- Today
- Holidays
- Birthdays
- Reminders
- Cities
- Atlanta
- Austin
- Baltimore
- Berwyn
- Beverly Hills
- Birmingham
- Boston
- Brooklyn
- Buffalo
- Charlotte
- Chicago
- Cincinnati
- Cleveland
- Columbus
- Dallas
- Denver
- Detroit
- Fort Worth
- Houston
- Indianapolis
- Knoxville
- Las Vegas
- Los Angeles
- Louisville
- Madison
- Memphis
- Miami
- Milwaukee
- Minneapolis
- Nashville
- New Orleans
- New York
- Omaha
- Orlando
- Philadelphia
- Phoenix
- Pittsburgh
- Portland
- Raleigh
- Richmond
- Rutherford
- Sacramento
- Salt Lake City
- San Antonio
- San Diego
- San Francisco
- San Jose
- Seattle
- Tampa
- Tucson
- Washington
iRhythm CFO Sells Over $700K in Company Stock
Daniel Wilson, the Chief Financial Officer of iRhythm Technologies, has sold 5,188 shares of the company's stock.
Feb. 28, 2026 at 10:52am by Ben Kaplan
Got story updates? Submit your updates here. ›
Daniel Wilson, the Chief Financial Officer of iRhythm Technologies (NASDAQ:IRTC), has sold 5,188 shares of the company's stock for a total transaction value of $702,558.96. Following the sale, Wilson now directly owns 30,694 shares of the company's stock, valued at $4,156,581.48. This represents a 14.46% decrease in his position.
Why it matters
Insider transactions, such as stock sales by company executives, can provide insight into management's views on the company's prospects and valuation. Wilson's sale of a significant portion of his iRhythm stock holdings may signal that he believes the shares are overvalued at current levels.
The details
The stock sale was disclosed in a filing with the SEC and occurred on Wednesday, February 25th. The shares were sold at an average price of $135.42 per share. iRhythm Technologies is a medical technology company that develops and commercializes wearable cardiac monitoring devices and associated data analytics services.
- The stock sale occurred on Wednesday, February 25th, 2026.
The players
Daniel Wilson
The Chief Financial Officer of iRhythm Technologies.
iRhythm Technologies
A medical technology company that develops and commercializes wearable cardiac monitoring devices and associated data analytics services.
What they’re saying
“We must not let individuals continue to damage private property in San Francisco.”
— Robert Jenkins, San Francisco resident (San Francisco Chronicle)
What’s next
The judge in the case will decide on Tuesday whether or not to allow Walker Reed Quinn out on bail.
The takeaway
This case highlights growing concerns in the community about repeat offenders released on bail, raising questions about bail reform, public safety on SF streets, and if any special laws to govern autonomous vehicles in residential and commercial areas.
San Francisco top stories
San Francisco events
Mar. 17, 2026
Joe Klocek & FriendsMar. 17, 2026
Clinton Kane - 4350 Live with Julian Ray




