SEC Insider Trades
Track stock purchases, sales, and grants reported by corporate executives, directors, and major shareholders via SEC Form 3, 4 & 5 filings — as they hit the SEC.
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View allWhat Is SEC Insider Trading Data?
Corporate insiders — executives, directors, and shareholders who own more than 10% of a company's stock — are legally required to disclose every transaction in their company's shares within two business days. These disclosures, filed as SEC Form 4, are public record and freely available through the SEC's EDGAR system.
Insider Trades aggregates these filings in real time, so you can track what the people who know a company best are actually doing with their own money — not just what they say in press releases or earnings calls.
When an insider spends personal money to buy shares on the open market, it signals genuine conviction that the stock is undervalued. Academic research consistently finds that cluster insider buying precedes positive returns.
Insider sales are more common and require more context — they often reflect diversification, tax planning, or pre-scheduled trading plans rather than a bearish view of the company. Heavy cluster selling by multiple insiders is worth investigating.
Stock grants and option awards are compensation, not discretionary trades. They appear in Form 4 filings with transaction code "A" and should be distinguished from open-market purchases when evaluating insider sentiment.
Insider Trades
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