Is AAR Corp. Stock a Sell or Buy After a Senior VP Dumped Over 6,000 Shares Worth $705,000?

Jessica A. Garascia, Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary of AAR Corp. (AIR 1.43%), reported the exercise and immediate sale of 6,284 shares of Common Stock for a transaction value of approximately $705,000, according to a SEC Form 4 filing.

Transaction summary

Metric Value
Shares sold (direct) 6,284
Transaction value $705,000
Post-transaction shares (direct) 29,557
Post-transaction value (direct ownership) ~$3.28 million

Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average purchase price ($112.20); post-transaction value based on March 26, 2026 market close.

Key questions

  • What was the nature of this transaction, and what does the derivative context indicate?
    The transaction involved the exercise of 6,284 stock options, with all shares immediately sold; this reflects a liquidity event rather than a discretionary open-market sale.
  • How did this sale impact Jessica Garascia’s direct Common Stock holdings and ownership percentage?
    Her direct Common Stock holdings were reduced by 17.53%, from 35,841 shares pre-transaction to 29,557 shares post-transaction.
  • How does the scale of this sale compare to Garascia’s recent trading activity?
    This sale exceeded the recent median sale size of 4,209 shares (drawn from four sales since July 2024), reflecting a step-up in sale proportion explained by the shrinking holdings base.
  • What is the remaining equity exposure for the insider, and does the transaction suggest any change in long-term alignment?
    Garascia continues to hold 29,557 shares of Common Stock directly, maintaining active equity exposure; the transaction appears to be a routine option exercise for liquidity rather than a strategic shift in long-term ownership.

Company overview

Metric Value
Revenue (TTM) $3.13 billion
Net income (TTM) $171.00 million
Employees 5,700
1-year price change 101.14%
  • 1-year price change is calculated using March 26, 2026 as the reference date.

Company snapshot

  • AAR Corp. provides aftermarket aviation services, including inventory management, parts distribution, maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO), as well as engineering solutions and expeditionary logistics support.
  • It generates revenue through service contracts, parts sales and leasing, and performance-based logistics programs for both commercial and defense customers.
  • The company serves a global client base comprising commercial airlines, cargo carriers, aircraft leasing companies, OEMs, and military/government agencies.

AAR Corp. operates at scale as a leading independent provider of aviation services, leveraging a diversified portfolio across commercial and defense end markets. The company’s strategy focuses on integrated supply chain solutions and MRO capabilities, positioning it as a key partner for airlines and government entities seeking operational efficiency and reliability.

Its competitive advantage lies in its broad service offering, global reach, and established relationships with both commercial and military customers.

What this transaction means for investors

General Counsel Jessica Garascia’s March 26 sale of AAR Corp. stock isn’t a cause for concern. Some of her stock options vested, and she chose to dispose of the shares. She still retained almost 30,000 shares after the transaction, suggesting she is not in a rush to sell her holdings.

Garascia’s sale comes on the heels of AAR stock reaching a 52-week high of $122.97 on March 25. The stock rose as the company reported excellent business performance for its fiscal third quarter ended Feb. 28.

AAR announced fiscal Q3 sales of $845.1 million, which represented a 25% year-over-year increase. Moreover, the company achieved a dramatic reversal from a net loss of $8.9 million in the previous year’s fiscal third quarter to net income of $68 million this year.

Thanks to its strong Q3 net income, AAR’s price-to-earnings ratio has dropped to a low point over the past year. This suggests its stock is at a compelling valuation to make picking up shares worthwhile. That said, because the stock is not far from its 52-week high, now isn’t a bad time to sell although shareholders may want to hold onto the stock given the company’s strong performance.

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