Ameresco Insider Wisneski Files Form 4 Ownership Change May 2026
Read essayA board member's $302,900 exit from an energy infrastructure company raises a specific question about how insiders price government-contract revenue right now.
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A board member's $302,900 exit from an energy infrastructure company raises a specific question about how insiders price government-contract revenue right now.
Insider disposition data is a direct input to collateral quality and sector sentiment, and most allocators are not using it.
When a board member at the world's largest chip packaging company sells in the open market, the people closest to the supply chain are telling you something the public narrative is not.
Most insider filings are routine. The skill is knowing which ones to ignore and why.
One insider pre-sale notice at a healthcare AI company is routine. Three Form 144 filings across AI and tech names on the same date is a pattern that fund managers should read carefully.
Insider equity moves at an AI data-licensing platform only carry signal if you know whether the sale was pre-scheduled or discretionary.
A 50.75% reduction in insider ownership at a debt-heavy company is a data point, not a story. Here is how to use it.
When a control person files a Form 144 and Form 4 within 90 seconds, the directional intent is clear even before the share count is confirmed.
When a co-founder pulls $43 million out of a freshly public GPU company, the structure of the sale matters as much as the size.
When the person responsible for the technology files to sell at a depressed price, the 90-day window that follows is the signal worth tracking.
One open-market purchase from a long-tenure insider is a simple conviction signal, and here is exactly what it does and does not tell you.
Two Form 144 filings and a confirmed $2.3 million sale by the CEO of a consumer growth stock is a primary-source signal that most analysts will underweight.