AEVEX Corp. (AVEX) officer makes 650-share open-market purchase
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
AEVEX Corp. officer Michael Andrew Jackson reported an open-market purchase of company stock. On April 16, he bought 650 shares of Class A common stock at $20.00 per share, bringing his directly held stake to 650 shares following the transaction.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
Net Buyer: 650 shares ($13,000)
Net Buy
1 txn
Insider
Jackson Michael Andrew
Role
See Remarks
Bought
650 shs ($13K)
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase | Class A common stock | 650 | $20.00 | $13K |
Holdings After Transaction:
Class A common stock — 650 shares (Direct, null)
Footnotes (1)
Key Figures
Shares purchased: 650 shares
Purchase price: $20.00 per share
Net buy shares: 650 shares
+1 more
4 metrics
Shares purchased
650 shares
Open-market buy on April 16, 2026
Purchase price
$20.00 per share
Class A common stock transaction
Net buy shares
650 shares
Net change from this Form 4
Shares owned after
650 shares
Direct holdings following transaction
Key Terms
Class A common stock, open-market purchase, transaction code P
3 terms
Class A common stock financial
"security_title: "Class A common stock""
Class A common stock is a category of a company’s shares that carries a specific set of ownership rights—most commonly defined voting power and claims on dividends—set out in the company’s charter. For investors it matters because the class determines how much influence you have over corporate decisions, the share’s likely dividend and trading behavior, and how it compares in value to other share classes, like choosing a particular seat with different privileges at the company’s decision-making table.
open-market purchase financial
"transaction_action: "open-market purchase""
An open-market purchase is when an investor or a company buys shares on a public stock exchange at the going market price, rather than through a private deal. It matters to investors because these purchases change how many shares are available, can push the stock price up or signal confidence from large buyers, and often affect per-share metrics like earnings—think of it like someone buying lots of apples off a grocery shelf, reducing supply and potentially raising the price.
transaction code P regulatory
"transaction_code: "P" indicating a purchase"