Key Points
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AGCO Chief Accounting Officer Indira Agarwal disposed of 1,734 shares valued at $198,231 on July 10, 2026.
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The transaction was non-discretionary, executed to satisfy tax withholding obligations triggered by the vesting of restricted stock units (RSUs).
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The executive’s remaining direct equity stake is valued at $1.35 million as of the July 10, 2026, market close.
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Indira Agarwal, the chief accounting officer at AGCO Corporation (NYSE:AGCO), disposed of 1,734 shares of common stock on July 10, 2026, according to an SEC Form 4 filing.
Transaction summary
MetricValueShares sold (direct)1,734Transaction value$198,231Post-transaction shares (directly held)11,825Post-transaction value$1.35 million
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average sale price ($114.32); post-transaction value based on July 10, 2026 market close ($114.32).
Key questions
- What was the specific context of this stock disposition?The transaction involved the withholding of 1,734 shares by the company to cover tax liabilities associated with the vesting of restricted stock units originally awarded to Indira Agarwal on July 10, 2024.
- Does this transaction provide a signal regarding executive sentiment?No, because this was a non-discretionary tax withholding event, it does not reflect a change in the executive’s investment thesis or outlook on the firm’s valuation.
- What is the executive’s current equity exposure?Following this transaction, Indira Agarwal continues to hold 11,825 shares directly.
- How has the stock performed leading up to this transaction?As of the July 10 transaction date, the company’s common stock had a one-year gain of about 0.48%.
Company Overview
MetricValueShare Price (as of market close 2026-07-10)$114.32Market Capitalization$8.3 billionRevenue (TTM)$10.4 billionNet Income (TTM)$771.0 million
Company Snapshot
- AGCO Corporation manufactures and distributes a comprehensive portfolio of agricultural machinery, including high-horsepower tractors for large-scale operations, utility tractors for small to medium-sized farms, and specialized equipment for dairy and commercial applications, generating revenue through direct sales of equipment and replacement components.
- The company operates a global distribution model serving agricultural producers across diverse farm sizes and operational scales, generating revenue through equipment sales, aftermarket parts, and related agricultural machinery solutions.
- AGCO’s primary customers include commercial farmers, agricultural cooperatives, and equipment dealers across North America, Europe, and international markets, with a focus on serving both large-scale row crop operations and smaller specialty farming segments.
AGCO Corporation is a leading global manufacturer of agricultural machinery with a market capitalization of $8.3 billion and TTM revenues of $10.4 billion, serving a diverse customer base across multiple continents. The company’s competitive position is strengthened by its extensive product portfolio spanning tractors, implements, and replacement components, combined with a robust global distribution network that reaches commercial and specialty farming operations. With 24,000 employees and a strategic focus on essential agricultural equipment, AGCO maintains a significant presence in the industrials sector’s agricultural machinery segment.
What this transaction means for investors
The filing makes clear that AGCO withheld these shares to cover the taxes due when Agarwal’s restricted stock vested, a bookkeeping step that happens automatically on the vesting date. In other words, Agarwal didn’t choose to sell and didn’t time anything, and she still holds 11,825 shares directly. That said, the more interesting story is that AGCO is showing early signs of a cyclical turn. Though shares took a big hit earlier this year on tariff pressures, first-quarter results had reason to be positive. Revenue rose 14.3% to $2.34 billion, adjusted earnings of $0.94 per share more than doubled and crushed estimates, and management guided full-year revenue to a midpoint of $10.6 billion. CEO Eric Hansotia credited share gains in high-horsepower equipment and precision agriculture.
For long-term investors, the takeaway is to look past this filing and weigh the recovery against real headwinds that seem largely priced in: Management still expects flat-to-lower full-year production, Latin American demand fell more than 30%, and tariffs are set to cost roughly $135 million this year.
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Jonathan Ponciano has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.