 Dear Fellow Investor, The Iran War didn't just make headlines. It broke the gold market wide open. Gold is already above $5,000 and surging. But the metal isn't where the real money gets made. There's one tiny company sitting on more gold than France, Italy, and China combined. It moves 10x faster than the metal. And right now, it's still trading at a 99% discount to what it's actually worth. A briefing with the ticker is waiting for you. Go here for the full gold briefing — including the stock name and buy-up-to price >>> "The Buck Stops Here," Dylan Jovine, CEO & Founder Behind the Markets
More Reading from MarketBeat Media These Insider Trades Look Like Clear Signals—Until You Read the Fine PrintReported by Leo Miller. Posted: 3/24/2026. 
Key Points- Broadcom insider selling looks large in dollar terms, but the March transactions cited in filings are described as automatic “sell-to-cover” trades tied to RSU tax withholding.
- AppLovin insider selling picked up during the stock’s pullback, but much of it appears consistent with planned or routine activity, and the CEO still retains a sizable equity stake.
- Coupang’s recent disclosed buying by director Neil Mehta via Greenoaks-linked vehicles stands out as a more discretionary move, coming after the company’s widely reported data-incident overhang.
- Special Report: Do this before SpaceX IPOs or be sorry
Insider trading can look like a flashing buy-or-sell signal, but the story is more nuanced in three market leaders. Big sales of Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) and AppLovin (NASDAQ: APP) largely reflect routine mechanics like tax withholding and pre-set plans, while a sizable Coupang (NYSE: CPNG) purchase stands out as a deliberate vote of confidence. While the implications of these moves may seem obvious at first, insider trades often require closer scrutiny. The key is separating automatic or scheduled transactions from genuinely discretionary moves that may carry more informational weight. Broadcom Insider Selling Tops $88 Million: Red Flag or Business as Usual?Semiconductor lynchpin Broadcom is a leading maker of custom-designed artificial intelligence (AI) processors. Recently, the company has seen notable insider selling. So far in March, insiders have sold about $88.3 million in Broadcom stock, part of roughly $123 million in insider sales since the start of the quarter. Those transactions involved four individuals, including two senior executives: Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer Kirsten Spears sold roughly $19 million, and President of Broadcom's Semiconductor Solutions Group Charlie Kawwas sold about $21 million. These moves follow roughly $250 million in shares sold in Q4 2025. At face value, the headline number can look unsettling amid recent price volatility. The important detail, though, is why the shares were sold. All of Broadcom's insider sales in March "were sold through automatic transactions to cover withholding taxes due upon vesting of restricted stock units (RSUs)," according to the Form 4 SEC filing. RSUs are stock-based compensation that convert into shares when the awards vest. Because vesting is generally treated as taxable income, insiders must pay taxes on it. Companies commonly use a "sell-to-cover" process that automatically sells a portion of the newly vested shares to satisfy withholding obligations. In other words, these sales were not discretionary and do not necessarily signal a bearish view on AVGO. AppLovin: Insider Selling Picks Up as the Stock Pulls BackAppLovin has become a major player in mobile game advertising and user acquisition, pushing its market capitalization to about $150 billion. There are several reasons the stock has fallen nearly 40% from its 52-week high, including the ongoing software sell-off that began earlier this year. There were no insider sales in AppLovin during the first two months of the year, but that changed in March. So far this month, insiders have sold roughly $160 million in AppLovin shares. Most of these sales fall under 10b5-1 plans. Under those plans, insiders set up scheduled sales well in advance, which reduces the likelihood that the transactions are informative bearish signals. One exception is CEO Adam Foroughi's $42 million sale, which was not part of a 10b5-1 plan. While it is never encouraging to see a CEO sell shares, the scale matters: Foroughi's direct ownership fell from about 2.55 million shares to 2.43 million shares after the sale—a decline of less than 5%. Given that modest reduction, the recent insider sales at AppLovin are not particularly alarming. Coupang: Institutional Insider Ups Position as Shares TankOn the other side of the ledger, insiders are buying Coupang. Coupang is the dominant player in South Korea's e-commerce market, with a market capitalization around $35 billion. But the stock has struggled, trading nearly 44% below its 52-week high and down more than 19% in 2026. A major data breach has been a significant headwind, exposing the personal information of 33.7 million users—the largest such breach in South Korean history. Coupang said this incident dented customer activity, and its Product Commerce revenue rose a modest 12% year-over-year in the latest quarter, down from 18% the prior quarter. Amid that weakness, Neil Mehta—a director and board member—disclosed a purchase of about $137 million in CPNG shares via his investment firm, Greenoaks Capital Partners LLC, increasing the firm's position by roughly 11%. Because the buying was executed through Greenoaks-managed funds, it reflects institutional accumulation, which is typically viewed as a more constructive signal than routine insider selling. What These Trades Might (and Might Not) SayBroadcom's and AppLovin's insider selling may look bearish at first glance, but context matters: sales tied to RSU tax withholding or pre-set 10b5-1 plans often reflect compensation mechanics and scheduling rather than executives' views on the business. That means they don't automatically validate a stock's recent pullback. Coupang's disclosure is the clearer "signal" here because it represents added exposure during weakness by Greenoaks-managed funds. Even so, it doesn't guarantee a near-term bottom; it suggests the buyer may view the data-breach fallout as more temporary than the market is pricing in and is taking a longer-term view. |
0 التعليقات:
إرسال تعليق