
Corporate insiders in the U.S. are selling shares at a record pace, with insider sales reaching an all-time high for any quarter in the last two decades. According to VerityData, the surge in sales coincides with a post-election rally following the recent elections. In contrast, insider stock purchases have significantly decreased, with executives buying only $2.3 billion worth of stock year-to-date, the lowest amount since 2010. For context, during the COVID-19 market crash in 2020, insiders purchased $1.3 billion in just one month. The current trend raises concerns about market confidence as executives capitalize on stock market gains.
Insider sales are at an all time high. Probably nothing. https://t.co/S00jof8oy4
Executivo ‘insider’ vende ação da empresa após valorização com vitória de Trump nos EUA https://t.co/8HOnOo1xB8
🇺🇸 #SPX | Corporate insiders cash in on post-election US stock market surge - FT ➡ The rate of so-called insider sales has hit a record high for any quarter in two decades, according to VerityData ⚠ https://t.co/pLAIWA7V94 https://t.co/SFMMp9MScw
