EX-19 4 itci-20241231xex19.htm EX-19 Document
 
Exhibit 19
INTRA-CELLULAR THERAPIES, INC.
INSIDER TRADING POLICY
(As amended, effective December 31, 2024)

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
I.Purpose, Scope and Background
2
II.Responsibilities
2
III.What is Material Non-Public Information?
2
IV.The Consequences of Insider Trading
4
V.Our Policy
5
General Prohibition on Trading5
Transactions by Family Members, Others in Your Household and Entities You Control5
Other Companies’ Non-Public Information5
Personal or Independent Reasons Are Not Exceptions5
Policy Administrator5
When Information Becomes Public6
Prohibited Trading Periods6
Exceptions for Certain Transactions7
Pre-Clearance of All Acquisitions, Sales and Other Transfers by Company Personnel and Their Related Persons8
VI.Individual Responsibility
9
VII. Additional Prohibited Transactions
10
VIII. Post-Termination Transactions
10
IX.Company Assistance
11
X.Transactions by the Company
11
XI.Certifications
11

Addendum A - Rule 10b5-1 Trading Plan Policy

 1

 
I.Purpose, Scope and Background
Intra-Cellular Therapies, Inc. (the “Company”) has adopted the following policy regarding trading by Company personnel in the Company’s securities (the “Insider Trading Policy,” or this “Policy”). This Policy applies to all Company personnel, including directors, officers, employees and consultants of the Company and its subsidiaries. This Policy also applies to certain family members, other members of a person’s household and entities controlled by Company personnel, as described in Section V below. All such persons are collectively referred to as “Covered Persons” herein.
This Policy has been developed:
to educate all Covered Persons as to the federal securities laws and the rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) on insider trading in public company securities;
to set forth requirements that apply to Covered Persons who seek to trade in the Company’s securities;
to protect the Company and its personnel from legal liability; and
to preserve the reputation of the Company and its personnel for integrity and ethical conduct.
Because the Company is a public company, transactions in the Company’s securities are subject to the federal securities laws and regulations adopted by the SEC. These laws and regulations make it illegal for an individual to buy or sell securities of the Company while aware of material non-public information. The SEC takes insider trading very seriously and devotes significant resources to uncovering the activity and to prosecuting offenders. Liability may extend not only to the individuals who trade while in possession of material non-public information but also to their “tippers,” people who leak material non-public information to individuals who then trade based on that information. The Company and “controlling persons” of the Company may also be liable for violations by Company personnel.
II.Responsibilities
Covered Persons are responsible for compliance with this Policy, including the particular obligations outlined in Section VI below. As detailed below, certain Covered Persons, including directors, executive officers and “Restricted Employees” (defined below) have additional duties hereunder. The specific duties of the “Policy Administrator” (defined below) under this Policy are also explained below.
III.What is Material Non-Public Information?
Definition.
Material non-public information is any information (positive or negative) that:
2

 
is not generally known to the public, and
which, if publicly known, would likely affect either the market price of the Company’s securities or a person’s decision to buy, sell or hold the Company’s securities.
Examples. Common examples of information that will frequently be regarded as material include, but are not limited to:
the Company’s revenues, earnings, losses or projections of future financial results;
the status of or developments in any of the Company’s clinical trials or development programs;
the status or content of the Company’s product approvals, submissions, interactions and strategy with regards to the FDA or EMA or any other similar agency;
the status or content of the Company’s interactions with patent authorities;
the status of any capital raising efforts, including the contemplated public or private sale of additional securities of the Company;
the status of or content of the Company’s interactions with its strategic collaborators;
news of a pending or proposed merger, acquisition or tender offer involving the Company;
a change in control or a significant change in management of the Company;
the establishment of a program to repurchase securities of the Company;
a recapitalization event, such as a stock split;
a default on outstanding debt or preferred stock of the Company or a bankruptcy filing;
the procurement of funding from governmental or other sources;
the entering into or termination of a strategic alliance, collaboration, partnership or other joint venture or acquisition or disposition of a significant asset;
the loss, delay or gain of a significant contract, sale or order or other important development regarding customers or suppliers;
pending or threatened significant litigation or the resolution of such litigation;
a change in or dispute with the Company’s auditors; or
3

