Publisher’s Note: Many investors are rightfully skeptical of Wall Street’s entourage of brokers. And as a former Wall Street advisor himself, Chief Investment Strategist Alexander Green gets it.
In fact, there’s one simple strategy that Wall Street doesn’t want you to discover… But Alex is on a mission to put it in the hands of the regular investor.
So grab your fishing rod and sinkers…
Because as Alex points out in the article below, corporate insiders are bottom-feeding…
– Rachel Gearhart, Associate Publisher
It takes guts to buy stocks in a market as volatile as this one.
Most investors feel that if they’re going to stick their necks out, they need an edge.
Not just a perceived edge, but an actual one.
And the best edge, in my view, is to invest in the same stocks that the insiders are buying with their own money at current market prices.
Insiders have purchased stock in record numbers recently. Yet the typical punter is doing the exact opposite.
Millions of investors have bailed out of stocks over the past few weeks because they couldn’t take the pain anymore.
(And, in doing so, they turned paper losses into actual losses.)
Corporate insiders couldn’t take the pain anymore either.
They couldn’t stand to see their company’s shares selling at fire-sale levels without doing something about it.
And so they did…
Recent data reveals that corporate insiders – whose purchases correctly signaled the bottom in 2020 and other bear markets - are bottom-fishing.
More than 1,100 corporate executives and officers snapped up shares of their own firms in May alone.
It was the biggest ratio of buyers to sellers since March 2020, the last bear market bottom.
Bloomberg reported on this and noted that…
The insider buy-sell ratio also jumped in August 2015 and late 2018, with the former preceding a market bottom and the latter coinciding with one.
CNBC cited the same phenomenon with its headline “Insider Buying Is Surging.”
Yet the spike in insider purchases coincided with investors pulling cash from their equity funds.
The punters are acting on emotion. (Fear, particularly.)
The insiders are acting on numbers, analysis and reason. And perhaps a different emotion. (Greed.)
One of the best strategies you can follow is to ride the coattails of knowledgeable insiders.
Why? Because they have access to all sorts of material, nonpublic information, like…
The direction of sales since the last quarterly report
New products and services in development
Any expansion plans
Potential mergers and acquisitions
Whether the company has gained or lost any key customers
The status of outstanding litigation
Whether the company will put itself up for sale
Plans to take the company private
… And plenty of other good stuff unavailable to those of us on the outside looking in.
That’s why the Securities and Exchange Commission requires corporate insiders – officers, directors and beneficial owners – to file a Form 4 within two business days of any purchase or sale, detailing the number of shares bought, on what date and at what price.
Making this information public at least levels the playing field.
(You may not know why the insiders are buying. But at least you can see that they are.)
If you want to increase your stock market returns, you need to know what the insiders are doing.
Buying stocks that insiders are bailing out of or selling stocks that they are eagerly buying is a fundamental mistake.
Even when corporate fundamentals are checkered or poor, if the insiders are buying heavily, it is generally a sign that the problems are temporary and the stock is set to press higher.
Indeed, plenty of academic studies have confirmed that stocks with heavy insider buying tend to outperform the broad market in the months that follow.
Do you know which stocks the insiders are piling into right now? You should.
Because those are the companies whose shares are likely to perform best in the weeks and months ahead, no matter what the broad market does.
Good investing,
Alex
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