Aaron Levie, Chief Executive Officer of Box (NYSE:BOX), reported the sale of 15,000 shares of Common Stock in an open-market transaction on June 22, 2026, according to a SEC Form 4 filing.
Transaction summary
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 reported price ($24.32); post-transaction value based on June 22, 2026 market close.
Key questions
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How does this transaction compare to Levie’s historical sale cadence?
In the past year, Levie has executed five direct sales of 15,000 shares each on a near-quarterly schedule, consistent with his longer-term pattern of periodic disposals in 10,000–15,000 share increments.
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What percentage of Levie’s total direct holdings was impacted?
The 15,000 shares sold amounted to 0.5% of his direct Common Stock holdings at the time, reflecting incremental portfolio management rather than a material shift in ownership.
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Were any indirect or derivative interests involved in this sale?
No; the transaction involved only directly held Common Stock, with no indirect entities or derivative securities reported in this filing.
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What is Levie’s remaining ownership position post-sale?
As of June 22, 2026, Levie retains 2,874,673 shares of Common Stock (direct), maintaining a substantial continuing stake in the company.
Company overview
* 1-year performance calculated using June 22, 2026 as the reference date.
Company snapshot
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Box delivers a cloud-based content management platform with collaboration, workflow automation, security, and compliance features, accessible across web, mobile, and desktop applications.
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The firm operates a subscription-based SaaS model, generating recurring revenue from organizations that rely on the Box platform to manage and secure digital content.
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It serves organizations globally, with a customer base spanning financial services, healthcare, government, legal services, and other regulated industries.
Box is a leading provider of enterprise cloud content management solutions, enabling organizations to securely store, manage, and collaborate on digital assets at scale. The company’s strategy centers on delivering robust security, compliance, and integration capabilities tailored for complex, regulated environments. Box’s extensible platform and industry-specific solutions position it as a trusted partner for businesses seeking to modernize content workflows and ensure regulatory compliance.
What this transaction means for investors
This sale looks more like a routine liquidity event than a meaningful change in Levie’s outlook. The Box co-founder has followed a consistent pattern of selling 15,000 shares roughly once per quarter, and this latest transaction trimmed just 0.5% of his holdings. He still owns nearly 2.9 million common shares, leaving his financial interests closely tied to the company even as the stock has fallen about 22.5% over the past year.
The bigger story is how Box’s business is evolving amid broader pressure on software stocks. First quarter revenue climbed 11% year over year to a record $305.9 million, while remaining performance obligations grew 12% to $1.6 billion. Non-GAAP operating margin expanded to 27.7%, and the company repurchased $114 million of stock during the quarter. Management also raised the profile of its AI strategy, highlighting growing adoption of Enterprise Advanced and Box AI as customers build AI-powered workflows. Levie said organizations are increasingly turning to Box to unlock value from unstructured data, while CFO Dylan Smith said the company exceeded guidance on revenue, billings, operating margin, and net retention rate.
For long-term investors, Levie’s steady selling pattern is probably less important than whether Box can sustain double-digit revenue growth and turn its AI investments into durable subscription growth. Those fundamentals, not routine insider sales, are likely to determine where the stock goes next.
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Jonathan Ponciano has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Box. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
What to Know About a Box Insider’s $365,000 Stock Sale as Shares Fall 22% This Past Year was originally published by The Motley Fool