[Form 4] CITY HOLDING CO Insider Trading Activity
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
City Holding Co director Robert D. Fisher bought 133 shares of common stock in an open-market purchase at $126.36 per share. The trade was made pursuant to a Rule 10b5-1 Plan, indicating it was pre-scheduled. Following this transaction, he directly holds about 47,110.9314 shares, including 235.66833 shares accumulated through a dividend reinvestment plan.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary 10b5-1
Net Buyer: 133 shares ($16,806)
Net Buy
1 txn
Insider
FISHER ROBERT D
Role
null
Bought
133 shs ($17K)
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase | Common Stock | 133 | $126.36 | $17K |
Holdings After Transaction:
Common Stock — 47,110.931 shares (Direct, null)
Footnotes (1)
- Purchase made pursuant to a Rule 10b5-1 Plan. Includes 235.66833 shares acquired during the year through the reporting person's participation in the dividend reinvestment plan based upon the most recent plan statement.
Key Figures
Shares purchased: 133 shares
Purchase price: $126.36 per share
Shares owned after transaction: 47,110.9314 shares
+1 more
4 metrics
Shares purchased
133 shares
Open-market purchase on 2026-04-20
Purchase price
$126.36 per share
Open-market trade
Shares owned after transaction
47,110.9314 shares
Direct ownership following purchase
Dividend reinvestment shares
235.66833 shares
Accumulated during the year via dividend reinvestment plan
Key Terms
Rule 10b5-1 Plan, open-market purchase, dividend reinvestment plan
3 terms
Rule 10b5-1 Plan regulatory
"Purchase made pursuant to a Rule 10b5-1 Plan."
A Rule 10b5-1 plan is a prearranged, written schedule that lets corporate insiders buy or sell company stock at set times or amounts, even if they later learn material nonpublic information. Think of it like setting an automatic thermostat for trades: it creates a clear record that trades were planned in advance, reducing the risk of insider-trading accusations and helping investors trust that insider transactions are routine rather than based on secret information.
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.
dividend reinvestment plan financial
"shares acquired during the year through the reporting person's participation in the dividend reinvestment plan"
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.