BOK Financial Corp (BOKF) director granted 144 shares of common stock
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
BOK Financial Corp director Rose M Washington reported receiving a grant of 144 shares of Common Stock on 2026-07-14, classified as a grant, award, or other acquisition at $138.55 per share. After this award, she directly holds 1,915.98 shares, including 44.519 shares accumulated through a dividend reinvestment plan.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
1 transaction reported
Mixed
1 txn
Insider
Washington Rose M
Role
Director
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grant/Award | Common Stock | 144 | $138.55 | $20K |
Holdings After Transaction:
Common Stock — 1,915.98 shares (Direct)
Footnotes (1)
- [object Object]
Key Figures
Shares granted: 144.0000 shares
Grant price per share: $138.5500
Total shares after transaction: 1915.9800 shares
+1 more
4 metrics
Shares granted
144.0000 shares
Grant, award, or other acquisition of Common Stock on 2026-07-14
Grant price per share
$138.5500
Reported price per share for the 144-share Common Stock grant
Total shares after transaction
1915.9800 shares
Direct holdings of Rose M Washington following the reported grant
Dividend reinvestment shares
44.519 shares
Shares acquired under a BOKF dividend reinvestment plan since last report
Key Terms
Common Stock, Grant, award, or other acquisition, dividend reinvestment plan
3 terms
Common Stock financial
"security_title: "Common Stock""
Common stock represents ownership shares in a company, giving investors a stake in its success and a say in important decisions through voting rights. It is the most common type of stock traded on markets and can provide income through dividends, as well as potential for value growth. For investors, holding common stock means sharing in the company’s profits and risks.
Grant, award, or other acquisition financial
"transaction_code_description: "Grant, award, or other acquisition""
dividend reinvestment plan financial
"acquired under a BOKF dividend reinvestment plan since the date"
A dividend reinvestment plan lets shareholders automatically use cash dividends to buy more shares of the same company instead of receiving the money. It matters to investors because it turns regular payouts into a steady way to grow ownership and take advantage of compound returns—like having your savings automatically buy additional slices of a pie over time—while often reducing transaction costs and smoothing purchase timing.