 
other items that require the filing of a Current Report on Form 8-K with the SEC.
Twenty-Twenty Hindsight. In determining whether information is material, the SEC and other regulators will view the information after-the-fact with the benefit of hindsight. As a result, in determining whether any information is material, we will, and any Covered Person considering a trade in Company securities should, carefully consider whether regulators and others might view the information as being material in hindsight, with the benefit of all relevant information that later becomes available. For example, if there is a significant change in the Company’s stock price following release of certain information, that information will likely be determined to have been material when viewed with the benefit of hindsight.
In addition to addressing the relevant statutes and regulations in this area, we are adopting this Policy to avoid even the appearance of improper conduct on the part of anyone employed by or associated with the Company and certain related persons, not just members of senior management.
IV.The Consequences of Insider Trading
The consequences of insider trading violations can be severe:
For individuals who trade while in possession of material non-public information (or tip information to others):
a civil penalty of up to three times the profit gained or loss avoided;
a criminal fine (no matter how small the profit) of up to $5 million; and
a jail term of up to 20 years.
These penalties can apply even if the individual is not a member of the Board of Directors or an officer of the Company. Moreover, if an employee violates this Policy, he or she may also be subject to Company-imposed sanctions, including termination for cause.
For a company (as well as possibly any supervisory person) that fails to take appropriate steps to prevent illegal trading:
a civil penalty of the greater of $1 million or three times the profit gained or loss avoided as a result of the employee’s violation; and
a criminal penalty of up to $25 million.
Any of the above consequences, including an SEC investigation that does not result in prosecution, can tarnish the Company’s or an individual’s reputation and irreparably damage a career.
4

 
V.Our Policy
General Prohibition on Trading. Company personnel and Related Persons (as defined below in this Section V) may not buy or sell securities of the Company while in possession of material non-public information or engage in any other action to take advantage of, or pass on to others, that information, subject to the specific exceptions noted below in this Section V under the caption “Exceptions for Certain Transactions.”
Transactions by Family Members, Others in Your Household and Entities You Control. The restrictions in this Policy also apply to (1) immediate family members who reside with you, (2) others living in your household (whether or not related to you), (3) family members who do not live in your household but whose transactions in the Company’s securities are directed by you or are subject to your influence or control (e.g., parents or children who consult with you before they trade in the Company’s securities) and (4) any entities that you influence or control, including any corporations, limited liability companies, partnerships or trusts (each person or entity identified in clauses (1) – (4), a “Related Person”). SEC regulations specifically provide that any material non-public information about the Company communicated to any spouse, parent, child or sibling is considered to have been communicated under a duty of trust or confidence; and that any trading in the Company’s securities by such family members while they are aware of such information may, therefore, violate insider trading laws and regulations. Company personnel are expected to be responsible for informing all Related Persons of these obligations and for the compliance of all Related Persons with this Policy, including, without limitation, compliance with the black-out periods and pre-clearance procedures for transactions in the Company’s securities, as applicable, and all other restrictions in this Policy. Company personnel may be subject to the same penalties for failing to do so, including termination for cause. Furthermore, you should not participate in any investment club (i.e., groups of people who pool their money to make investments) that may invest in the Company’s securities.
Other Companies’ Non-public Information. This Policy also applies with equal force to information relating to any other company, including our customers, vendors or suppliers, obtained by Company personnel during the course of their service to or employment by the Company. For example, no Company personnel who, in the course of work on behalf of the Company, learns of material non-public information about a company with which the Company does business or that is involved in a potential transaction or business relationship with the Company may trade in the other company’s securities until the information becomes public or is no longer material.
Personal or Independent Reasons Are Not Exceptions. Transactions in the Company’s securities that may be necessary or justifiable for independent reasons (such as the need to raise money for an emergency expenditure) are no exception. Even the appearance of an improper transaction must be avoided to preserve our reputation for adhering to the highest standards of conduct.
Policy Administrator. This Policy shall be administered by the “Policy Administrator,” who shall initially be the Company’s General Counsel, and if such person is not available, then
5

