BETA Technologies insider selling draws attention after CEO Kyle Clark reports $713,000 in June share sales.
Insider Trading
Table of Contents
June 24, 2026
BETA Technologies, Inc. (NYSE: BETA) disclosed that Director and Chief Executive Officer Kyle Clark sold approximately $713,000 worth of company shares, according to a Form 4 filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
The reported transactions occurred across three trading days. Clark sold 15,000 shares on June 18 at an average price of $15.78, 15,000 shares on June 22 at an average price of $15.74, and 15,000 shares on June 23 at an average price of $16.01.
In total, the filing showed 45,000 shares sold. After the latest reported sale, Clark still held 5,644,837 shares indirectly through The Godric’s Hollow Trust.
BETA Technologies is an electric aviation company focused on electric aircraft, charging infrastructure, and advanced aviation systems.
The sale is notable because it involved the company’s CEO, but the dollar amount remains below the higher-signal thresholds typically associated with larger insider selling.
CEO sales above $2.5 million tend to draw greater attention. In this case, Clark’s reported sales totaled approximately $713,000.
That makes the filing worth tracking, but less significant than a large executive sale in the multi-million-dollar range.
The filing showed consistent sales of 15,000 shares on each reported transaction date.
The average sale prices ranged from $15.74 to $16.01, placing the transactions within a tight price range.
Repeated insider sales can become more relevant when they continue across multiple filings or rise above key dollar thresholds.
Clark still reported more than 5.6 million shares owned indirectly after the latest sale.
That means the filing reflects a partial liquidity event, not a broad exit from the stock.
The Form 4 also listed other ownership lines, including direct and indirect holdings, so the remaining ownership should be read across the full filing rather than only one transaction line.
The Form 4 indicates that the transactions were made pursuant to a contract, instruction, or written plan intended to satisfy Rule 10b5-1 conditions.
That lowers the signal strength compared with discretionary open-market selling.
Insider sales can reflect diversification, tax planning, liquidity planning, or pre-arranged trading programs. In this case, the planned-sale structure and relatively modest dollar amount make the filing less concerning than a large discretionary CEO sale.
Executive sales become more meaningful when they exceed common dollar thresholds, occur repeatedly over time, or reduce a reported ownership position sharply.
Platforms like LevelFields aggregate insider transactions and flag when activity exceeds key thresholds, helping investors identify when executive selling exceeds key thresholds and may signal a meaningful shift in ownership behavior.
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