Eagle Capital Growth Fund (GRF) director buys more shares
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
Eagle Capital Growth Fund director Tyler Donald G reported buying shares of the fund’s common stock. On April 16, 2026, he made an open-market purchase of 1,000 shares at $9.90 per share, bringing his direct holdings to 8,059 shares.
The filing also shows a prior small acquisition of 23 shares on March 19, 2026 at $10.25 per share, after which his holdings were 7,059 shares. Together, these moves modestly increase the director’s direct ownership in the fund.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
Net Buyer: 1,000 shares ($9,900)
Net Buy
2 txns
Insider
Tyler Donald G
Role
null
Bought
1,000 shs ($10K)
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase | Common Stock | 1,000 | $9.90 | $10K |
| L | Common Stock | 23 | $10.25 | $235.75 |
Holdings After Transaction:
Common Stock — 8,059 shares (Direct, null)
Footnotes (1)
Key Figures
Latest purchase size: 1,000 shares
Latest purchase price: $9.90 per share
Holdings after latest trade: 8,059 shares
+4 more
7 metrics
Latest purchase size
1,000 shares
Open-market purchase of common stock on April 16, 2026
Latest purchase price
$9.90 per share
Price paid for 1,000 shares on April 16, 2026
Holdings after latest trade
8,059 shares
Direct common stock ownership following April 16, 2026 purchase
Prior small acquisition
23 shares
Small acquisition on March 19, 2026 under code L
Prior acquisition price
$10.25 per share
Price for 23 shares acquired March 19, 2026
Holdings after prior trade
7,059 shares
Direct holdings after March 19, 2026 small acquisition
Net buy shares
1,000 shares
Net buy-sell shares across reported transactions
Key Terms
open-market purchase, small acquisition, Rule 16a-6, non-derivative
4 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.
small acquisition financial
"transaction_action": "small acquisition""
Rule 16a-6 regulatory
"transaction_code_description": "Small acquisition under Rule 16a-6""
non-derivative financial
"transaction_type": "non-derivative""