---
title: "John Hess Sells $36M CVX Post-Merger: Cadence Read"
type: news
slug: john-hess-cvx-may-2026-36m-post-merger-cadence
canonical_url: https://13finsight.com/news/john-hess-cvx-may-2026-36m-post-merger-cadence
published_at: 2026-05-12T17:40:58.841Z
updated_at: 2026-05-12T17:41:02.222Z
author: Alex Rivera
author_title: Breaking News Editor
author_url: https://13finsight.com/authors/alex-rivera
word_count: 950
locale: en
source: 13F Insight
---

# John Hess Sells $36M CVX Post-Merger: Cadence Read

> John Hess sold $36M of CVX across May 6-7, 2026 — his second large post-merger distribution after a similar $35M November 2025 window. Cadence is consistent with a programmed founder liquidity plan, not opportunistic timing.

John B. Hess, Chief Executive Officer of Hess Corp at the close of its merger into Chevron Corp, sold approximately $36 million of CVX common stock across three consecutive sessions on May 6-7, 2026 — his first material distribution of the Chevron consideration shares he received in the merger close. The transactions printed at $183.90, $184.67, and $185.21, against a 13G beneficial ownership filing that placed Hess at 8.58% of the legacy Hess Corp float ahead of the deal close. The combination — a recent megadeal merger close plus a founder/CEO distributing meaningful consideration paper — is the kind of insider event the Form 4 stream is built to surface. The framing that matters here is not the dollar value. It is the timing: Hess, a former CEO whose family has been a continuous presence on the cap table since the 1960s, is now liquidating the Chevron stock he received in exchange for the Hess Corp position. The cadence will telegraph whether the post-merger Chevron leadership team retains an aligned founder voice, or whether the Hess family's economic interest is winding down on a programmed schedule. Hess's full Form 4 history — 20,426 lifetime transactions and $1.37 billion in cumulative sells — is the right baseline. The Recent Cadence DateTickerCodeSharesPriceValue 2026-05-06CVXS78,048$185.21$14.5M 2026-05-06CVXS88,921$184.67$16.4M 2026-05-06CVXS28,031$183.90$5.2M 2025-11-21CVXS226,367$150.20$34.0M 2025-11-21CVXS17,557$150.85$2.6M 2025-11-21CVXS31,076$149.48$4.6M 2025-11-20CVXS37,441$151.37$5.7M 2025-11-20CVXS17,309$152.43$2.6M The May 2026 block is the second large distribution since the merger close, after a similarly sized November 2025 window. The pattern that emerges across the two windows is roughly $35M per distribution event, separated by approximately six months. That cadence — semi-annual six-figure-share distributions through 10b5-1 windows — is consistent with an explicit founder liquidity program adopted in connection with the merger close, not opportunistic discretionary selling. The price progression is also informative. The November 2025 prints clustered around $150; the May 2026 prints cleared at $184-$185. Either the underlying plan was schedule-based (fixed share counts, regardless of price) or the May window was specifically calendared to the CVX run-up. Either reading is consistent with a programmatic distribution rather than tactical timing. The Beneficial Ownership Picture (Pre-Merger Baseline) The most recent Schedule 13G/A filing relevant to John Hess's beneficial ownership predates the merger close. The 2025-02-14 filing placed John B. Hess at 8.58% beneficial ownership of legacy Hess Corp (26,502,061 shares). At the merger exchange ratio, that translates into a meaningful Chevron consideration position — the precise share count depends on the final ratio agreed at close, but a back-of-envelope estimate at typical megadeal exchange ratios places his initial Chevron consideration around 35-40 million CVX shares. The most recent Form 4 filings on EDGAR show 658,045 CVX shares remaining after the May 2026 distribution — but that figure reflects the Class A common balance reported on Table I, not the full beneficial ownership picture. Until a post-merger Schedule 13G/A is filed, the complete beneficial ownership against the new combined Chevron float is not publicly disclosed in a single number. This is the kind of editorial trap that derails articles on post-merger insider activity: writing "Hess now owns 658K CVX" implies a wind-down to a small residual. The 658K figure is the Form 4 Table I balance after the most recent sale, but the full picture requires waiting for the next 13G/A refresh, which will incorporate any Class B / derivative / trust-held consideration shares from the merger. What This Says About the Combined Chevron Strategy The Chevron-Hess merger was driven by the value of Hess's 30% Guyana stake (Stabroek block) — a tier-one offshore asset that Chevron acquired against an arbitration challenge from ExxonMobil over rights of first refusal. The post-close question for institutional holders has been whether John Hess remains operationally engaged in the combined company beyond a transitional period, or whether his role is winding down as the Guyana asset integration completes. Two reads: Aligned-founder read: Hess retains meaningful CVX consideration shares post-merger; the May 2026 sales represent diversification rather than disengagement. Institutional holders interpreting it this way will continue to underwrite the combined company's Guyana extraction trajectory at face value. Wind-down read: The semi-annual $35M+ cadence is the explicit programmed distribution of a founder/CEO whose operational role is transitional. If this is the read, the next 13G/A filing will show a meaningfully lower beneficial ownership stake, and the post-merger Chevron leadership becomes the operative reference point for capital allocation decisions. Both reads are consistent with the current Form 4 stream. The next data point that disambiguates them is the next Schedule 13G/A refresh, scheduled annually in February. Hess's complete trading record through that filing window will be the determining input. What to Watch From Here Three anchored signals worth tracking: CVX Q2 2026 earnings (early August 2026 window): The first Chevron quarterly print fully incorporating Hess assets. Specifically the production volumes from the Guyana Stabroek block and the integration capex run-rate. Next Schedule 13G/A on John Hess's beneficial ownership (annual February refresh): The first post-merger filing that captures Class A + Class B + derivative-held CVX consideration shares. This is the filing that will disambiguate the aligned-founder vs. wind-down reads. Form 4 cadence into November 2026: If the next distribution event prints around $35M six months after May 2026, the 10b5-1 program is intact and the cadence is the new baseline. A larger or accelerated print would be the first deviation worth catching in the smart-money signal feed. SEC documentation for the May 2026 transactions is on the EDGAR Form 4 page for CIK 0001087997, and the most recent Schedule 13G/A on the same insider sits under the same filer index. The post-merger Chevron institutional holder base can be cross-referenced against the CVX holder page and the legacy HES holder data remains available for the deal valuation history.

