Aoki Ichiro 4
Research Summary
AI-generated summary
indie Semiconductor (INDI) President Ichiro Aoki Sells 4,573 Shares
What Happened
Ichiro Aoki, President and Director of indie Semiconductor, converted vested restricted stock units (derivative conversions/awards) into common shares and sold 4,573 of those shares in open-market trades. The sales were 3,705 shares and 868 shares sold on 2026-03-02 at $3.56 per share, yielding $13,196 and $3,092 respectively (total proceeds $16,288). The conversions/grants recorded on 2026-03-01 were at $0.00 per share (RSU vesting/settlement).
Key Details
- Transaction types: conversion/exercise of derivatives (code M), grant/award (code A), and open-market sales (code S).
- Dates and prices:
- 2026-03-01: Converted/received RSUs / derivative conversions at $0.00 (multiple entries: 8,750 and 2,050 shares; also a 2,050 RSU grant noted).
- 2026-03-02: Sold 3,705 shares @ $3.56 ($13,196) and 868 shares @ $3.56 ($3,092).
- Total shares sold: 4,573; total proceeds: $16,288.
- Footnotes:
- F1: The shares sold in the open market were sold to pay withholding taxes related to RSU vesting.
- F2–F4: These entries relate to restricted stock units (each RSU converts to one share); vesting schedule noted (50% vesting on March 1, 2025 and 2026) and some RSUs were fully vested as of grant (salary-for-equity program).
- Shares owned after the transactions: not specified in the provided filing.
- Filing timeliness: Form 4 filed 2026-03-02 for transactions on 2026-03-01/03-02 — appears timely (no late filing flag).
Context
- These transactions reflect RSU vesting and a routine cashless-like outcome: vested RSUs converted to shares and a portion sold in the open market to cover tax withholding (per F1). This is common when companies withhold shares to satisfy payroll taxes and does not by itself necessarily signal a change in insider sentiment.
- For retail investors, purchases are often more informative about insider conviction; these entries are derivative conversions and tax-related sales rather than discretionary open-market purchases.