Insider Activity

Insider Activity Articles

With earnings season drawing to a close and the windows for buying and selling opening, watch for the volume of buying and selling to increase in the coming weeks.
Insiders continued to buy shares this past week, and some were in very beaten down stocks such as Seagate Technology and Pandora Media.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced that a Silicon Valley executive has agreed to pay more than a half-million dollars to settle charges that he traded on inside information...
The silent period has closed windows for executives and institutional holders to buy and sell shares. That window is starting to open and we saw some massive buys this week.
Insiders looking to sell shares are starting to emerge from the sidelines as quiet periods are ending, including activist investor Bill Ackman.
Regular 24/7 Wall St. readers know that earnings season typically slows the rate of insider activity in a big way. Corporations go into what is called the silent period, before, during and sometimes...
Insider activity has slowed to a crawl as corporations halt insider transactions as they report quarterly earnings and revenue.
Despite the fact that first-quarter earnings will come in big next week, some serious insider buying has hit the tape.
With first-quarter earnings right around the corner, insiders that want to make a transaction are probably in a hurry, as many corporations are shutting windows for executives looking to sell or buy...
The first quarter was a busy one for insider buying. While it remains to be seen how this quarter will be, the overall tone of insider activity remains positive.
With the quarter winding down, so to are the windows for insiders to make transactions before earnings are reported. We saw a definite volume drop this week.
One thing is for sure, insiders looking to sell were far less visible than the buyers over the first 90 days of 2016. That suggests that many insiders feel there is more overall upside to the markets...
Insider sellers were conspicuous by their absence this past week. With first-quarter earnings reports only about three weeks away, many company windows for insider transactions may be closing.
After a week when the indexes finally fought their way back to even for 2016, one probably would think that insiders would be selling the huge rally. Just the opposite happened.
The return of the S&P 500 to the 2,000 level has proven to be a point at which some are ready to take money off the table.