Jayme L. Brooks, Chief Financial Officer of Limbach Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ:LMB), sold 10,310 shares of the company’s common stock on March 17, 2026, according to a Form 4 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The transactions were executed under a pre-arranged 10b5-1 trading plan and produced proceeds totaling $778,550.
The sale was completed through multiple trades with execution prices ranging from $77.1047 to $81.403 per share. At present the stock trades at $75.74, reflecting a 26.5% decline over the past six months from its 52-week high of $154.05.
After these transactions, Brooks holds 140,750 shares of Limbach Holdings common stock in her name. In addition to her direct ownership, Brooks indirectly controls 3,897 shares through the Brooks Family Trust, as noted in the filing.
Separately, third-party analysis available through InvestingPro indicates that LMB appears undervalued at current levels and that there are 12 additional ProTips available to subscribers. Investors wishing to dive deeper are directed to a comprehensive Pro Research Report that covers LMB along with more than 1,400 U.S. equities.
Those developments come on the heels of Limbach’s fourth-quarter 2025 report, which presented a mixed operating picture. The company reported earnings per share of $1.40, ahead of analyst expectations of $1.21, representing a 15.7% surprise. Revenue for the quarter was $186.9 million, below the anticipated $198.45 million and reflecting a 5.82% shortfall versus consensus estimates.
In response to the quarter, Stifel adjusted its price target for Limbach Holdings upward to $107 from $104 while maintaining a Buy rating. The firm pointed to margins that outperformed expectations and noted that organic revenue growth re-accelerated to 24% during the quarter. These factors were cited as supporting the firm’s view even amid the revenue miss.
The juxtaposition of stronger-than-expected profitability and a revenue shortfall frames the near-term narrative for investors watching Limbach. The insider sale, executed through a pre-arranged 10b5-1 plan, reduces the CFO’s direct holdings but leaves her with a substantial stake when direct and indirect ownership are combined.
Investors tracking LMB may weigh the company’s reported ability to deliver robust earnings against the revenue gap and recent price pressure in the stock. For market participants interested in additional signals and screening tools, the InvestingPro platform and its Pro Research Report are referenced as sources of further data and analysis for LMB and more than 1,400 other U.S. equities.