[Form 4] Ibotta, Inc. Insider Trading Activity
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
Ibotta, Inc. director and CEO Bryan Leach reported a routine tax-related share disposition. On this Form 4, 18,638 shares of Class A Common Stock were withheld by the company at $34.25 per share to cover income tax obligations tied to vesting restricted stock units.
The footnotes state this is not a sale of shares by Leach but a withholding by the issuer in connection with the net settlement of previously reported RSUs. After this transaction, Leach holds 866,484 shares of Class A Common Stock directly.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
1 transaction reported
Mixed
1 txn
Insider
Leach Bryan
Role
CEO AND PRESIDENT
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tax Withholding | Class A Common Stock | 18,638 | $34.25 | $638K |
Holdings After Transaction:
Class A Common Stock — 866,484 shares (Direct, null)
Footnotes (1)
- This transaction is not a sale of shares by the Reporting Person. Instead, this represents shares that have been withheld by the Issuer to satisfy its income tax and withholding and remittance obligations in connection with the vesting and net settlement of previously reported restricted stock units ("RSUs") . Certain of these securities are RSUs. Each RSU represents a contingent right to receive one share of the Issuer's Class A Common Stock, subject to the applicable vesting schedule and conditions of each RSU.
Key Figures
Tax-withheld shares: 18,638 shares
Withholding price: $34.25 per share
Post-transaction holdings: 866,484 shares
3 metrics
Tax-withheld shares
18,638 shares
Shares withheld to satisfy tax obligations on RSU vesting
Withholding price
$34.25 per share
Transaction price per share for withheld shares
Post-transaction holdings
866,484 shares
Bryan Leach’s direct Class A holdings after withholding
Key Terms
restricted stock units ("RSUs"), net settlement, Class A Common Stock
3 terms
restricted stock units ("RSUs") financial
"previously reported restricted stock units ("RSUs")"
Restricted stock units (RSUs) are a company promise to give an employee shares of stock (or cash equivalent) in the future, but only after certain conditions—usually staying with the company for a set time or hitting performance goals—are met. Investors watch RSUs because when they vest they increase the number of shares outstanding and can lead insiders to sell shares, affecting share price, company dilution and the true cost of employee pay.
net settlement financial
"in connection with the vesting and net settlement of previously reported restricted stock units"
Class A Common Stock financial
"Each RSU represents a contingent right to receive one share of the Issuer's Class A Common Stock"
Class A common stock is a category of a company’s shares that carries a specific set of ownership rights—most commonly defined voting power and claims on dividends—set out in the company’s charter. For investors it matters because the class determines how much influence you have over corporate decisions, the share’s likely dividend and trading behavior, and how it compares in value to other share classes, like choosing a particular seat with different privileges at the company’s decision-making table.