Welcome to our dedicated page for Saga Coms SEC filings (Ticker: SGA), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
Saga Communications, Inc. filings document the formal record for a Florida media company with Class A common stock traded under SGA. Recent Form 8-K reports furnish earnings releases, dividend declarations, executive officer duty updates and other material events, including exhibits and Inline XBRL cover-page data.
The company's proxy materials describe annual meeting proposals, director elections, auditor ratification and executive-compensation votes. Other filings address periodic-report timing and related financial-reporting matters, while operating disclosures center on broadcast properties, advertising revenue, station operating measures, digital initiatives, capital allocation and governance of the public-company issuer.
Saga Communications, Inc. (SGA) Form 4: 10% owner Edward K. Christian Trust disclosed the sale of 608 Class A common shares on 07/23/2025 at a weighted-average price of $13.0242 per share. The transaction was coded “S” (open-market sale). After the sale, the Trust still directly owns 901,074 shares.
The divestiture represents approximately 0.07% of the Trust’s post-transaction holdings and an immaterial portion of SGA’s ~5.8 million shares outstanding. No derivative securities were involved, and no other changes in ownership were reported. Because the filer remains well above the 10% ownership threshold, the filing signals a routine portfolio adjustment rather than a strategic shift.
Form 4 filing overview: On 07/11/2025 the Edward K. Christian Trust, a 10 % owner of Saga Communications, Inc. (SGA), disclosed the sale of 3,300 Class A common shares. The weighted-average price was $13.6264, with individual trades executed between $13.50 and $14.00. After the transaction the Trust directly owns 905,403 shares. No derivative security dealings were reported.
The filing contains no narrative on strategic motives; however, Form 4s are closely watched because insider activity can hint at sentiment toward the company’s valuation, liquidity, or personal diversification needs.