UPPER SAUCON TWP., Pa.- NASA head Jared Isaacman may still be the largest shareholder of the payment processing company he created, but he’s saying farewell to his super voting rights.
Shift4, which was founded by Isaacman in New Jersey in 1999 and now calls Upper Saucon Township in Lehigh County home, has announced a simplification of its corporate structure.
The company’s multi-share class structure has been condensed into a single Class A share class structure.
Previously, Isaacman and his Rook Holdings Inc. owned all of Shift4’s Class B and C shares. Under that structure, Isaacman’s shares gave him “super voting” power, meaning he had more sway than a shareholder with just Class A shares.
According to a proxy filing with the SEC last April, Isaacman’s Class B and C shares gave him a 76% voting stake in Shift4.
Now, under the Class A structure, the B and C shares are gone, and one share equals one vote. Isaacman remains Shift4’s largest equity holder with an approximately 25.9% ownership, the company said in a news release.
Isaacman resigned as executive chairman of the Shift4 board of directors last December, after his nomination to lead NASA was approved by the U.S. Senate. It was the second time he was up for the job, after President Trump first rescinded the nomination in May of 2025, and then reinstated it the following November.
Amid the back-and-forth, Isaacman stepped aside as Shift 4 CEO and gave the reins to then-President Taylor Lauber.