CHCO Insider Trading
City Holding Company (CHCO) operates in the Financial Services sector, specifically the Banks - Regional industry, with a market capitalization near $1.90B, listed on NASDAQ, employing roughly 934 people, carrying a beta of 0.48 to the broader market. City Holding Company operates as the parent entity for City National Bank of West Virginia, offering a broad spectrum of financial services including banking, wealth management, and investment solutions throughout the United States. Led by Charles R. Hageboeck, public since 1987-06-26.
In the last 12 months, City Holding Company insiders made 16 buy transactions and 15 sale transactions.
| Date | Name | Type | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 1, 2026 | HAGEBOECK CHARLES R | S-Sale | 1,858 | $124.40 | $231.1K |
| May 27, 2026 | LEGGE JEFFREY DALE | S-Sale | 1,309 | $125.00 | $163.6K |
| May 26, 2026 | BUMGARNER DAVID L | S-Sale | 1,161 | $124.50 | $144.5K |
| May 21, 2026 | BUMGARNER DAVID L | S-Sale | 805 | $124.50 | $100.2K |
| May 13, 2026 | Parsons James M. | P-Purchase | 100 | $121.60 | $12.2K |
| May 7, 2026 | BUMGARNER DAVID L | S-Sale | 402 | $125.00 | $50.3K |
| Apr 29, 2026 | Raynes Bryan Scott | 0 | $0.00 | $0 | |
| Apr 29, 2026 | HAGEBOECK CHARLES R | S-Sale | 5,855 | $125.30 | $733.6K |
| Apr 29, 2026 | Quinlan Michael T Jr | S-Sale | 1,210 | $126.09 | $152.6K |
| Apr 28, 2026 | HAGEBOECK CHARLES R | S-Sale | 375 | $125.00 | $46.9K |
How to Read CHCO Insider Activity
Net insider sentiment is bullish over the trailing twelve months: 16 buy transactions versus 15 sales. Cluster buying by officers or directors is one of the cleaner insider signals because purchases require personal capital deployment and carry direct SEC scrutiny for material non-public information violations. The transaction table above includes the filer's reporting name, transaction type, share count, per-share price, and total dollar value where computable. For options traders, insider activity is one input to event-driven sizing alongside earnings calendar, analyst-rating cluster moves, and the implied-vol surface. Form 4 filings (the dominant Section 16 reporting form) must be submitted within two business days of the transaction; clusters of buys across multiple insiders within a short window are the strongest informational pattern. SEC EDGAR carries the underlying source filings for verification and additional historical depth.
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Frequently asked CHCO insider trading questions
- How active are CHCO insiders right now?
- Over the trailing twelve months, City Holding Company (CHCO) insiders made 16 buy transactions and 15 sale transactions. Net insider sentiment over the trailing twelve months tilts to the buy side (16 buys vs 15 sales). The transaction list above shows the most recent filings; each entry includes the insider's name, transaction type, share count, and per-share price.
- What counts as an insider transaction?
- Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act requires officers, directors, and 10% beneficial-owner shareholders to disclose changes in their holdings via Form 3 (initial statement), Form 4 (subsequent transactions, filed within two business days), and Form 5 (annual catch-up). Insider transactions cover open-market purchases and sales, exercise of stock options, gifts, and grants. The "transaction type" field on each row distinguishes these subcategories.
- Are CHCO insider buys a bullish signal?
- Insider open-market purchases (Type P) carry more informational weight than insider sales: an insider must commit personal capital, and the SEC scrutinizes purchases under Rule 10b5-1 for material non-public information. Sales, by contrast, are often driven by liquidity, tax planning, or pre-scheduled 10b5-1 trading plans rather than negative information. Cluster buying (multiple insiders buying within a short window) is a stronger signal than isolated buys.
- How do CHCO insider transactions affect options pricing?
- Insider transaction data does not directly drive implied volatility, but Form 4 disclosures can move single-name IV if the size or timing is unusual (e.g. a large CEO buy ahead of an earnings window). Options markets price the marginal informational content; routine transactions under pre-scheduled plans are typically ignored. For event-driven options sizing, pair the insider transaction history with the upcoming earnings calendar.