 
the Company’s Chief Financial Officer shall serve as the alternate Policy Administrator. The Policy Administrator may, however, change from time to time.
When Information Becomes Public. This Policy applies to material non-public information about the Company, which means that trading is permitted once the information becomes known to the public (unless some other Company policy or legal or contractual obligation restricts trading at that time). Because the Company’s stockholders and the investing public should be afforded time to receive and absorb information, as a general rule you should not engage in any transactions until the beginning of the second business day after the day on which the material information has been released. Thus, if an announcement is made at any time on a Monday (e.g., before or after the market opens), Wednesday generally would be the first day on which you may trade. If an announcement is made at any time on a Friday, Tuesday generally would be the first day on which you may trade. However, if the information released is complex, such as a major financing or other significant transaction, it may be necessary to allow additional time for the information to be absorbed by the investing public. In such circumstances, you will be notified by the Policy Administrator regarding a suitable waiting period before trading. In addition, we have established specified black-out periods, as described below.
Prohibited Trading Periods. While it is never permissible to trade based on material non-public information, we are implementing the following procedures to help prevent inadvertent violations of this Policy and avoid even the appearance of an improper transaction (which could result, for example, where Company personnel engage in a trade while unaware of a pending major development).
(1)    Company Wide Black-Out Periods Applicable to All Company Personnel. All Company personnel and Related Persons are prohibited from trading in any of the Company’s securities during the following periods:
from the time each such individual becomes aware of the material information (the black-out start times often vary) until the beginning of the second business day after the day the Company has made a public announcement of material information, including earnings releases, unless the information released is complex, in which case it may be necessary to extend this period and the Company will notify you by e-mail of any such extension of the black-out period; and
during other specified periods when significant developments or announcements are anticipated, as notified by the Company via email.
The Company will notify you by e-mail when you and your Related Persons may not trade (or request pre-clearance to trade) in the Company’s securities during periods when significant developments or announcements are anticipated. The Company will also notify you when trading restrictions are lifted. Of course, even during periods when trading is permitted, no one, including persons or entities who do not fall within the definition of Related Persons, should trade in the Company’s securities if he or she possesses material non-public information.
6

 
(2)    Additional Black-Out Periods Applicable to the Board of Directors, Executive Officers and Restricted Employees. In addition to being subject to the trading procedures applicable to all Company personnel (above), members of the Company’s Board of Directors, executive officers, Restricted Employees and Related Persons of all such individuals are also subject to additional trading procedures and restrictions during the following periods:
the period beginning on the 10th day prior to the last day of the close of each fiscal quarter (e.g., for the quarter ended March 31, the black-out period would begin on March 21) until the beginning of the second business day after the release of the Company’s financial results for each quarter and, in the case of the fourth quarter, financial results for the year end; and
any other periods as determined by the Company.
Restricted Employees” shall mean key advisors and staff who, at any given point in time, by virtue of their position and involvement with the Company, are or are likely to be exposed to material non-public information, as identified and directly notified by the Policy Administrator or his or her designee.
Exceptions for Certain Transactions.
(1)    Gifts. Bona fide gift transactions are subject to this Policy, including the pre-clearance procedures of this Policy, provided that gifts may occur during black-out periods if the recipient of the gift agrees not to sell the Company’s securities until the trading restrictions are lifted.
(2)    Mutual Funds and Exchange Traded Funds. Transactions in mutual funds and exchange traded funds that are invested in the Company’s securities are not transactions subject to this Policy.
(3)    Transactions Involving Company Equity Plans. Except as otherwise noted below, this Policy does not apply to the following transactions:
Stock Option Exercises. This Policy does not apply to the exercise of a stock option acquired pursuant to the Company’s equity plans, or to the exercise of a share withholding right pursuant to which a person has elected to have the Company withhold shares subject to an option to pay the exercise price or satisfy tax withholding requirements. This Policy does apply, however, to any sale of stock as part of a broker-assisted cashless exercise of an option, or any other market sale of stock for the purpose of generating the cash needed to pay the exercise price and/or taxes upon the exercise of an option.
Restricted Stock Awards and Restricted Stock Unit Awards. This Policy does not apply to the vesting of restricted stock or restricted stock units, or the exercise of a share withholding right pursuant to which a person elects to have the Company withhold shares of stock to satisfy tax withholding requirements upon the vesting of
7

