Two NXP executives sold a combined $2.3M on Monday, before the stock surged 20% by Friday. Both trades were pre-planned, filed months ago, executed on schedule. Jensen unloaded 46% of his position. Hardy sold 72%. By Friday they'd left $460,000 on the table between them. The filing that triggered the move came Tuesday: NXP reported results that beat expectations, and the stock never looked back. It closed the week at its 52-week high with an RSI of 83. The executives had no way to know what the stock would do when they set those sale dates months ago. That's how 10b5-1 plans work. But here's what they did know: their own company's numbers, heading into the print. They chose to exit anyway. AMD's CTO moved $11M out on Tuesday. Pre-planned, like NXP. The stock sat at $334, already in overbought territory with an RSI of 79 and trading at 131 times earnings. By Friday it hit $360, up 7.7%. Papermaster sold 2% of his total position, his second sale in three weeks. On April 8 he moved $741K and watched the stock climb 15% over the following week. This time he scaled up. AMD reports May 5, four days from now. The company beat estimates by 16% last quarter. Papermaster knows what this quarter looks like. He filed a pre-planned sale anyway, and the timing puts him on the sidelines before earnings. His last two exits both preceded gains. The pattern is there. The semiconductor sector tells the rest of the story. Seventeen insiders across twelve tech companies sold $88.7M this week. Zero buying. Not one. Microchip Technology's CEO led the sector with $36.8M, Texas Instruments moved $4.2M, ON Semiconductor's CFO sold $5.8M. All scheduled sales. All executed while their stocks traded near highs. The 30-day rolling total makes it worse: 60 tech sells totaling $284M against zero buys. When an entire sector heads for the exits in the same direction for a month straight, the individual 10b5-1 plans start to look less like portfolio management and more like consensus. Qualcomm's Chief Accounting Officer sold her entire position Thursday. All of it. $33K doesn't move markets, but selling 100% of your holdings the day before the stock jumps 15% is a decision you remember. Grech sold at $156. QCOM closed Friday at $179. She left $4,500 on the table from a $33,000 sale, a 15% miss on money she chose to take off the table completely. Pre-planned or not, when you zero out your position and the stock rockets the next day, the 10b5-1 paperwork doesn't make the timing less notable. Qualcomm had just reported earnings that beat by 2.9%. The stock was already above both moving averages and technically healthy. She sold anyway. One person was buying. Charter Communications had three insiders step in with nearly $2.4M combined. Winfrey led with $1.2M, Davis added $995K, Nair put in $175K. All discretionary. All the same day. CHTR dropped 1.6% by Friday, so they're underwater for now, but the pattern is the point. While tech insiders were running a month-long exit, three executives at a communications company walked in with real money on the same day. No coordination. No pre-planning. Just three people at the same company who all decided Wednesday was the day to buy. Charter trades at a price-to-earnings ratio we don't have, but the insiders do. They know their business better than anyone reading this, and they just backed it with $2.4M. BlackRock's CEO and President combined for $44.8M in sales this week. Fink moved $35.6M, Kapito added $9.2M. Both pre-planned. The stock gained 1.1%. Routine on paper. Zoom out: Financials saw $87.6M in selling against $9.4M in buying, a 90% sell-side tilt. Over the past 30 days that ratio holds: $160M in sells versus $12.8M in buys. BlackRock manages $11 trillion. When its top two executives move $45M out in the same week, the percentage of their holdings is irrelevant. The dollar amount is the message. Robinhood's CTO sold $490K Wednesday and watched the stock drop 11% by Friday. Pre-planned sale, discretionary loss. Pinner sold at $82. HOOD closed at $72. He's down $52,000 in two days on a sale he scheduled months ago. His last trade was April 8, when he sold $408K and the stock jumped 13% the following week. This time the pattern reversed. Robinhood reported earnings that beat by 6.3%, but the stock sits 53% below its 52-week high with an RSI of 42. Pinner sold into weakness. The 10b5-1 plan made the sale automatic. The weakness was already there. AMD reports Monday. ON Semiconductor reports Sunday. Microchip and PayPal both report Tuesday. Four of this week's biggest sellers all face earnings in the next six days. Monday's Daily Filing will show whether any of them filed new 10b5-1 plans to replace the ones that just executed. |