When insiders buy shares of their own company, investors should take notice. After all, insider buying can be one of the strongest signals of management confidence, as executives, directors, and other insiders often have a deeper understanding of their company’s financial health, growth prospects, and future opportunities than the average investor. While no indicator is perfect, significant insider purchases have historically been viewed as a bullish sign that those closest to the business believe the stock is undervalued and positioned for potential upside.

Look at Robinhood (HOOD), for example.

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After dipping on Bitcoin-fueled weakness, HOOD is just starting to come back strong, especially with news that an insider bought more than 250,000 shares. In fact, according to a securities filing, director Meyer Malka bought 250,000 shares at prices ranging from $80.07 to $81. Two days before that, Malka picked up 181,000 shares for between $83.24 and $83.63 a share. 

The company also just launched its 2026 FIFA World Cup prediction market trading and unveiled new fee reductions for customers. The company said customers can now trade contracts on individual matches, group and tournament winners, spreads, totals, player contracts, and combo bets. That’s a big deal, considering that fans are expected to bet about $50 billion on the games.

Sincerely,

Ian Cooper