Safepoint Exec Pay, Slide’s Stock Sell-Offs Getting Attention in Florida

May 18, 2026 by

When Tampa-headquartered Slide Insurance filed for an initial public offering in June 2025 and disclosed executive compensation topping $40 million, it triggered some sniping and some intense scrutiny of the Florida property insurance industry that continues a year later.

In the latest IPO for a Florida insurer, Safepoint Holdings, parent of Tampa-based Safepoint Insurance and Manatee Insurance Exchange, reported last week that its own top three executives were paid a total of more than $20 million in salary, bonuses and stock awards in 2025.

Safepoint CEO David Flitman received $12.5 million, while Chief Financial Officer Steven Hoffman took home $5.3 million for the year. Chief Underwriting Officer Gustavo Fernandez was paid $2.8 million, the S-1 filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission shows.

As CEO compensation goes, the package is about average for U.S. property-casualty insurance carriers, according to the Consumer Federation of America, which tracks exec pay and has been highly critical of rising compensation at a time that policyholders have been squeezed with escalating premiums.

For Florida-focused carriers, the Safepoint CEO’s total compensation for the year preceding the IPO outpaced all except Slide’s Bruce Lucas and HCI’s Paresh Patel. Both of those CEOs reported compensation plans of just over $20 million for 2024.

Flitman’s remuneration package was well short of that reported for some of the major national carriers, which ranged from $16 million to $26 million in 2024.

Former Louisiana Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon is listed in the Safepoint filing as a consultant and “lead independent director” for the company, but his compensation was not reported. Other non-employee directors earned cash and stock awards of less than $139,000 each in 2025.

Safepoint leadership declined to comment on the pay packages, due to the “quiet period” – the time between the IPO registration date until a month or so after stock trading begins, during which company officers are restricted from releasing new information that could affect investor decisions.

About the same time that Safepoint’s SEC filing was released last week, Slide’s executives generated their own headlines and questions after they sold large amounts of company stock. CEO Bruce Lucas recently sold common stock worth more than $5 million, while his wife, Shannon Lucas, Slide’s chief operating officer, sold shares of almost $500,000, according to SEC filings and investment news reports. One company director sold 6,300 shares totaling $119,372. Another sold $1 million of stock, following other sales by company officers in recent weeks.

Some of those sell-offs came a few weeks after Slide announced it planned to buy back $100 million in outstanding shares of its stock.

The moves have raised eyebrows among at least a few fellow executives in the Florida property insurance industry. But Slide’s leadership said the sales of shares were planned well in advance and were fully disclosed.

“Consistent with governance best practices, Slide adopted a 10b5-1 plan at its IPO to allow officers and directors an opportunity to periodically sell shares at pre-scheduled, predictable intervals,” reads a statement emailed to Insurance Journal late last week.

A 10b5-1 plan is described as a pre-arranged contract that publicly denotes when company officers can buy or sell stock, to avoid the taint of insider trading, according to the Securities and Exchange Commission, Charles Schwab, and others.

“These pre-filed plans are commonplace throughout corporate America and are routinely used to facilitate financial planning and wealth diversification. Any implication otherwise would be false and misleading,” Slide’s statement noted.

Wall Street analysts said such stock trades are not unusual after IPOs, and, in this case, they reflect Slide’s upward trajectory and strong earnings statements in recent months.

“They’ve had a couple of nice quarters. Very profitable,” said Paul Newsome, a managing director and senior research analyst at Piper Sandler, an investment bank and research firm. “You kind of wish they would hold on to it a little bit longer, for an even better stock price.”

Slide reported a 50% jump in net income for the first quarter of 2026, to almost $140 million, and an improved combined ratio of 55.5%, Q1 filings show.

Newsome agreed that Slide, founded in 2021, has not been without controversy as it has grown by leaps and bounds, partly through large takeouts of Citizens Property Insurance Corp. policies over the last four years. But the recent stock buyback is not surprising, he noted.

The share sell-offs have raised questions, but the company has assured Newsome that the sales are partly due to the firm’s need for liquidity. Stock sales by company officers does not mean leadership is seeing trouble on the horizon, he said.

“It’s an immensely profitable company right now,” Newsome said. He said the rosy picture is due in part to Florida’s legislative reforms of 2022, which stemmed the tide of excessive and costly claims litigation.

“There are no Florida home insurance writers that are in trouble right now. This is a great environment to write insurance in Florida, after many years of it being horrible.”

Newsome pointed out that the bread and butter of Slide’s business model, based on takeouts of policies from the state-created insurer of last resort, however, is coming to an end: Citizens continues to shrink in size, thanks to an improving Florida market and many new insurance companies in the state.

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