[Form 4] FARMERS & MERCHANTS BANCORP INC Insider Trading Activity
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
Farmers & Merchants Bancorp Inc. director Andrew J. Briggs reported selling a total of 6,000 shares of Common Stock in open-market transactions. He sold 3,000 shares at $27.76 and 3,000 shares at $27.60 per share, and now directly holds 216,085 shares.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary 10b5-1
Net Seller: 6,000 shares ($166,080)
Net Sell
2 txns
Insider
Briggs Andrew J
Role
Director
Sold
6,000 shs ($166K)
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sale | Common Stock | 3,000 | $27.76 | $83K |
| Sale | Common Stock | 3,000 | $27.60 | $83K |
Holdings After Transaction:
Common Stock — 216,085 shares (Direct, null)
Footnotes (1)
Key Figures
Total shares sold: 6,000 shares
First sale price: $27.76 per share
Second sale price: $27.60 per share
+2 more
5 metrics
Total shares sold
6,000 shares
Open-market Common Stock sales reported on Form 4
First sale price
$27.76 per share
3,000-share open-market sale of Common Stock
Second sale price
$27.60 per share
3,000-share open-market sale of Common Stock
Shares held after transactions
216,085 shares
Direct Common Stock ownership following latest sale
Net buy/sell direction
Net sale of 6,000 shares
transactionSummary netBuySellShares
Key Terms
Common Stock, open-market sale, non-derivative
3 terms
Common Stock financial
"security_title: "Common Stock" for the reported transactions"
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.
open-market sale financial
"transaction_action: "open-market sale" for each transaction"
An open-market sale is when a shareholder sells existing shares directly on a public exchange to any willing buyer, rather than through a private deal. Think of it like putting goods on a busy market stall where price is set by supply and demand; for investors it matters because such sales increase available supply, can put short-term downward pressure on the stock price, and signal changes in liquidity or investor confidence.
non-derivative financial
"transaction_type: "non-derivative" for each Common Stock entry"