The director disposed of 5,000 shares for $120,700 on July 13, 2026.
The transaction resulted in a roughly 0.75% reduction in total direct and indirect equity holdings.
The shares were sold indirectly from an IRA and accounts held for children.
The disposal was executed under a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted on June 13, 2025.
Director E. Philip Wenger sold 5,000 shares of Fulton Financial Corporation (NASDAQ:FULT) on July 13, 2026, according to a recent SEC Form 4 filing.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Transaction value | $120,700 |
| Shares sold (indirectly held) | 5,000 |
| Post-transaction shares (directly held) | 583,918 |
| Post-transaction shares (indirectly held) | 75,936 |
| Post-transaction value | $15.95 million |
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Share Price (as of market close 2026-07-13) | $24.17 |
| Market Capitalization | $4.6 billion |
| Revenue (TTM) | $1.3 billion |
| Net Income (TTM) | $393.4 million |
Fulton Financial Corporation is a regional banking holding company with $4.6 billion in market capitalization and approximately 3,400 employees. The company maintains a diversified revenue base through traditional banking operations, generating $1.3 billion in TTM revenue with net income of $393.4 million, reflecting solid operational profitability within the regional banking sector. As a community-focused financial institution, Fulton competes through localized customer relationships and comprehensive product offerings tailored to regional market needs.
Wenger set this plan back in June 2025, and the 5,000 shares barely dens a position of roughly 660,000 held across an IRA, family accounts, and direct ownership. When a long-tenured director, and former CEO, sells a fraction of a percent on a schedule set a year earlier, there's not really a big message to it. One nuance worth noting: He's chairman emeritus, so this is a founder-adjacent insider trimming, not an operating executive signaling anything about the outlook.
Meanwhile, Fulton is executing steadily. First-quarter operating earnings came in at $0.55 per share, and net interest margin held roughly flat at 3.58%. Management has been returning capital aggressively, buying back about $24.5 million in stock during the first quarter, and just folded in its Blue Foundry Bancorp acquisition to deepen its New Jersey footprint. Now, with second-quarter results due July 22, the things that actually matter are whether margins hold as rate cuts arrive and how smoothly the Blue Foundry deal integrates.
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Jonathan Ponciano has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.