
The disposal of 3,000 shares realized an estimated $332,000 based on a weighted average execution price of $110.77 per share.
The transaction represented 8% of the insider's indirect holdings but only about 0.25% of their total equity position.
The shares were sold by a British Virgin Islands entity controlled by the executive under a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted on March 26, 2026.
Yanjun Wang, the CCO and GC of Sea Limited (NYSE:SE), sold 3,000 Class A ordinary shares in an indirect transaction on July 14 and July 15, 2026, according to an SEC Form 4 filing.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Transaction value | $332,310 |
| Shares sold (indirectly held) | 3,000 |
| Post-transaction shares (directly held) | 1,162,442 |
| Post-transaction shares (indirectly held) | 34,000 |
| Post-transaction value | $133.24 million |
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average sale price ($110.77); post-transaction value based on July 15, 2026 market close ($111.36).
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Share Price (as of market close 2026-07-15) | $111.36 |
| Market Capitalization | $68.2 billion |
| Revenue (TTM) | $25.2 billion |
| Net Income (TTM) | $1.6 billion |
Sea Limited is a diversified digital platform operator with a $68.2 billion market capitalization and TTM revenues of $25.2 billion, positioning it as a leading technology conglomerate in emerging markets. The company leverages its integrated ecosystem spanning entertainment, commerce, and fintech to capture multiple revenue streams while maintaining significant scale across geographically fragmented markets. Sea's competitive advantage derives from its multi-platform approach, deep regional expertise in Southeast Asia and Latin America, and ability to cross-monetize its user base across its three core business segments.
This sale ultimately looks like another scheduled slice off the same plan that Wang’s been using to sell off every few days over a period of months. Wang sold through a BVI entity, and it’s worth noting that 3,000 shares clears just a quarter of a percent of her stake while she keeps more than 1.2 million shares. When an insider sells small, regular amounts on autopilot, as is the case here, the recurring nature is itself the tell: this is programmed diversification, not someone reacting to the stock's rough year. If anything, the louder signal points the other way, since Sea has been buying back its own shares under a $1 billion program.
The business keeps outrunning its stock. Sea's first-quarter revenue jumped 47% to $7.1 billion, and adjusted EBITDA topped $1 billion for the first time, powered by Shopee's record volume and a fast-growing lending arm. CEO Forrest Li framed 2026 as a year to lean into growth while holding financial discipline. Ultimately, for long-term investors, this recurring selling is noise. More important will be whether Shopee's profitability holds and whether the firm’s expanding SME loan book, which climbed 71% to nearly $10 billion, stays clean.
Jonathan Ponciano has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Sea Limited. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.