[Form 4] JFrog Ltd Insider Trading Activity
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
JFrog Ltd director Barry Zwarenstein sold 1,250 Ordinary Shares in open-market trades. The Form 4 shows two sales on May 1, 2026, both at $49.00 per share. A footnote states these transactions were carried out under a pre-arranged Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted on November 25, 2025.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary 10b5-1
Net Seller: 1,250 shares ($61,250)
Net Sell
2 txns
Insider
ZWARENSTEIN BARRY
Role
null
Sold
1,250 shs ($61K)
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sale | Ordinary Shares | 1,100 | $49.00 | $54K |
| Sale | Ordinary Shares | 150 | $49.00 | $7K |
Holdings After Transaction:
Ordinary Shares — 29,910 shares (Direct, null)
Footnotes (1)
- [object Object]
Key Figures
Shares sold: 1,250 shares
Sale price: $49.00 per share
Transactions count: 2 sales
+1 more
4 metrics
Shares sold
1,250 shares
Total Ordinary Shares sold in open-market trades on May 1, 2026
Sale price
$49.00 per share
Reported price for each Ordinary Share sold on May 1, 2026
Transactions count
2 sales
Two non-derivative open-market sale transactions on May 1, 2026
Net share change
-1,250 shares
transactionSummary netBuySellShares indicating a net-sell position
Key Terms
Rule 10b5-1 trading plan, open-market sale, Ordinary Shares
3 terms
Rule 10b5-1 trading plan regulatory
"The sales reported in this Form 4 were effected pursuant to a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan..."
A Rule 10b5-1 trading plan is a pre-arranged schedule that allows company insiders to buy or sell stock at specific times, even if they have inside information. It helps prevent accusations of unfair trading by making these transactions look planned and transparent, rather than sneaky or illegal.
open-market sale financial
"transaction_action: "open-market sale" for each Ordinary Share 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.