 
any restricted stock or restricted stock unit. This Policy does apply, however, to any market sale of restricted stock or shares received upon vesting of restricted stock units for the purpose of generating the cash needed to pay the taxes associated with the vesting.
Employee Stock Purchase Plan. This Policy does not apply to purchases of the Company’s securities under the Company’s employee stock purchase plan, if any. This Policy does apply, however, to subsequent sales or other transfers of such securities.
Other Transactions with the Company. Any other purchase of the Company’s securities from the Company or sales of the Company’s securities to the Company are not subject to this Policy.
(4)    Rule 10b5-1 Trading Plans. Notwithstanding the restrictions and prohibitions on trading in the Company’s securities set forth in this Policy, persons subject to this Policy are permitted to effect transactions in the Company’s securities pursuant to approved trading plans established under Rule 10b5-1 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (“Trading Plans”), provided that the Trading Plan is established while the person is not in possession of material non-public information, and that the Trading Plan is not entered into during any applicable Company-imposed black-out period. The use of any such Trading Plan by the Company’s Board of Directors, executive officers, Restricted Employees and each of their Related Persons must comply with the Company’s Rule 10b5-1 Trading Plan Policy, set forth on Addendum A hereto.
Pre-Clearance of All Acquisitions, Sales and Other Transfers by Certain Company Personnel and Their Related Persons. In order to ensure compliance with this Policy and with any Section 16 reporting requirements, all transactions in the Company’s securities (including acquisitions, sales, gifts and other transfers, whether or not for value), including the execution of Trading Plans, by members of the Company’s Board of Directors, executive officers, Restricted Employees and each of their Related Persons, must be pre-cleared by the Policy Administrator. If you are a member of one of the groups listed above and you contemplate a transaction in the Company’s securities, you must seek prior clearance from the Policy Administrator or other designated individual prior to executing the transaction. The Policy Administrator will use his or her reasonable best efforts to provide approval or disapproval within two business days. You must wait until receiving pre-clearance before you or your Related Persons execute the transaction. Neither the Company nor the Policy Administrator shall be liable for any delays that may occur due to the pre-clearance process. If the transaction is pre-cleared by the Policy Administrator, it must be executed by the end of the second business day after the date of receipt of pre-clearance. Notwithstanding receipt of pre-clearance of a transaction, if you or any Related Person becomes aware of material non-public information about the Company after receiving the pre-clearance but prior to the execution of the transaction, you or such Related Person may not execute the transaction. Each person is responsible for determining whether he or she is in possession of material non-public information, as discussed below in Section VI. If you are a Section 16 reporting person, promptly following execution of the transaction, but in no event
8

 
later than the end of the first business day after the execution of the transaction, you must notify the Policy Administrator and provide details regarding the transaction sufficient to complete the required Section 16 filing.
Employees of the Company who are not members of the Board of Directors, executive officers or Restricted Employees may, but are not required to, pre-clear transactions in the Company’s securities in the same manner as set forth above. Such employees are not required to notify the Policy Administrator following execution of the transaction.
Please note that pre-clearance does not provide Company personnel or Related Person with immunity from investigation, claims or liability. It is the responsibility of the individual to comply with the federal securities regulations.
VI.Individual Responsibility
Persons subject to this Policy have ethical and legal obligations to maintain the confidentiality of information about the Company and to refrain from engaging in transactions in the Company’s securities while in possession of material non-public information. Each individual is responsible for making sure that he or she complies with this Policy, and that any Related Person, whose transactions are subject to this Policy, also complies with this Policy. In all cases, the responsibility for determining whether an individual is in possession of material non-public information rests with that individual, and any action on the part of the Company, the Policy Administrator or any other employee or director pursuant to this Policy (or otherwise) does not in any way constitute legal advice or insulate an individual from liability under applicable securities laws. You may be subject to legal penalties and disciplinary action by law enforcement officials and/or the Company for any conduct prohibited by this Policy or applicable securities laws, as described in Section IV above.
Tipping Information to Others. Company personnel must not disclose non-public information about the Company to others outside the Company who do not have an obligation to maintain the confidentiality of such information. If the outsider trades on such information, penalties for insider trading may apply in these situations whether or not you derive any monetary benefit from the other person’s trading activities. Material non-public information is sometimes inadvertently disclosed or overheard in casual, social conversations. Please take care to avoid such disclosures.
Prevention of Insider Trading by Others. If you become aware of a potential insider trading violation, you must immediately advise our Policy Administrator and/or report the matter using the Company’s anonymous whistleblower reporting procedures. You should also take steps, where appropriate, to prevent persons under your supervision and/or control from using material non-public information for trading purposes. Moreover, Company-imposed sanctions, including termination for cause, could result if an employee fails to comply with this Policy.
Confidentiality. Serious problems could be caused for the Company by the unauthorized disclosure of internal information about the Company, whether or not for the purpose of facilitating improper trading in the Company’s securities. Company personnel must closely
9

