See what insiders are doing — before it's old news.
Every time a company officer, director, or major shareholder buys or sells their own stock, they're legally required to disclose it to the SEC within two business days (Form 4). That's not a leak — it's public record. This page aggregates it live, alongside what tickers the trading community is actually talking about right now.
Recent insider transactions (SEC Form 4)
Legally disclosed trades by officers, directors, and 10%+ owners. Sorted by transaction value.
| Ticker | Insider | Role | Action | Shares | Price | Value | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading recent filings from SEC EDGAR… | |||||||
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Look up a specific company
The feed above only shows what recently landed in the market-wide batch. Search a ticker to pull that company's own insider filing history directly from SEC EDGAR.
Not all "insider trades" mean the same thing
SEC transaction codes tell you why the shares moved. A director awarded stock isn't making the same statement as an executive buying on the open market with their own cash.
Open market buy
The insider spent their own money on the open market — the strongest signal of the group.
Open market sale
Could mean anything from a scheduled 10b5-1 plan to genuine profit-taking — context matters.
Award / grant
Compensation, not a market decision — the company gave them these shares.
Option exercise
Converting options into shares. Often paired with an immediate sale (see the exercise-and-sell pattern).
Gift
Shares given away, not sold — no cash changed hands.
Tax withholding
Shares surrendered to cover taxes owed on vesting — administrative, not a market view.
What traders are actually talking about
Live trending tickers from StockTwits — ranked by real discussion volume from active traders, not a generic most-mentioned list.
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Coming later
Congressional trading disclosures
Members of Congress are required to disclose their stock trades under the STOCK Act. The official sources (House Clerk, Senate eFD) exist and are public — but they publish as PDFs, not clean data, and the popular free aggregators that used to parse them have gone offline. Building a reliable parser for the official filings is real, separate work — not something to fake with placeholder data.