, and a range of analyst targets above the trading level referenced in the filing.