 
safeguard material non-public information even within the Company, and only share it with colleagues on a need-to-know basis. Company personnel should not discuss internal Company matters or developments (whether or not you think such information is material) with anyone outside of the Company (including, but not limited to, family, friends, business associates, investors and expert consulting firms), except as required in the performance of regular corporate duties. This prohibition applies specifically (but not exclusively) to inquiries about the Company that may be made by the financial press, investment analysts or others in the financial community and also includes posting material non-public information on any social media platforms. It is important that all such communications on behalf of the Company be made only through an authorized officer under carefully controlled circumstances. Unless you are expressly authorized to the contrary, if you receive any inquiries of this nature, you should decline comment and refer the inquirer to the Vice President of Corporate Communications and Investor Relations. Please review the Company’s separate Regulation FD Policy, which governs all public communications with people outside the Company.
VII.Additional Prohibited Transactions
Because we believe it is generally improper and inappropriate for Company personnel to engage in short-term or speculative transactions involving the Company’s securities, it is our policy that Company personnel and Related Persons not engage in any of the following activities, except in each case in limited circumstances with prior approval of the Policy Administrator:
trading in the Company’s securities on a short-term basis. Any shares of Company common stock purchased in the open market must be held for a minimum of six months and ideally longer;
purchasing of financial instruments (including prepaid variable forward contracts, equity swaps, puts, calls, straddles, collars and exchange funds) that are designed to hedge or offset any decrease in the market value of the Company’s equity securities and entering into other transactions with the same economic effect, including short sales;
borrowing or other arrangements involving the pledge of Company securities as collateral for a loan or holding such securities in a margin account; and
selling a security future that establishes a position that increases in value as the value of the underlying equity security decreases.
VIII.Post-Termination Transactions
This Policy will no longer apply to any individual after that individual’s termination of service to the Company. However, if an individual is in possession of material non-public information when his or her service terminates, that individual may not trade in the Company’s securities until that information has become public or is no longer material. It would be prudent for the individual, if he or she is subject to a black-out period upon termination of service, to refrain from trading until those restrictions no longer apply to Company personnel.
10

 
IX.Company Assistance
Any person who has any questions about specific transactions or this Policy in general may obtain additional guidance from the Policy Administrator. Remember, however, the ultimate responsibility for adhering to this Policy and avoiding improper transactions rests with you. In this regard, please use your best judgment when considering a transaction in the Company’s securities.
X.Transactions by the Company
The Company will not engage in transactions in Company securities, except in compliance with applicable securities laws.
XI.Certifications
As a condition to employment, all employees will be required to certify their understanding of and intent to comply with this Policy. Members of the Board of Directors, Senior Management and other personnel may be required to certify compliance on an annual basis.
11

 
ADDENDUM A
RULE 10b5-1 TRADING PLAN POLICY
This Rule 10b5-1 Trading Plan Policy applies to members of the Company’s Board of Directors, executive officers, Restricted Employees and each of their Related Persons who use or seek to use a Trading Plan (“Participants”). Capitalized terms used herein and not otherwise defined are defined as set forth in the Insider Trading Policy.
1.Trading Plan Establishment
A.No Trading Plan may become effective (that is, no transaction may occur) until the Participant has (i) delivered a complete copy of the Trading Plan to the Policy Administrator, (ii) certified that such Participant is not aware of any material non-public information about the Company and that such Participant is adopting the Trading Plan in good faith and not as part of a plan or scheme to evade the prohibitions of Rule 10b5-1 and (iii) received the written acknowledgment by the Company to enter into the Trading Plan. Additionally, Participants entering into a Trading Plan must act in good faith with respect to that Trading Plan during its term. Disclosure regarding a Trading Plan’s adoption may, at the Company’s discretion, be made through a press release or Current Report on Form 8-K.

B.Each Trading Plan must be a written plan or binding agreement entered into with a national brokerage firm or other financial professional reasonably acceptable to the Company. Trading Plans must use a Company-approved template.

C.The Trading Plan may only be adopted during the generally applicable quarterly open trading window described in the Company’s Insider Trading Policy and at a time when the Trading Plan Participant does not otherwise possess material, non-public information concerning the Company.

