Insider Trading Tracker
Track real-time corporate insider trading activity from SEC Form 4 filings. Monitor insider buys and sells from CEOs, CFOs, directors, and other key executives.
Recent Buys
200
$734.19M value
Recent Sells
0
$0 value
Buy/Sell Ratio
200.00
Bullish sentiment
Notable Trades
19
By CEOs & CFOs
Notable Insider Trades
Transactions by CEOs, CFOs, and key executives
$0
616.7K shares
@ $0.00
1/12/2026
$0
283.1K shares
@ $0.00
1/12/2026
$0
45.1K shares
@ $0.00
1/12/2026
$0
210.5K shares
@ $0.00
1/12/2026
$0
361.1K shares
@ $0.00
1/12/2026
$0
185.0K shares
@ $0.00
1/9/2026
$0
89.1K shares
@ $0.00
1/9/2026
$0
10.3K shares
@ $0.00
1/9/2026
$0
70.2K shares
@ $0.00
1/9/2026
$0
104.5K shares
@ $0.00
1/9/2026
$0
207.4K shares
@ $0.00
1/8/2026
$9.21M
101.6K shares
@ $90.65
1/8/2026
$0
207.4K shares
@ $0.00
1/8/2026
$9.21M
101.6K shares
@ $90.65
1/8/2026
$748.4K
40.0K shares
@ $18.71
1/7/2026
$5.17M
20.8K shares
@ $248.53
1/7/2026
$4.72M
18.9K shares
@ $249.41
1/7/2026
$71.8K
287 shares
@ $250.01
1/7/2026
$748.4K
40.0K shares
@ $18.71
1/7/2026
Recent Insider Buys
| Ticker | Shares | Value | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| WMT | 825 | $93.3K | Jan 12 |
| AMC | 616.7K | $0 | Jan 12 |
| AMC | 283.1K | $0 | Jan 12 |
| AMC | 45.1K | $0 | Jan 12 |
| AMC | 210.5K | $0 | Jan 12 |
| AMC | 361.1K | $0 | Jan 12 |
| AMC | 37.0K | $0 | Jan 12 |
| AMC | 21.9K | $0 | Jan 12 |
| AMC | 1.8K | $0 | Jan 12 |
| AMC | 11.4K | $0 | Jan 12 |
| AMC | 23.8K | $0 | Jan 12 |
| COST | 1.5K | $1.37M | Jan 12 |
| TSLA | 520.0K | $226.63M | Jan 12 |
| AMC | 13.3K | $0 | Jan 9 |
| AMC | 6.8K | $0 | Jan 9 |
| AMC | 880 | $0 | Jan 9 |
| AMC | 5.3K | $0 | Jan 9 |
| AMC | 7.1K | $0 | Jan 9 |
| NVDA | 71.0K | $13.30M | Jan 9 |
| NVDA | 128.8K | $24.23M | Jan 9 |
| NVDA | 200 | $37.7K | Jan 9 |
| AMC | 69.1K | $0 | Jan 9 |
| AMC | 35.8K | $0 | Jan 9 |
| AMC | 3.7K | $0 | Jan 9 |
| AMC | 28.1K | $0 | Jan 9 |
Recent Insider Sells
| Ticker | Shares | Value | Date |
|---|
Understanding Insider Trading
Why Insider Buying Matters
When corporate insiders purchase their company's stock with their own money, it's often a strong bullish signal. Insiders have access to information that gives them unique insight into the company's prospects.
- Insiders know the business better than anyone
- Buying signals confidence in future performance
- Studies show insider buys can predict stock outperformance
- Particularly meaningful when CEOs and CFOs buy
How to Interpret Insider Sells
Insider selling is less meaningful than buying because executives sell for many personal reasons. However, heavy selling can be a warning sign worth investigating further.
- Diversification and tax planning drive many sales
- Pre-planned selling programs are routine
- Heavy selling by multiple insiders warrants attention
- Look at the pattern, not individual transactions
Key Insider Trading Signals
🟢Bullish Signals
- •Multiple insiders buying within a short period
- •CEO or CFO making large open-market purchases
- •Insider buying near 52-week lows
- •Purchases that significantly increase ownership
- •Insider buying during market weakness
🔴Warning Signals
- •Multiple top executives selling large amounts
- •CEO or CFO selling after recent stock price surge
- •Insiders selling more than 25% of holdings
- •Cluster of selling with no accompanying buys
- •Sales occurring before negative news or earnings
Frequently Asked Questions
What is insider trading and is it legal?▼
Legal insider trading occurs when corporate insiders (executives, directors, employees) buy or sell their company's stock and report these transactions to the SEC via Form 4 within two business days. This is perfectly legal and provides valuable information to investors. Illegal insider trading involves trading based on material non-public information, which is prohibited.
Why should I track insider buying?▼
Insider buying is often considered a bullish signal because executives typically have the best understanding of their company's prospects. When insiders buy stock with their own money, it suggests confidence in the company's future. Studies show that following insider buys, especially by CEOs and CFOs, can lead to market-beating returns.
What is SEC Form 4?▼
SEC Form 4 is a document that must be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within two business days whenever a corporate insider buys or sells company stock. It discloses the transaction details including the number of shares, price, date, and the insider's relationship to the company.
Does insider selling mean the stock will go down?▼
Not necessarily. Insiders sell for many reasons unrelated to company performance, such as diversification, tax planning, personal expenses, or scheduled selling programs. However, heavy selling by multiple insiders, especially CEOs and CFOs, can be a warning sign worth investigating.
What makes an insider transaction significant?▼
Significant insider transactions typically involve: 1) Large dollar amounts (over $100,000), 2) Multiple insiders buying at the same time, 3) Purchases by CEOs or CFOs rather than routine option exercises, 4) Buying in the open market rather than from the company, and 5) Transactions that substantially increase an insider's ownership percentage.
How can I use insider trading data?▼
Use insider trading data as one factor in your investment research. Look for patterns like multiple insiders buying, CEOs making large purchases, or clusters of buying at lower prices. Combine this with fundamental analysis, valuation metrics, and technical indicators for a complete picture before making investment decisions.
What is the difference between insider buying and insider selling?▼
Insider buying (purchases) generally carries more weight because insiders use their own money to buy stock, signaling confidence. Insider selling is less meaningful because insiders sell for various personal reasons. However, focus on the pattern: multiple insiders buying is bullish, while heavy selling by key executives may warrant caution.
Which insider transactions matter most?▼
The most meaningful transactions are: 1) Open market purchases (not option exercises), 2) Transactions by top executives (CEO, CFO, President), 3) Large transactions relative to the insider's existing holdings, 4) Purchases near 52-week lows, and 5) Buying by multiple insiders within a short time period.
How recent is the insider trading data?▼
Our insider trading data is sourced directly from SEC EDGAR filings and updated regularly. Since insiders must file Form 4 within two business days of a transaction, the data represents very recent activity. We display transactions by filing date to ensure you see the latest insider moves.
Can I filter insider trades by company or executive?▼
Yes, you can click on any stock ticker to see all insider trading activity for that specific company. You can also view transactions by notable executives like CEOs and CFOs. Use the buy/sell filters to focus on insider purchases or sales based on your investment strategy.
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