Discover the full insider trade history of Vectrus, Inc., a listed equity based in United States. Shares are quoted on US US, under the authority of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Defense & Aerospace sector, Vectrus, Inc. has logged 51 reports. The latest transaction was reported on 27 May 2022 — Levée d'options. Among the most active insiders: Shreves Kenneth W. Every trade is accessible without an account.
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Vectrus, Inc. should now be viewed through the lens of V2X, Inc., the successor company created by the July 5, 2022 merger of Vectrus and Vertex Aerospace Services Holding Corp. The legacy VEC ticker has therefore been replaced by VVX on the NYSE, but Vectrus remains central to understanding the company’s industrial history, customer base, and long-standing exposure to U.S. government mission support. Prior to the merger, Vectrus was an independent U.S. listed company spun off from Exelis in September 2014 and historically associated with Colorado Springs, Colorado. The combined V2X company is headquartered in McLean, Virginia, and remains heavily tied to the United States defense market, especially the Department of Defense and the U.S. Army. From a business-model perspective, Vectrus built a position in critical mission services, a category that blends base and facility operations, logistics and supply chain support, information technology mission support, engineering, and digital integration. SEC filings describe the legacy company as a global service provider to the U.S. government, with operations centered on these four core areas. Following the merger, the group broadened its scope into defense, national security, civilian, and international markets, improving both scale and customer diversification. The company’s competitive standing is based less on consumer-facing branding and more on execution capability, long-term government relationships, and the ability to support complex, geographically dispersed contracts. SEC disclosures indicate a footprint of 329 locations across 47 countries and territories, which is strategically important in defense outsourcing because customers value operational continuity, compliance discipline, and the ability to deliver in multiple theaters. The business also benefits from deep exposure to recurring programs, particularly within the U.S. Army customer set, which historically represented a significant share of revenue. Recent corporate milestones have included the 2022 merger that created a larger and more diversified platform, followed by continued operational and talent-building initiatives in 2024 and 2025, including technology leadership appointments and business-development moves linked to Army aviation and broader innovation priorities. Those actions reinforce the company’s focus on organic growth, contract capture, and portfolio deepening rather than headline-grabbing transformation. For French, Belgian, and Swiss investors, the investment case should be read as that of a U.S.-listed defense services contractor on the NYSE whose revenue visibility, backlog conversion, and margin profile depend on successful recompetes, new awards, and disciplined execution across the United States and international defense markets.