D.Purchases or sales pursuant to a Trading Plan may not occur until expiration of a cooling-off period that ends no earlier than thirty (30) days after adoption of the Trading Plan, and if the Participant is a director or officer (as defined in Rule 16a-1(f) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended), no earlier than the later of (i) ninety (90) days after adoption of the Trading Plan or (ii) two business days following the disclosure of the Company’s financial results in a Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q or Annual Report on Form 10-K for the completed fiscal quarter in which the Trading Plan was established; provided that the required cooling-off period for directors and officers is subject to a maximum of one hundred twenty (120) days after adoption of the Trading Plan (in each case, the “Cooling Off Period”).

E.A Participant may have only one Trading Plan with respect to the Company’s securities in operation at any time, except as follows:
A-1

 
(i) Participants may have one additional Trading Plan under which trading is not authorized to begin until after all trades under the earlier-commencing Trading Plan are completed or expired without execution, provided, however, that if the first trade under the later-commencing Trading Plan is scheduled during the Effective Cooling-Off Period (as defined below), the later-commencing Trading Plan may not rely upon this exception. The “Effective Cooling-Off Period” means the cooling-off period that would be applicable to the later-commencing Trading Plan if the date of adoption of the later-commencing Trading Plan were deemed to be the date of termination of the earlier-commencing Trading Plan; and
(ii) Participants may enter into a Trading Plan providing for sell-to-cover transactions that sell only such securities as are necessary to satisfy tax withholding obligations arising exclusively from the vesting of a compensatory award. This exception does not apply to sales made to cover taxes in connection with the exercise of stock option awards.
F.A Participant may purchase or sell securities pursuant to a Trading Plan designed to cover a single trade only one time during any consecutive twelve (12) month period.
2.Plan Amendments
Any Trading Plan amendment, modification or change to the amount, price, or timing of the purchase or sale of securities (or a modification or change to a written formula or algorithm, or computer program that affects the amount, price, or timing of the purchase or sale of Company securities) under the Trading Plan is deemed to be a termination of such Trading Plan and the adoption of a new Trading Plan, and must comply with all requirements of this Policy applicable to the adoption of a new Trading Plan.
3.Plan Termination
Early termination of Trading Plans should occur only in unusual circumstances, and the effectiveness of a Trading Plan termination will be subject to the prior review and approval of the Company. If a Trading Plan is terminated, disclosure regarding such termination may, at the Company’s discretion, be made through a press release or Current Report on Form 8-K. Furthermore, in the event a Participant terminates a Trading Plan, Participant will be subject to the required Cooling-Off Period before engaging in any new transactions in Company securities or adopting a new Trading Plan.
4.Miscellaneous
A.Consistent with Section VII of the Company’s Insider Trading Policy, which prohibits transactions that are designed to hedge or offset any decrease in the market value of the Company’s equity securities, at the time of entering into the Trading Plan, the Participant may not be, and during the term of the Trading Plan may not become, a party to a corresponding or hedging transaction involving Company securities.

A-2

 
B.The Company has the right at any time to require additional and/or different requirements in connection with the modification or termination of a Trading Plan in order to protect the Participant and the Company from potential liability. The Company may suspend Trading Plans immediately upon notice to the Trading Plan Participant for any reason, including but not limited to as underwritten public offerings, private placement transactions or other material events of the Company.

C.In accordance with SEC rules and regulations, the Company will disclose in Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and Annual Reports on Form 10-K whether, during the Company’s last fiscal quarter, any director or officer adopted or terminated (i) a Trading Plan for the purchase or sale of Company securities that is intended to satisfy the affirmative defense conditions of Rule 10b5-1(c) or (ii) a non-Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangement. In such disclosure, the Company will provide a description of the material terms of such trading arrangement, including the name and title of the director or officer, the date of adoption or termination of the trading arrangement, the duration of the trading arrangement, and the aggregate number of Company securities to be sold or purchased under the trading arrangement.

D.The Trading Plan Participant will be solely responsible for determining the Trading Plan’s compliance with Rule 10b5-1 and other applicable laws and regulations. Acknowledgement of a Trading Plan by the Company should not be characterized or understood to signify consent, approval or a legal opinion as to the Trading Plan’s compliance with Rule 10b5-1 or other applicable laws and regulations.
*****
A-3