FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

Wafd Insider Sold Shares Worth $776,160, According to a Recent SEC Filing

By

-- Kim E Robison, Executive Vice President & Chief Operations Officer, on April 24, 2026, sold 22,000 shares in Wafd (WAFD) for $776,160. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Robison has control over a total of 116,099 common shares of the company, with 116,099 shares held directly.

SEC Filing:

https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/936528/000170271326000003/xslF345X05/wk-form4_1777302670.xml

Price: $35.54, Change: $+0.34, Percent Change: +0.97%

Related Articles

Research

Research Alert: Pentair: Q1 Results Top Expectations, Eps Outlook Lifted

CFRA, an independent research provider, has providedwith the following research alert. Analysts at CFRA have summarized their opinion as follows:PNR's Q1 EPS of $1.22 beat consensus by $0.05, rising 10% Y/Y despite modest 1% organic sales growth. Operating margin expanded 100 bps to 25% while gross margin improved 190 bps to 41.8%, reflecting effective cost management and pricing realization. We view PNR as executing well on profitability initiatives and strategic pricing actions amid challenging residential markets. Management's 26% operating margin target appears within reach given continued margin expansion momentum. Flow segment led results with income up 22% and margin expanding 210 bps to 23.7%, benefiting from strong commercial and industrial demand. Capital deployment accelerated with $200M in share repurchases (vs. $50M in the prior year), signaling management's confidence in intrinsic value. We see PNR's 1.7x leverage ratio providing flexibility for additional buybacks and accretive M&A opportunities. Looking ahead, we expect Y/Y sales expansion to pick up in 2H 2026 as easier comps emerge.

$PNR
Research

Research Alert: CFRA Maintains Hold Opinion On Shares Of The Coca-cola Company

CFRA, an independent research provider, has providedwith the following research alert. Analysts at CFRA have summarized their opinion as follows:We increase our 12-month target by $3 to $85, based on a 2027 P/E of 24.3x, a slight premium to KO's five-year average forward P/E multiple. We raise our adjusted EPS estimates by $0.03 to $3.28 for '26 and by $0.05 to $3.50 for '27. Following KO's Q1 earnings beat and guidance raise, we are raising our estimates and price target but maintaining Hold on the shares. While we were impressed with KO's Q1 earnings release (particularly its volume growth), we continue to view the stock's risk/reward potential as balanced and its valuation as fair. While we remain bullish on the growth prospects of KO's fairlife milk brand and recognize expected earnings benefits from the weaker U.S. dollar, we believe the stock's recent performance is reflecting these positives. Still, KO boasts one of the market's strongest earnings track records (its last quarterly earnings miss was in Q1 2017), and we acknowledge the company's long history of returning cash to shareholders, noting its S&P Dividend Aristocrat Index status.

$KO
Oil & Energy

UAE's OPEC+ Exit Weakens Cartel's Market Grip, Raises Volatility Risks, Analysts Say

The UAE has withdrawn from OPEC and the broader OPEC+ alliance, delivering a significant blow to the group's ability to manage global oil markets and raising questions about the future of coordinated supply policy, Rystad Energy strategists said on Tuesday.The Gulf state, which produces about 4.8 million barrels per day and has ambitions to raise output further, has been among a handful of members capable of adjusting supply to respond to market shocks."OPEC and OPEC+ have only ever been as strong as members' willingness to hold barrels back," Jorge Leon, head of geopolitical analysis at Rystad Energy, said in a market note on Tuesday. "Losing a member with significant spare capacity takes a real tool out of the group's hands."The UAE's departure strips the producer group of one of its core mechanisms of influence, spare capacity that can be deployed to offset disruptions or withdrawn to support prices.Leon said the move weakens the group's ability to manage supply imbalances over time.Rystad said the impact on prices may be limited by ongoing geopolitical risks in the near term, including the Strait of Hormuz blockade, which continues to inject uncertainty into global supply flows.However, the longer-term implications are more profound. The consultancy said that with less spare capacity concentrated within the group, OPEC+ may find it difficult to calibrate output and maintain price stability.The shift comes as global oil demand approaches a potential peak, altering the incentives for low-cost producers. Rather than holding back production under quota systems, countries with available capacity may prioritize maximizing output and protecting market share.The move could place greater pressure on Saudi Arabia to shoulder a larger share of production adjustments to stabilize markets, a role Rystad analysts said may become difficult to sustain on its own.Saxo Bank strategists said the UAE's departure from OPEC and OPEC+ marks a shift in global oil policy at a time when the ongoing Iran conflict has disrupted global energy flows and drained both commercial and strategic crude inventories worldwide."The UAE is seizing the opportunity to exit OPEC and remove production constraints that have limited its ability to utilize growing capacity," said Ole Sloth Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.The UAE has steadily expanded its production capacity in recent years, driven by upstream investments led by Abu Dhabi's Adnoc Group. Saxo Bank said that before output fell last month to 2.2 million b/d, production had climbed to about 3.6 mmb/d.The country's current crude production capacity stands at about 4.85 mmb/d, with a target of reaching 5 mmb/d by 2027.Meanwhile, Sparta Commodities analysts said the producer cartel is facing renewed questions over its long-term cohesion after the UAE's departure, though the immediate impact on global oil balances remains muted."For the short-term, it means very little in terms of oil balances with the Strait of Hormuz closed," the analysts said, adding that the implications are more in the longer-term if and when the OPEC+ group gets back to its prior role in the market.Over the longer term, the UAE is expected to increase production to about 4.5-4.8 million b/d, up from its OPEC+ quota of about 3.4 million b/d. Sparta said the shift could introduce additional barrels into the market, potentially putting downward pressure on prices.With the exit, Phil Flynn, senior market analyst at Price Futures, said the UAE is positioning itself to ramp up oil production as it seeks greater autonomy outside the constraints of OPEC+.Flynn said that the UAE has long been constrained by an outdated production baseline set at about 3.2 million b/d in about 2018. However, the Gulf state has since made significant investments in upstream capacity, lifting its production potential to exceed 5 million b/d in the coming years.