Lightwave Logic (LWLG) has been one of the more eye-catching stocks of the past twelve months. Its share price has climbed 939% in a year. Now, its newest top executive has cashed in some of those gains.
Lightwave Logic, Inc., LWLG
On April 10, 2026, Snizhana P. Quan, the company’s Principal Financial Officer, exercised 20,000 employee stock options and sold the resulting shares immediately. The transaction generated roughly $207,000, based on a weighted average price of $10.36 per share.
The stock closed at $10.60 on the same day.
This type of transaction — exercise and sell on the same day — is a standard way for executives to convert vested equity into cash. It typically reflects a need for liquidity or tax planning rather than a loss of confidence in the company.
Quan was previously the company’s corporate controller before stepping into the PFO role in January 2026. Following the sale, she holds 51,125 shares directly and another 4,800 shares indirectly through a domestic partner.
She also retains 55,000 stock options, meaning her financial interest in LWLG remains intact.
Director Craig Ciesla also exercised options and sold shares around the same time, according to SEC filings. Both transactions came shortly after a follow-on equity raise and the large run-up in price.
Despite the stock’s dramatic rise, Lightwave Logic’s financials are thin. The company reported just $106,855 in licensing and royalty revenue in 2025. It posted a net loss of $20.3 million for the year.
The market cap sat below $150 million a year ago. It now stands at $1.58 billion.
That gap between valuation and revenue is wide. The company finished 2025 with $69 million in cash, which gives it several years of runway at its current burn rate. But actual product sales remain minimal.
On the technology side, Lightwave Logic made two moves that investors have been watching closely. The company integrated its electro-optic polymer platform into the GDSFactory process design kit, and it signed a development agreement with Tower Semiconductor (TSEM).
These steps matter because they make it easier for potential customers to actually design using LWLG’s polymer technology within standard foundry processes.
The company targets data center and AI interconnect markets, where demand for faster optical components is growing. Getting its materials into foundry workflows is a key step toward commercial adoption.
Community valuations on Simply Wall St range from roughly $0.02 to $14.50 per share, reflecting how wide the gap in investor opinion remains.
The stock was trading at $10.60 at the close on April 10, 2026.
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