Welcome to our dedicated page for Tronox Holdings Plc SEC filings (Ticker: TROX), 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.
Tronox Holdings plc filings document operating results, governance matters and capital-return actions for an integrated titanium dioxide producer. Recent Form 8-K reports furnish earnings releases, selected preliminary financial results, dividend declarations, board-related disclosures and material-event exhibits.
Proxy and shareholder-vote filings cover director elections, executive compensation votes, annual meeting proposals, board committee matters and sustainability governance. The record also discloses business conditions affecting TiO2 and zircon, cost-management initiatives, mineral sands investments, restructuring charges, and industry demand, supply and manufacturing-footprint considerations.
Tronox Holdings plc (TROX) – Form 4 insider purchase
On 08/01/2025, SVP & Chief Financial Officer John Srivisal bought 37,000 TROX common shares on the open market (transaction code P) at a weighted-average price of $3.3913 per share (range $3.33-$3.41). Following the purchase, Srivisal’s direct beneficial ownership rises to 237,283 shares.
There were no sales, derivative transactions, or Rule 10b5-1 notations. The filing reflects a single, open-market accumulation, suggesting incremental insider confidence at a price level roughly one-quarter of TROX’s 52-week high (not disclosed in the filing). While the absolute dollar value is modest, a C-suite purchase—particularly by the CFO—can be viewed as a favorable governance and sentiment cue for investors tracking management alignment.
Tronox Holdings plc (TROX) – CEO insider purchase
SEC Form 4 filed 08/01/2025 discloses that CEO & Director John D. Romano bought 100,000 TROX common shares in the open market (transaction code “P”) at a $3.0893 weighted-average price (range $3.045–$3.11). Following the trade, Romano directly owns 1,333,485 shares. No derivative securities were involved and no sales were reported.
Open-market purchases by a chief executive are often viewed as a positive sentiment signal, suggesting management confidence in near-term prospects. While the dollar size is modest relative to the company’s market cap, the transaction increases the CEO’s personal exposure and may draw investor attention to valuation levels around $3 per share.