🕵️SEC Form 4 Explained: Reading Insider Buying and Selling
Form 4 is where corporate insiders reveal their own trades within two days. Here is how to read the codes, separate real buys from option exercises, and weigh the signal.
When a CEO, CFO, or director buys or sells their own company's stock, they have to tell you — fast. The disclosure is SEC Form 4, and it is one of the highest-quality signals a trader can read for free. The reason is simple: insiders know their business better than anyone, and open-market buying has only one rational motive. This guide explains how to read a Form 4, what the transaction codes mean, and why buying and selling are not mirror images. Educational only — not financial advice.
Who files a Form 4, and when
Form 4 is required of Section 16 insiders: a company's officers, its directors, and any beneficial owner of more than 10% of its stock. Whenever their holdings change — a purchase, a sale, an option exercise, a grant — they must file within two business days. That speed is what makes Form 4 valuable: unlike a 13F (45 days) or a Congress PTR (up to 45 days), you are seeing the insider's move almost in real time. (Form 4 is the middle of a trio — see Forms 3, 4, and 5.)
Reading the form: the transaction codes
Every line on a Form 4 carries a one-letter transaction code. The ones that matter most:
- P — Purchase. An open-market buy. The insider spent their own cash. This is the signal.
- S — Sale. An open-market sale. Common and noisy.
- A — Award/grant. Shares granted as compensation. Not a market decision.
- M — Exercise of options. Converting options to shares; often paired with a sale.
- F — Shares withheld for taxes. A bookkeeping sale to cover the tax on vesting. Not a bearish bet.
- G — Gift. A transfer, not a market view.
The single most important skill is separating a "P" purchase from everything else. A headline that screams "insider sold $2M of stock" often turns out to be an M (option exercise) plus an F (tax withholding) — mechanical, not a vote against the company.
Why buying beats selling as a signal
This is the core asymmetry of insider data:
There are a hundred reasons to sell a stock and only one reason to buy it.
An insider might sell to buy a house, pay a tax bill, diversify a concentrated net worth, or fund a divorce — none of which says anything about the company. But an insider who takes personal cash and buys shares in the open market is making a single, unambiguous statement: I think this is cheap. That is why open-market purchases — code P — carry far more information than sales.
That does not make every insider buy a winner. Insiders are early, sometimes by a lot, and they are wrong like everyone else. But as a class, open-market insider buying is one of the better-studied edges in the public record.
What raises the signal
Not all buys are equal. The factors that strengthen an insider-buying read:
- Cluster buys. Several different insiders buying within a short window beats one lone buyer. This is the strongest version — see Insider Cluster Buys.
- Size relative to net worth. A meaningful purchase by someone, not a token gesture.
- Role. A CEO or CFO buy generally outweighs a junior officer's.
- Price context. Buying into weakness (after a selloff) is a stronger statement than buying strength.
- A fresh purchase after a long quiet stretch. A first buy in years is more notable than routine accumulation.
What weakens it — the 10b5-1 caveat
Many insider sales are made under a 10b5-1 plan: a pre-arranged, automatic schedule set up months in advance, specifically so the insider cannot be accused of trading on inside information. A sale executed on a 10b5-1 plan carries essentially no signal — it was decided long before whatever is happening now. Good Form 4s footnote the plan. Learn to spot it before you read a routine, scheduled sale as bearish. See 10b5-1 Plans.
A practical workflow
- Filter to open-market buys (P). Ignore grants, exercises, and tax withholding when hunting for signal.
- Look for clusters. One buyer is interesting; three is a story.
- Check role and size. Weight a large CEO/CFO buy more heavily.
- Overlay the chart. An insider cluster buy into a basing pattern or at support is far more actionable than a buy in a falling knife.
- Respect your stop. Insiders can be early. The Form 4 informs the thesis; your risk plan still defines the trade.
The bottom line
Form 4 is the insider tape: fast (two business days), specific, and free. The skill is reading the codes — isolating real open-market purchases (P) from grants, option exercises, and tax-related sales — and remembering the asymmetry: buying is a strong, single-meaning signal, while selling is mostly noise, much of it pre-scheduled. Cluster buys by senior insiders, especially into technical support, are the events worth your attention.
SetupSignals surfaces recent Form 4 activity right on each symbol's page — buys and sells, who and how much — beside the live chart and short-interest data, so an insider purchase lines up against the actual setup instead of sitting in a separate filings feed.
Frequently asked questions
What is an SEC Form 4?
Form 4 is the filing that corporate insiders — officers, directors, and 10%+ owners — must submit within two business days of any change in their company stock holdings, including buys, sales, option exercises, and grants.
Why is insider buying a stronger signal than insider selling?
Insiders sell for many reasons unrelated to the company — taxes, diversification, personal expenses — while an open-market purchase has one motive: they believe the stock is undervalued. That asymmetry makes buying far more informative.
What do the Form 4 transaction codes mean?
Key codes are P (open-market purchase), S (sale), A (grant/award), M (option exercise), F (shares withheld for taxes), and G (gift). 'P' is the high-signal one; M and F are mechanical, not market views.
What is a cluster buy?
A cluster buy is when several different insiders purchase shares in the open market within a short period. It is considered the strongest insider signal because it reflects shared conviction rather than one person's decision.
This guide was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed against the SetupSignals editorial guidelines.
See these setups on real charts.
SetupSignals scans the market after the close and sorts every breakout, setup, and failure into seven actionable lanes — delivered by 4:30 ET.
Start free →