Insider Screener
Real-time Form 4 Filtering Engine
| Filing Date | Trade Date | Ticker | Company Name | Reporting Person | Relationship | Industry (by SEC) | Type | Price | Qty | Total, $ | Owned After | Change, % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010-11-13 02:30 | 2010-11-09 | DEI | Douglas Emmett Inc | Kamer William | Officer; Chief Financial Officer, Secy | Real Estate Investment Trusts | SALE | $17.82 | 138,519 | $2,468,132 | 42,665 | -76.5% |
| 2008-08-14 00:55 | 2008-08-11 | DEI | Douglas Emmett Inc | Kamer William | Officer; Chief Financial Officer | Real Estate Investment Trusts | SALE | $24.49 | 43,021 | $1,053,584 | 95,200 | -31.1% |
| 2006-11-02 03:39 | 2006-10-30 | DEI | Douglas Emmett Inc | Kamer William | Officer; Chief Financial Officer | Real Estate Investment Trusts | BUY | $21.00 | 95,200 | $1,999,200 | 95,200 | +100.0% |
Strategic Signal Filtering
Our screener allows you to cut through the noise of routine stock grants and small trades. By focusing on high-value transactions from C-suite executives (CEO/CFO), you can identify where the "Smart Money" is being deployed with maximum conviction.
Investing Without Illusions
Insider data is not a magic wand, but it is the most honest indicator available. While insiders sell for many reasons (taxes, personal needs), they generally buy for only one: they believe the stock price is undervalued. We provide the tools to track these skin-in-the-game moves.
UNDERSTANDING THE DATA
FILING DATE: The date and time when the transaction was reported to the SEC. This is when the public first receives the information.
TRADE DATE: The actual day the insider executed the purchase or sale in the market.
INDUSTRY: The specific market sector the company operates in. Useful for identifying broader institutional capital flows across sectors.
OWNED AFTER: The total number of shares held by the insider following the transaction. This highlights the insider's remaining conviction in the company.
CHANGE %: The percentage increase or decrease of the insider's total position. Large percentage changes often carry more weight than the dollar amount alone.
TRADE TYPES DEFINITIONS
BUY: An open market purchase. Typically indicates an insider's belief that the stock is undervalued or poised for growth.
SELL: An open market sale. While often used for diversification or liquidity, large or unexpected sales can be a warning signal.
OPT+S (OPTION EXERCISE & SALE): This occurs when an insider exercises their stock options and sells them immediately. Often part of a structured compensation plan.