TJX COMPANIES INC /DE/·4

Feb 3, 7:00 PM ET

LANE AMY B 4

Research Summary

AI-generated summary

Updated

TJX Director Amy B. Lane Buys Shares via Open Market

What Happened

  • Amy B. Lane, a director of TJX Companies (ticker: TJX), recorded a series of open‑market purchases of TJX common stock between March 2021 and March 2022 and a 174‑share gift/disposition on Jan 4, 2021. The purchases were small, fractional and round‑lot amounts bought at prices between $64.87 and $72.54, costing roughly $7,900 in total. The Jan 4, 2021 gift/disposition is shown at $0 proceeds.

Key Details

  • Transactions (selected):
    • 2021-01-04: Gift/disposition — 174 shares @ $0.00 (G) – $0 reported.
    • 2021-03-04: Purchase — 22.445 shares @ $64.87 = $1,456 and 1.72 shares @ $64.87 = $112 (P).
    • 2021-06-03: Purchase — 21.823 shares @ $66.99 = $1,462 and 1.714 shares @ $66.99 = $115 (P).
    • 2021-09-02: Purchase — 20.231 shares @ $72.54 = $1,468 and 1.589 shares @ $72.54 = $115 (P).
    • 2021-12-02: Purchase — 20.669 shares @ $71.26 = $1,473 and 1.669 shares @ $71.26 = $119 (P).
    • 2022-03-03: Purchase — 22.353 shares @ $66.13 = $1,478 and 1.792 shares @ $66.13 = $119 (P).
  • Approximate cash spent on purchases: ~$7,900. Gift/disposition reported at $0.
  • Shares owned after the transactions: Not specified in the Form 4.
  • Footnotes: F1 notes interim transactions were previously reported. F2 and F3 state shares previously reported as indirectly held were transferred to a trust for which Lane is trustee, grantor and beneficiary and are now held directly.
  • Timeliness: The Form 4 was filed on 2026-02-03 covering transactions from 2021–2022, so the filing is late — this delays public disclosure of insider activity.

Context

  • These were direct purchases (code P), i.e., open‑market or private purchases — purchases are generally viewed as a more informative insider action than routine dispositions, but filings do not disclose motivation.
  • The Jan 4 gift/disposition (code G) is a non‑market signal event and does not by itself indicate sentiment. Transfers to a trust (F2/F3) reflect changes in how shares are held, not new economic exposure.
  • Late filing reduces the timeliness of the disclosure; retail investors should note the dates of the underlying trades rather than the filing date when assessing insider activity.