Nayax Ltd (NASDAQ: NYAX) Rule 144 sales, RSU vesting, 37.3M shares outstanding
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
144
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
Nayax Ltd submitted a Rule 144 notice disclosing recent restricted-share activity and an RSU vesting.
The excerpt lists 37,301,367 Ordinary Shares outstanding as of 06/26/2026, an RSU issuance of 1,510 shares on 06/25/2025 issued upon vesting with no consideration, and several small reported dispositions by an individual in March–June 2026.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Key Figures
Shares outstanding: 37,301,367 shares
RSUs vested: 1,510 shares
Disposition on 03/26/2026: 57 shares, 3142.97
+3 more
6 metrics
Shares outstanding
37,301,367 shares
as of 06/26/2026
RSUs vested
1,510 shares
issued upon vesting on 06/25/2025, no consideration
Disposition on 03/26/2026
57 shares, 3142.97
reported resale row dated 03/26/2026
Disposition on 03/30/2026
74 shares, 3990.82
reported resale row dated 03/30/2026
Disposition on 06/01/2026
1,052 shares, 77,122.12
reported resale row dated 06/01/2026
Disposition on 06/04/2026
260 shares, 17,695.60
reported resale row dated 06/04/2026
Key Terms
RSUs, Rule 144, Ordinary Shares
3 terms
RSUs financial
"Shares issued upon vesting of RSUs | Nayax Ltd."
RSUs, or restricted stock units, are a form of company shares given to employees as part of their compensation. They are typically awarded with certain restrictions, such as a waiting period before they can be fully owned or sold, similar to earning a gift that becomes fully yours over time. For investors, RSUs can impact a company's stock offerings and reflect how much the company relies on stock-based incentives to attract and retain talent.
Rule 144 regulatory
"144: Securities To Be Sold"
Rule 144 is a U.S. securities regulation that sets conditions under which restricted or insider-held shares can be legally resold to the public, such as required holding periods, availability of public information, limits on how much can be sold at once, and certain filing requirements. For investors it matters because it determines when previously locked-up shares can enter the market — like a release valve that can increase supply, affect share price, and signal insider intent.