Transaction overview
Thomas J. Dickman, Chief Technology Officer of Fold Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ:FLD), reported a small sale of company common shares in a Form 4 filing tied directly to the vesting and settlement of restricted stock units (RSUs).
On April 20, 2026, Mr. Dickman sold 61 shares of Fold Holdings common stock at $1.50 per share, generating proceeds of $91. The Form 4 notes that this sale was executed to meet tax withholding obligations associated with the recent vesting and settlement of RSUs. The transaction was non-discretionary, aligned with the company’s policy that requires tax liabilities arising from vesting to be funded via a "sell to cover" sale.
RSU conversion and background
Three days before the sale, on April 17, 2026, Mr. Dickman received 178 shares of common stock at no cash cost through the conversion of restricted stock units. Those RSUs convert into common stock on a one-for-one basis. The units trace back to equity granted in connection with the company’s business combination and were issued under an Agreement and Plan of Merger dated July 24, 2024.
The RSU award began vesting on May 19, 2023, and continued through monthly installments. The vesting schedule was conditioned on Mr. Dickman’s continued service with the company and the occurrence of a liquidity event, a condition that was satisfied at the time of the referenced merger.
Post-transaction holdings and market context
After these recent transactions, Mr. Dickman holds 543,498 shares of Fold Holdings common stock directly. The sale price of $1.50 per share sits close to the company’s quoted share price of $1.47 at the time of reporting. The stock has been under pressure over the past year, posting a 63% decline, although it has recovered nearly 29% in the most recent week.
Independent analysis from InvestingPro cited in the filing indicates that the stock trades slightly above an assessed Fair Value of $1.33. The company faces profitability headwinds, reflected by a negative gross profit margin in the analysis.
Earnings, analyst reactions and strategic notes
Fold Holdings disclosed fiscal fourth-quarter 2025 revenue of $9.1 million, below a forecasted $10.89 million, representing a revenue shortfall highlighted in the filing. In response to those results, Cantor Fitzgerald lowered its price target on Fold to $2.00 from $4.50. H.C. Wainwright also adjusted its target to $3.00 from $7.00, while retaining a Buy rating and citing concerns over current trading patterns.
Amid the revenue miss and analyst adjustments, Fold emphasized strategic initiatives in its communications. The company pointed to the launch of a Bitcoin Rewards Credit Card and ongoing efforts to reduce debt as part of its operational priorities. Both Cantor Fitzgerald and H.C. Wainwright continued to carry positive ratings on the company despite trimming price targets, reflecting a degree of analyst optimism alongside caution.
What the filing shows
The Form 4 indicates that Mr. Dickman’s small sale was routine and specifically directed by company policy to cover the tax liabilities produced by the RSU vesting and settlement. The filing documents the conversion of RSUs into common stock and connects those units to the merger agreement dated July 24, 2024, and the established vesting schedule that began on May 19, 2023.
Investors and observers reading the filing are provided with the executive’s remaining direct holdings, the precise volumes and prices of the transactions, and the company's recent financial and strategic disclosures that accompanied analyst updates.
Bottom line
Mr. Dickman’s sale was limited in scale and characterized in the filing as a non-discretionary sell to cover tax withholding tied to RSU settlement. The broader context provided in the filing highlights Fold Holdings’ recent revenue shortfall, analyst price-target reductions, and strategic initiatives, all detailed alongside the executive’s updated shareholdings.