CENTERSPACE (NYSE: CSR) director adds 1,700 shares in open-market buy
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
CENTERSPACE director Rodney Jones-Tyson made an open-market purchase of 1,700 Common Shares of Beneficial Interest on June 22, 2026 at an average price of $55.26 per share. Following this buy, he directly holds 7,877 common shares, indicating a modest increase in his personal stake.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
Net Buyer: 1,700 shares ($93,942)
Net Buy
1 txn
Insider
Jones-Tyson Rodney
Role
null
Bought
1,700 shs ($94K)
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase | Common Shares of Beneficial Interest | 1,700 | $55.26 | $94K |
Holdings After Transaction:
Common Shares of Beneficial Interest — 7,877 shares (Direct, null)
Footnotes (1)
Key Figures
Shares purchased: 1,700 shares
Purchase price: $55.26 per share
Shares owned after: 7,877 shares
+1 more
4 metrics
Shares purchased
1,700 shares
Open-market buy on June 22, 2026
Purchase price
$55.26 per share
Average price for the June 22, 2026 trade
Shares owned after
7,877 shares
Director’s direct holdings following the transaction
Net buy shares
1,700 shares
Net-buy direction in transaction summary
Key Terms
Common Shares of Beneficial Interest, open-market purchase, Form 4
3 terms
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.
Form 4 regulatory
"INSIDER FILING DATA (Form 4)"
Form 4 is a official document that company insiders, such as executives or major shareholders, file with regulators whenever they buy or sell company shares. It provides transparency about how those with inside knowledge are trading, helping investors see if insiders are confident in the company's prospects or may be selling for personal reasons. This information can influence investor decisions by revealing insiders' perspectives on the company's value.