New York, February 27, 2026, 09:41 (EST) — Regular session
- Shares of Vertex dropped about 4% early Friday, pulling back after Thursday’s rally.
- A trust linked to the CEO snapped up 60,000 shares this week, according to a regulatory filing.
- According to the company, investor “fireside chats” are set for next week at events hosted by Citizens JMP and Morgan Stanley.
Vertex, Inc. dropped about 4% to $14.24 early Friday, lagging as tech stocks broadly pulled back. The stock traded in a tight band, hitting lows of $14.15 and topping out at $14.53, after ending Thursday at $14.84. Investing.com
The move stands out—Vertex is once again reacting straight to tape moves. Insiders stepped in to buy, while executives hit the road to talk up the story with investors. Since that rough patch in February, the stock’s yet to find its footing. For traders, that combination usually means spreads stay wide and momentum keeps running hot.
Vertex builds software for handling indirect tax—think sales tax and VAT—for business clients. These companies often get a spotlight at investor conferences, where executives can talk about how demand is shaping up. Sometimes they stick to existing guidance, but every so often, they’ll toss in a few extra details.
Chief Executive Chris Young and CFO John Schwab will take part in “fireside chats” at a pair of conferences—Citizens JMP Technology on March 3, then Morgan Stanley TMT the following day, the company said. Vertex intends to broadcast both sessions live, with replays set to be posted on its investor relations page. GlobeNewswire
This week brought fresh activity: a living trust linked to Young snapped up 60,000 shares of Vertex Class A on Feb. 23, according to a Form 4. The weighted average on the buy? $12.1799. Prices ranged between $11.9832 and $12.2862. SEC
Insider activity followed familiar patterns. Director David DeStefano reported the conversion of 109,233 restricted stock units into shares, a filing shows. Of those, 51,983 shares were sold at $13.26 apiece to satisfy tax obligations on the vesting event. RSUs like these are standard equity awards and typically convert once vesting conditions are met. SEC
Vertex shot up 10.83% to close at $14.84 on Thursday, a sharp move from Wednesday’s $13.39, according to StockAnalysis. Shares didn’t hold those gains on Friday, slipping during the session. StockAnalysis
It all comes back to Vertex’s guidance from February. In the Feb. 11 earnings report, Young flagged “double-digit revenue growth” on tap for 2025, saying European e-invoicing mandates would provide a near-term lift. Schwab referenced a 2026 outlook with sustained double-digit increases, and noted the company bought back about $10 million worth of shares in Q4, part of its $150 million repurchase program.
Even with conferences and a handful of insider buys, the main figures haven’t budged. If Thursday’s jump looks, to investors, like a positioning move and not a real change, the stock might keep dropping. That risk only gets sharper if softness sticks around in application software and liquidity keeps fading.