Trey Byus, Chief Expedition Officer of Lindblad Expeditions (LIND +5.62%), sold 10,000 shares of common stock in an open-market transaction valued at approximately $200,500 on May 21, 2026, following a year of strong share gains for the adventure travel specialist, as shown in this SEC Form 4 filing. Transaction summary Metric Value Context Shares sold (direct) 10,000 Shares sold by Byus in this o...
Trey Byus, Chief Expedition Officer of Lindblad Expeditions (LIND +5.62%), sold 10,000 shares of common stock in an open-market transaction valued at approximately $200,500 on May 21, 2026, following a year of strong share gains for the adventure travel specialist, as shown in this SEC Form 4 filing. Transaction summary Metric Value Context Shares sold (direct) 10,000 Shares sold by Byus in this open-market transaction Transaction value $200,500 Approximate value based on SEC Form 4 reported price ($20.05 per share) Post-transaction shares (direct) 101,530 Directly held shares after the sale Post-transaction value (direct ownership) $2.0 million Value of remaining direct holdings at $20.05 per share as of May 21, 2026 Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 reported price ($20.05); post-transaction value based on May 21, 2026, market close ($20.05). Key questions How does the size of this sale compare to Trey Byus's prior open-market transactions? This 10,000-share sale is the smallest of the three open-market sales reported since August 2025, with previous transactions involving 16,585 shares and 26,460 shares; the reduced size is consistent with the declining available holdings. This 10,000-share sale is the smallest of the three open-market sales reported since August 2025, with previous transactions involving 16,585 shares and 26,460 shares; the reduced size is consistent with the declining available holdings. What percentage of Byus's total direct holdings was affected, and what remains post-transaction? The sale impacted 9.0% of direct shares, leaving Byus with 101,530 directly held shares, equating to approximately 0.18% insider ownership of the company's outstanding shares as of the latest filing. The sale impacted 9.0% of direct shares, leaving Byus with 101,530 directly held shares, equating to approximately 0.18% insider ownership of the company's outstanding shares as of the latest filing. Did this transaction involve any indirect holdings or derivative se...
South Korea's Kospi recently hit an all-time high, but the index appears to be overly reliant on two heavyweights — Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix — according to BTIG analyst Jonathan Krinsky in a note. "We get the fundamentals around memory are robust, but the concentration risk of this index has become increasingly outsized when relying on just two names," Krinsky said. The iShares MSCI South ...
South Korea's Kospi recently hit an all-time high, but the index appears to be overly reliant on two heavyweights — Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix — according to BTIG analyst Jonathan Krinsky in a note. "We get the fundamentals around memory are robust, but the concentration risk of this index has become increasingly outsized when relying on just two names," Krinsky said. The iShares MSCI South Korea ETF is "set to gap up again into trendline resistance," he said. "It's been a hard trend to fight, but given the increasingly obvious breadth deterioration, we would be on guard for a swift downside reversal in this ETF." Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix make up approximately more than half of the weighting in the Kospi while only 42% of constituents are above their 200-day moving averages, he said, "so we have a situation where the majority of names are not just lagging the index, but actually moving in the opposite direction." And while the Kospi has risen more than 20% in the past month, just four of 19 industry groups are positive — and 10 of the groups are down 5% or more, he noted. South Korea's Kospi has nearly doubled since the start of the year, data from LSEG shows. SK Hynix's shares, which have surged approximately 250% year-to-date, saw the company's market capitalization exceed $1 trillion. The gains have been supported by rising demand for high-bandwidth memory chips used in AI servers and accelerators. Samsung Electronics crossed the $1 trillion mark earlier this month , becoming the second Asian company to do so after Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. — CNBC's Lee Ying Shan contributed to this report.
The Trump administration has opened a criminal investigation into E Jean Carroll, the writer who accused the president of sexual assault, according to news reports. Prosecutors, the New York Times and CNN reported on Wednesday, are looking into whether Carroll, 82, committed perjury in a 2022 deposition during her civil lawsuits against Trump, in which she said she did not accept outside financial...
The Trump administration has opened a criminal investigation into E Jean Carroll, the writer who accused the president of sexual assault, according to news reports. Prosecutors, the New York Times and CNN reported on Wednesday, are looking into whether Carroll, 82, committed perjury in a 2022 deposition during her civil lawsuits against Trump, in which she said she did not accept outside financial support for her legal battles. Nearly six months later, before the trial started, Carroll’s attorneys informed the judge and Trump’s lawyers that a nonprofit funded by Reid Hoffman, the billionaire LinkedIn co-founder, had paid some legal fees and expenses. Trump’s lawyers claimed Carroll hid Hoffman’s funding and that the obfuscation undermined her credibility. Carroll’s lawyers said she never met or spoke with anyone from the nonprofit. The judge allowed Trump’s attorney, Alina Habba, to question Carroll again in a second deposition. In 2024, a three-judge federal appeals court panel in New York dismissed the claim that Carroll had lied in her deposition. Carroll, a longtime advice columnist, claimed in her 2019 book What Do We Need Men For? that Trump forced himself upon her in a New York department store’s dressing room. Trump denied the allegations, accusing her of “totally lying” and adding that she was “not my type”. Carroll filed a federal civil lawsuit against Trump for sexual abuse and defamation. A jury found Trump liable on both counts, and awarded Carroll $5m in damages. A year later, a separate jury ordered Trump to pay $83m in another defamation case. Trump has appealed both judgments. CNN and the New York Times reported that Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, has recused himself from the justice department investigation due to his role representing Trump in Carroll’s civil case. The reported federal investigation into Carroll marks the latest example of Trump’s justice department launching criminal investigations into political opponents. Federal pr...
Federal Government Floats NDAs For Employees In Leak Crackdown Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times , President Donald Trump's administration on May 26 floated a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) for federal employees who have access to what the government described as sensitive information. The logo of the Office of Personnel Management in Washington on Feb. 13, 2025. Tierney L. Cross/Reu...
Federal Government Floats NDAs For Employees In Leak Crackdown Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times , President Donald Trump's administration on May 26 floated a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) for federal employees who have access to what the government described as sensitive information. The logo of the Office of Personnel Management in Washington on Feb. 13, 2025. Tierney L. Cross/Reuters The proposed NDA says that employees may access "non-public, confidential, or proprietary information," such as personal health information and details relating to agency operations. It states that employees understand they are required to follow laws and regulations governing confidential information and that they agree to "take all reasonable precautions to safeguard and protect Confidential Government Information from unauthorized disclosure." Violating the agreement could lead to repercussions, including termination and civil or criminal penalties, according to the draft. The Office of Personnel Management developed the NDA form in the wake of leaks, including the leak of information about the U.S. raid on Venezuela prior to American forces carrying it out, the office said in a notice set to be published on May 27. "Federal employees do not have discretion to disclose Confidential Government Information outside of narrow circumstances prescribed by relevant authorities and implemented by procedures which may differ by agency," the notice states. "Unauthorized disclosures of Confidential Government Information disrupt agency operations and erode public trust." In recent months, there have also been disclosures of personal information of about 4,500 employees of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, one of the agencies charged with enforcing immigration law, as well as leaks of planned immigration enforcement operations. " In much of the private sector, employees handling sensitive business or customer information are routinely required to sign confidentiality agreeme...