AEHR TEST SYSTEMS [AEHR]

Reporting date: 10/09/2025

⚠️ Neutral Insider Sale Detected

πŸ“ What Happened

  • Insider: DANESH FARIBA
  • Role: Director
  • Company: AEHR TEST SYSTEMS (AEHR)
  • Transaction Date(s): 2025-10-09
  • Table I (Non-Derivative Securities)
    • Sale : 9,000
    • Average Sale Price: $24.79
    • Total Value: 9,000 * $24.79 = $223,101.48
    • Post-Transaction Direct Holdings: 16,643 shares (direct)
    • Indirect Holdings: None reported
    • 10b5-1 Plan Used? No

πŸ“„ Summary

DANESH FARIBA, Director at AEHR TEST SYSTEMS (AEHR), sold 9,000 shares on October 09, 2025, at an average price of $24.79, realizing proceeds of about ~$223,101.48. After the transaction, they now hold 16,643 direct shares (includes unvested restricted stock units). For retail traders, this is a neutral-to-slightly bearish event: modest director profit-taking, not a dramatic divestiture.

πŸ”‘ Interpretation

  • Type: Discretionary (no 10b5-1 plan reported)
  • Disposition: Shares were sold (transaction code S) β€” disposed immediately as reported
  • Size Context: The sale of 9,000 shares reduced reported direct holdings from ~25,643 to 16,643 (based on the sequence of filings), representing roughly ~35% of pre-sale holdings β€” sizable but still leaves meaningful ownership; appears like partial profit-taking rather than full exit.
  • ATH Metric: The sale price (~$24.79) sits in a mid-range of historical prices rather than at an all-time high or low; using the reported trade price as a recent reference, this does not appear timed at an obvious ATH or ATL and seems opportunistic but not opportunistically tied to an extreme price.
  • Outlier Check: Not unusually large for a director-level sale in absolute dollars; consistent with occasional trimming rather than an extraordinary liquidation.

πŸ“Š Bullish or Bearish?

Neutral β†’ Slightly Bearish

Neutral β†’ Slightly Bearish. The filing shows net insider sales (9,000 shares) from a director with no 10b5-1 plan reported; this looks like routine profit-taking rather than a clear negative signal. Data is complete for these transactions but cluster activity cannot be determined from this filing alone.

βœ… Bottom Line (Retail Takeaway)

This transaction looks like routine profit-taking rather than a bearish signal. For retail traders, it’s noise, not a tradeable event β€” not worth short-/mid-term action unless corroborated by large coordinated insider sales or negative company developments.