Epsilon Energy Ltd. (EXCHANGE:EPSN) reported insider purchases this week after Chief Executive Officer Jason Stabell disclosed a sequence of acquisitions in a Form 4 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Over the span of March 27 to March 31, 2026, Stabell added 20,000 common shares to his holdings for a combined outlay of $124,180.
The trades break down as follows: on March 27, Stabell purchased 6,000 shares at $6.20 apiece, representing $37,200; on March 30, he bought 12,000 shares at $6.22, totaling $74,640; and on March 31 he acquired 2,000 shares at $6.17, for $12,340.
Following those transactions, the filing shows Stabell holds 518,765 shares directly and controls an additional 543,039 shares indirectly through Sisu Investments, LLC.
The insider buying coincides with recent strength in Epsilon Energy's stock price. Shares were trading at $6.16 at the close, delivering a 38.6% return year-to-date. Analysis from InvestingPro included in company coverage characterizes the stock as appearing undervalued relative to its Fair Value, a view that the filing notes may have played a role in Stabell's purchasing decisions. Epsilon Energy's market capitalization is listed at $185 million.
Investors also had fresh financial data to consider this week. Epsilon Energy reported fourth-quarter 2025 results that exceeded analyst expectations: the company posted earnings per share of $0.43, compared with the $0.04 consensus estimate, and reported revenue of $14.82 million against an expected $11.36 million. Despite the outsized EPS and revenue numbers, the stock experienced a modest decline in premarket activity and closed down 0.65% at $6.16 on the day the results were reflected in trading.
The disclosed trades and the quarterly performance together offer direct data points for market participants monitoring insider behavior and company fundamentals. The Form 4 filing provides the precise transaction dates, share counts, and prices, while the earnings release supplies the most recent top-line and per-share figures investors have to assess the company’s near-term financial performance.
Contextual note: The article reports the transactions and the company’s reported results as disclosed in regulatory filings and published financial data; it does not assign causation between the purchases and subsequent market moves.