Insider Activity

Insider Activity Articles

Earnings season has arrived, and while that has meant a slowdown in insider activity, some of the top executives at the biggest countries across the United States are still making some trades.
The SEC has announced that in its fiscal year 2016 the agency filed 868 enforcement actions, a new single year high for such actions.
Some insiders may be selling stock as they expect volatility after the election. Others may just be taking some money off the proverbial table.
With the fourth quarter underway and third-quarter earnings ready to start hitting the tape next week, many executives and 10% institutional owners have had to put plans of buying stock on hold.
Corporations forbid employees from buying or selling company shares around the release of earnings for obvious reasons. Things may be ready to quiet down in October.
Given the fact that insider sales windows are closing fast as third-quarter earnings are imminent, it is pretty easy to understand the spike in selling volume we saw this past week.
The SEC has charged the former senior director of regulatory affairs for Puma Biotechnology with insider trading ahead of the company’s news announcements about its drug to treat breast cancer.
When most investors hear about insider trading charges being filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission, they probably think of someone profiting from leaked merger news. They probably are not...
The sell-offs that hit earlier in the month got some insiders interested in shares, and like the week before, they were out again in force last week.
Once again insiders were making transactions that may be getting done now in an effort to beat the closure of trading windows as third-quarter earnings season approaches.
The SEC has announced insider trading charges against hedge fund manager Leon G. Cooperman and his firm Omega Advisors.
Despite the wild ride the markets have taken, the faith of insiders certainly has not been shaken. It is indeed a positive to see insiders buying shares at current levels.
The markets sure took shareholders on a wild ride last week, and one thing that was notably absent was insider selling.
The continued market strength was able to lure some insiders to the sell desk, even as the window for selling may start to get shorter as we are just a few weeks away from companies reporting...
With volume picking up as traders return from the Labor Day holiday, it should be no surprise that insider volume picked up as well.