LMB
insider transactionsLimbach Holdings, Inc. — buys & sells by directors, officers and 10% owners A shareholder owning more than 10% of the company. Must report trades, but usually a weaker signal than an officer or director. (SEC Form 4).
Net shares · 30d
-4.9K
0 buy · 4.9K sell
Net value · 30d
-$388.8K
$0 in · $388.8K out
Sentiment · 30d
Net selling
0% buying · 100% selling
Open-market trades · 30d
4
0 buy · 4.9K sell
Net buy / sell volume
Not enough data to chart yet.
Tap or hover the chart for daily net volume. Green = net buying, red = net selling.
All transactions
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Other·G
Jay Sharp KEY
Executive Vice President · 10b5-1
$0
720 sh
Own -1%
-
Sell·S
Jay Sharp KEY
Executive Vice President · 10b5-1
$16.3K
200 sh · $81.32
Own -0%
-
Sell·S
Jay Sharp KEY
Executive Vice President · 10b5-1
$162.4K
2.0K sh · $80.34
Own -3%
-
Sell·S
Jay Sharp KEY
Executive Vice President · 10b5-1
$148.3K
1.9K sh · $79.67
Own -2%
-
Sell·S
Jay Sharp KEY
Executive Vice President · 10b5-1
$61.8K
788 sh · $78.46
Own -1%
About LMB insider trading
This page tracks insider transactions for Limbach Holdings, Inc. (LMB) reported to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Form 4. Corporate insiders — directors, executive officers and beneficial owners of more than 10% of the stock — must disclose their trades within two business days. Open-market purchases (code P) and sales (code S) made at the insider's discretion are the most-watched opportunistic signals, while awards (A), option exercises (M) and tax-withholding (F) reflect compensation rather than conviction. Trades marked 10b5-1 were made under a pre-arranged plan and are considered routine. A cluster buy — several insiders buying within a short window — is historically a stronger bullish indicator than any single trade.