Infleqtion insider selling reaches $380.7 million as CEO, directors, and Maverick Capital report major share sales.
Insider Trading
Table of Contents
Multiple insiders and affiliated holders at Infleqtion, Inc. (NASDAQ: INFQ) reported stock sales totaling approximately $380.7 million across May 21, May 22, and May 26, according to Form 4 filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
The reported transactions included sales from Director and Chief Executive Officer Matthew John Kinsella, Director David B. Singer, and Maverick Capital Ltd.
Infleqtion is a quantum technology company focused on commercializing quantum computing, quantum sensing, atomic clocks, and related quantum hardware and software systems.
The reported selling is notable because it far exceeds typical insider-selling thresholds.
Insider sales above $1 million are generally worth reviewing, while CEO or CFO sales above $2.5 million tend to draw greater investor attention. Clustered selling above $5 million to $10 million can become a higher-signal event when multiple insiders or related holders sell within a short timeframe.
In this case, reported sales exceeded $380 million across several filings, with the company’s CEO also reporting more than $13 million in sales.
Kinsella sold 657,889 shares on May 22 at $17.29 per share for approximately $11.4 million. He also sold 112,065 shares on May 26 at $15.56 per share for approximately $1.7 million.
Together, the CEO transactions totaled approximately $13.1 million. After the latest reported sale, Kinsella owned 336,197 shares.
CEO sales of this size are not automatically negative, but they are large enough to require context, especially when they occur alongside additional selling from other directors or affiliated holders.
David B. Singer reported two major sales. He sold 6,369,163 shares on May 21 at $14.69 per share for approximately $93.6 million, followed by 5,249,967 shares on May 22 at $16.76 per share for approximately $88.0 million.
Maverick Capital Ltd also reported two large sales. The firm sold 6,584,519 shares on May 21 at $14.69 per share for approximately $96.7 million, followed by 5,323,111 shares on May 22 at $16.77 per share for approximately $89.3 million.
These transactions represented the bulk of the reported May selling activity.
The filings indicate that at least some of the sales 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 selling can happen for many reasons, including liquidity planning, portfolio management, diversification, tax planning, or pre-arranged trading programs.
Still, the size and concentration of the sales make the filings difficult to ignore. When multiple insiders or affiliated holders sell large amounts over a short period, investors usually review the timing, remaining ownership, and whether the selling follows a major stock move.
Clustered insider selling becomes more meaningful when it involves senior leadership, exceeds common dollar thresholds, or appears across multiple related filings in a short window.
Platforms like LevelFields aggregate insider transactions and flag when activity exceeds key thresholds, helping investors identify when insider buying has historically aligned with meaningful stock movements.
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