NIKE (NKE) director John Rogers Jr. adds 4,000 Class B shares
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
NIKE, Inc. director John W. Rogers Jr. bought 4,000 shares of NIKE Class B Common Stock in an open-market transaction. The shares were purchased at an average price of $43.34 per share, increasing his direct holdings to 41,022 shares after the transaction. A footnote explains that, under company policy, market trades by officers and directors are allowed only during a specified window after quarterly earnings releases or under approved Rule 10b5-1 trading plans.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
Net Buyer: 4,000 shares ($173,360)
Net Buy
1 txn
Insider
ROGERS JOHN W JR
Role
Director
Bought
4,000 shs ($173K)
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase | Class B Common Stock | 4,000 | $43.34 | $173K |
Holdings After Transaction:
Class B Common Stock — 41,022 shares (Direct)
Footnotes (1)
- [object Object]
Key Figures
Shares purchased: 4,000 shares
Purchase price: $43.34 per share
Shares owned after transaction: 41,022 shares
3 metrics
Shares purchased
4,000 shares
Open-market buy of NIKE Class B Common Stock
Purchase price
$43.34 per share
Average price for the 4,000-share transaction
Shares owned after transaction
41,022 shares
Director’s direct holdings following the purchase
Key Terms
Class B Common Stock, open-market purchase, Rule 10b5-1 trading plans, quarterly earnings
4 terms
Class B Common Stock financial
"security_title: "Class B Common Stock""
A class B common stock is one of multiple types of a company’s ordinary shares that carries specific rights—often different voting power or dividend priority—compared with other classes. For investors it matters because those differences affect how much influence you have over company decisions, the income you might receive, and how freely the shares trade; think of it like owning a car with different keys: some keys let you start the engine and open the trunk, others only unlock the door.
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.
Rule 10b5-1 trading plans regulatory
"except pursuant to approved 10b5-1 trading plans"
Rule 10b5-1 trading plans are written, pre-arranged instructions that allow company insiders (such as executives or directors) to automatically buy or sell their company's stock at specified times or under set conditions, like a standing instruction or automated thermostat for trades. They matter to investors because these plans provide a legal defense against insider‑trading accusations and create predictable insider trading patterns that can help signal whether sales are routine portfolio management or potentially meaningful to the company’s outlook.
quarterly earnings financial
"after the first full trading day after the release of quarterly earnings"
FAQ
What insider transaction did NIKE (NKE) report for John W. Rogers Jr.?
NIKE reported that director John W. Rogers Jr. made an open-market purchase of 4,000 shares of NIKE Class B Common Stock. The transaction occurred at an average price of $43.34 per share and increased his direct ownership to 41,022 shares following the trade.
What does NIKE’s trading window policy say about insider stock transactions?
NIKE’s policy allows officers and directors to trade company stock only after the first full trading day following quarterly earnings releases, ending on the fourteenth day of the third month of the next fiscal quarter, unless trades occur under approved Rule 10b5-1 trading plans.
Was the NIKE (NKE) director’s purchase part of a derivative or options exercise?
No, the reported transaction involved non-derivative NIKE Class B Common Stock acquired through an open-market purchase. The filing does not show any derivative exercises or related derivative positions for this transaction, and the derivative summary is empty.