OneWater Marine COO buys 72,482 shares in 2 transactions totaling $890,984.86 as stock down 59.7% from highs
Chief Operating Officer Anthony Aisquith purchased 72,482 shares across 2 separate transactions on May 6–7, 2025, increasing his holdings by 9.2% to 859,638 shares. The buys occurred at $12.38 and $12.23, with a blended average price of $12.29, in a company currently trading at $12.57 after declining 59.7% from its 52-week high of $31.18. OneWater Marine faces material operational headwinds: the company is unprofitable (full-year net income was negative, latest quarter showed a $368.0K loss), revenue contracted 8.4% year-over-year, and quarterly revenue stands at $483.5M. His cross-ticker buy track record shows 0 out of 2 prior purchases were well-timed at the 90-day mark (average 90d return -4.4%), and his two prior buys at OneWater itself (September 2024) also yielded negative 90-day returns of -1.7% and -7.0%. This purchase occurs near the stock's multi-month low but within the context of persistent weakness and negative historical outcomes from this insider's prior open-market purchases.
COO Anthony Aisquith bought 10,000 shares across 2 transactions for $215,000 at blended avg $21.50 as stock down 38.5% from 52-week high
Anthony Aisquith, Chief Operating Officer of OneWater Marine Inc., made 2 separate purchases totaling 10,000 shares for $215,000.00, with transaction prices at $21.75 on 2024-09-06 and $21.25 on 2024-09-10. His post-transaction holdings increased to 729,316 shares from 719,316 shares, representing a 1.4% increase in his stake. The purchases occurred when the stock was trading near $21.48 (current price), down 38.5% from its 52-week high of $34.92 and down 24.7% over the preceding 90 days. OneWater Marine's fundamentals show modest profitability in the latest quarter (net income $14.7M on revenue $542.4M) but the company was unprofitable over its most recent full fiscal year, with an extremely low P/E of 7.70. The insider purchase pattern—incremental accumulation via multiple transactions over four days at prices well below historical highs—occurs amid significant recent price deterioration and underlying negative annual profitability.