Northern Trust (NTRS) director receives small stock grant, holds 3,334.52 units
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
4
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
Petrino Richard reported acquisition or exercise transactions in this Form 4 filing.
NORTHERN TRUST CORP director Richard Petrino received a grant of 2.43 shares of common stock on April 1, 2026 as a compensation-related award. After this grant, he directly holds a total of 3,334.52 shares and stock units tied to the company’s common stock.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
1 transaction reported
Mixed
1 txn
Insider
Petrino Richard
Role
Director
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grant/Award | Common Stock | 2.43 | $141.41 | $343.63 |
Holdings After Transaction:
Common Stock — 3,334.52 shares (Direct)
Footnotes (1)
- [object Object]
Key Figures
Stock grant: 2.43 shares
Grant reference price: $141.41 per share
Total holdings after grant: 3,334.52 shares/units
+1 more
4 metrics
Stock grant
2.43 shares
Common Stock grant on April 1, 2026
Grant reference price
$141.41 per share
Price per share for the 2.43-share award
Total holdings after grant
3,334.52 shares/units
Direct position following the Form 4 transaction
Stock units payable in shares
2,334.52 units
Units payable 1-for-1 in common stock
Key Terms
Common Stock, Grant, award, or other acquisition, stock units
3 terms
Common Stock financial
"security_title: "Common Stock""
Common stock represents ownership shares in a company, giving investors a stake in its success and a say in important decisions through voting rights. It is the most common type of stock traded on markets and can provide income through dividends, as well as potential for value growth. For investors, holding common stock means sharing in the company’s profits and risks.
Grant, award, or other acquisition financial
"transaction_code_description: "Grant, award, or other acquisition""
stock units financial
"Includes 2,334.52 stock units payable automatically on a 1-for-1 basis"
Stock units are individual pieces of ownership in a company, like slices of a pie that together make up the whole business. They matter to investors because each unit represents a claim on the company’s assets, profits and sometimes voting power, and changes in the number or value of these units affect ownership percentages, potential dividends and share dilution — all of which influence an investment’s worth.