First Republic Bank executives sold nearly $12 million worth of its stock in just the past three months, it has been revealed.
Executive Chairman James Herbert II sold the most of any of the other insiders, off-loading a whopping $4.5 million worth of shares since the start of the year.
In all, four of the struggling bank’s top executives sold $11.8 million worth of stock so far this year, at prices averaging just below $130 a share, the Wall Street Journal found.
Some of these sales came just days before the bank started facing liquidity troubles, as panicked investors sought to get their money back following the fall of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.
Company executives are now said to be eyeing a sale of the bank, as its shares plummeted as much as 35 percent on Thursday.

First Republic Bank is reportedly considering a sale, as pressure mounts on small and mid-sized US banks following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank
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The Journal found that Herbert made two sales in January and February, worth 7 percent and 5 percent of his holdings in the company, respectively.
At the same time, Robert Thornton, the bank’s president of private wealth management sold 73 percent of his outstanding shares for $3.5 million in his first trade since 2021, and CEO Michael Roffler sold nearly $1 million in January after previously offloading $1.3 million worth of shares in November.
Chief Credit Officer David Lichtman also sold $2.5 million worth of shares over the course of three sales since 2023 began.
The last of those sales came on March 6, just two days before Silicon Valley Bank disclosed it had lost $1.8 billion, triggering a massive bank run that forced SVB to close.
Lichtman and his spouse had already sold another $2.5 million in November and December, the Journal reports, making the most sales over just a five-month period than they ever had previously.
None of the filings for the executives’ sales indicate they were executed under 10b5-1 plans, which are prescheduled sales designed to protect business executives from accusations of insider trading, the Journal notes.
DailyMail.com has reached out to First Republic for comment.