U.S. Stock Insider Trading | Burke & Herbert disclosed 5 insider transactions on March 4

On March 4, 2026, Burke & Herbert (BHRB) disclosed five insider trading transactions. Executive Jennifer Palmer Schmidt purchased 231 shares on February 28, 2026.

【Recent Insider Trading】

Disclosure date Title Name Trade date Buy/Sell Quantity Price per share/US$ Total amount/US$
March 4, 2026 Executive Kimlel Lauren N. February 28, 2026 Buy 130 54.03 7,023.38
March 4, 2026 Executive Huffman Patrick Kip February 28, 2026 Buy 109 54.03 5,888.83
March 4, 2026 Executive Rowan Shannon Barrow February 28, 2026 Buy 63 54.03 3,403.64
March 4, 2026 Executive Hintelmann Robert Victor Jr. February 28, 2026 Buy 74 54.03 3,997.92
March 4, 2026 Executive Schmidt Jennifer Palmer February 28, 2026 Buy 231 54.03 $12,500
February 11, 2026 Director MADDY H CHARLES III February 10, 2026 Sell 11,500 69.62 $803,200
February 11, 2026 Director MADDY H CHARLES III February 10, 2026 Buy 15,600 43.33 $676,600
January 22, 2026 Director BOYLE DAVID P January 19, 2026 Sell 1,736 64.67 $112,300
January 22, 2026 Executive Roy Eugene Halyama January 19, 2026 Sell 443 64.67 $28,600
January 22, 2026 Executive Rowan Shannon Barrow January 19, 2026 Sell 105 64.67 $6,790.35

【Company Profile】

Burke & Herbert Financial Services Corp. was formed in 2022 as a company in the state of Virginia and serves as the holding company for Burke & Herbert Bank and Trust Company. The company is a community-focused financial institution. The company is committed to providing financial solutions to customers who value exceptional personalized service, local decision-making, and modern banking technology. The company’s business involves attracting deposits from local businesses and individual customers and using these deposits to originate commercial, mortgage, and consumer loans within the company’s market area. The company also invests in securities consisting of debt issued by entities primarily sponsored by the U.S. government, mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae, municipal debt, and other financial institutions’ subordinated debt.

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