## FAQ

### How much CVX stock did John Hess sell in May 2026?

John Hess sold approximately $36.1 million of Chevron (CVX) common stock across May 6-7, 2026 — 78,048 shares at $185.21, 88,921 shares at $184.67, and 28,031 shares at $183.90. This was his second major post-merger distribution, following a similar $46.9M block sold across November 20-21, 2025 at $149-$152 per share.

### Why is John Hess selling CVX shares?

John Hess received CVX consideration shares when the Chevron-Hess merger closed, exchanging his legacy Hess Corp stake for Chevron stock. The semi-annual ~$35M distribution cadence (November 2025 plus May 2026) is consistent with a Rule 10b5-1 plan adopted around the merger close — programmatic diversification rather than discretionary opportunistic selling. The deal was driven by Hess's 30% Guyana Stabroek block stake.

### How much CVX does John Hess still own after the May 2026 sales?

Form 4 Table I shows 658,045 CVX shares after the most recent sale, but that figure reflects only the Class A common balance reported on Table I — not the full post-merger beneficial ownership picture. Until a post-merger Schedule 13G/A is filed (annual February refresh), the complete beneficial ownership against the new combined Chevron float, including any Class B / derivative / trust-held consideration shares, is not yet publicly captured in a single number.

### What does the Hess selling pattern signal about Chevron strategy?

Two reads remain consistent with the Form 4 stream: an aligned-founder read where Hess retains meaningful CVX shares and the sales reflect diversification, or a wind-down read where the semi-annual cadence telegraphs an operational role winding down. The disambiguating signal will be the next 13G/A filing showing post-merger beneficial ownership, plus whether the next distribution event in November 2026 prints around $35M or accelerates materially.

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Source: 13F Insight — https://13finsight.com/news/john-hess-cvx-may-2026-36m-post-merger-cadence
Author: Alex Rivera — https://13finsight.com/authors/alex-rivera
Last updated: 2026-05-12T17:41:02.222Z