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Snizhana P. Quan, the recently appointed Principal Financial Officer at Lightwave Logic (NASDAQ:LWLG), reported the exercise of 20,000 stock options and immediate sale of all resulting common shares for a total value of approximately $207,000, according to the SEC Form 4 filing.
|
Metric |
Value |
|---|---|
|
Shares sold (direct) |
20,000 |
|
Transaction value |
~$207,000 |
|
Post-transaction shares (direct) |
51,125 |
|
Post-transaction shares (indirect) |
4,800 |
|
Post-transaction value (direct ownership) |
~$542,000 |
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average purchase price ($10.36); post-transaction value based on April 10, 2026 market close ($10.60).
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What was the structure and rationale of this transaction?
This event combined the exercise of 20,000 employee stock options with an immediate open-market sale, typical for securing liquidity and managing tax obligations without increasing net equity exposure. -
How material was the reduction in direct ownership?
The sale reduced direct common share holdings by 26.34%, leaving 51,125 shares directly held, while indirect holdings via a domestic partner remained unchanged at 4,800 shares. -
Does the transaction impact the insider’s overall exposure to Lightwave Logic?
While common share holdings decreased, Quan Snizhana P. still holds 55,000 employee stock options (direct), providing continued economic alignment with the company and capacity for future equity conversion. -
How does the timing of this transaction relate to recent market performance?
The option exercise and sale took place as shares were priced at $10.60 at the market close on April 10, 2026, capping a one-year total return of 939.22% for Lightwave Logic, which may have influenced the choice to monetize vested awards at elevated share prices.
|
Metric |
Value |
|---|---|
|
Price (as of market close April 10, 2026) |
$10.36 |
|
Market capitalization |
$1.58 billion |
|
Revenue (TTM) |
$236,855 |
|
1-year price change |
939.22% |
* 1-year price change calculated using April 10, 2026, as the reference date.
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Develops photonic devices and non-linear optical polymer materials systems, including electro-optic modulators and polymer photonic integrated circuits.
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Generates revenue primarily through the sale of advanced photonic components.
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Targets telecommunications component and systems manufacturers, networking and semiconductor companies, Web 2.0 media, computing, aerospace, and government agencies.
Lightwave Logic is a development-stage company specializing in the design and commercialization of advanced photonic and electro-optic polymer technologies for high-speed data communications. The company leverages proprietary materials science to enable faster, more efficient optical signal processing, positioning itself at the forefront of next-generation fiber-optic and computing markets. With a focused customer base across telecom, networking, and high-performance computing sectors, Lightwave Logic aims to capitalize on growing demand for bandwidth and speed in global data infrastructure.
Quan’s recent sale of Lightwave Logic shares looks more like a new executive supplementing their income than an insider trying to flee a sinking ship. Quan was the company’s corporate controller for a few years before taking on the position of Principal Financial Officer in January. Following the transaction, Quan held over 50,000 shares and about 55,000 options that should keep her interests aligned with shareholders.
While it looks like the company’s lead accountant is keen to remain invested in Lightwave Logic, everyday investors might consider the stock a little too risky. A year ago, the company’s market cap was below $150 million. When the market closed on April 10, 2026, it boasted a $1.58 billion market cap that could come crashing down if investors don’t begin seeing significant sales in the quarters ahead. The company reported just $106,855 in licensing and royalty revenue during 2025. The lack of sales led to a $20.3 million net loss.
Lightwave Logic finished 2025 with $69 million in cash and cash equivalents. This is enough to keep the lights on at its present cash burn rate for a few more years. While the company appears flush with cash, risk-averse investors probably want to wait until after it starts reporting significant sales before betting on the stock.
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Cory Renauer 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.
A Lightwave Logic (LWLG) Insider Sold 20,000 Shares After a Huge Run Up was originally published by The Motley Fool
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