[Form 4] i-80 Gold Corp. Insider Trading Activity
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
i-80 Gold Corp. director John William Seaman filed a Form 4 that reports no insider trading activity for the period covered. The filing shows no purchases, sales, exercises, gifts, tax withholdings, or other equity restructurings, and it does not list any derivative holdings or updated share positions.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Key Figures
Reported buy transactions: 0 transactions
Reported sell transactions: 0 transactions
Derivative transactions: 0 transactions
+1 more
4 metrics
Reported buy transactions
0 transactions
Form 4 transactionSummary buyCount
Reported sell transactions
0 transactions
Form 4 transactionSummary sellCount
Derivative transactions
0 transactions
Form 4 transactionSummary derivativeTransactionCount
Net buy/sell shares
0 shares
Form 4 transactionSummary netBuySellShares
Key Terms
Form 4, insider transactions, derivative transactions
3 terms
Form 4 regulatory
"i-80 Gold Corp. director John William Seaman filed a 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.
insider transactions financial
"reports no insider trading activity for the period covered"
derivative transactions financial
"no options, warrants, or other derivatives were exercised or traded"
Derivative transactions are contracts whose value depends on the price or performance of something else—like stocks, bonds, currencies, interest rates or commodities. Think of them as insurance or bets about a future price: investors use them to protect against losses, lock in prices, or try to amplify returns, but they can also magnify losses, create cash demands and expose a firm to the risk that the other party won’t meet its obligation, so they can materially affect a company’s financial stability and volatility.