Director Transactions

Insiders are adept at buying when their stock is cheap - So who has been making moves?

Fri 12 Apr 24, 12:59pm (AEST)
insider trading corporate ipads
Source: Shutterstock

Key Points

  • Majority of insiders buying occurred during market weakness, indicating a strategy to capitalise on undervalued stocks
  • Instances of selling into strength were observed, with directors benefiting from share price rebounds
  • Dr. David Allen from Plato Investment Management stresses the importance of tracking insider transactions for predicting company performance

Welcome to the fifth instalment of our quarterly breakdown of ASX insider moves, brought to you by myself, my colleague Kerry Sun, and Dr David Allen from Plato Investment Management.

Quick recap

If you're new to the series, you can get a recap on the research that drives the series and the previous instalments via the links below:

As always, who is buying and selling makes for fascinating reading. We’ll be sharing with you the following:

  • Companies that have seen multiple insiders buying and selling during the period

  • Analysing which directors have been buying into weakness or momentum, and vice versa

  • The top insider buys and sells by dollar amount

  • Dr Allen will also share a fund manager's perspective, highlighting why it pays to "follow the money" by looking back at a previous successful trade. He also shares a new opportunity that has come up on and some of the shorts Plato has been making

Multiple insiders making moves

As always, when multiple unique insiders buy or sell, my interest is piqued. During the March quarter, 32 companies (down from 45 in the prior quarter) had three or more different insiders making moves, which are listed below. I've also analysed under what type of circumstances the transactions occurred, based on 3-month and 1-year performance.

Ticker

Company

Unique

Sum of Trades

3 Month

1 Year

Outcome

BBN

Baby Bunting Group

5

$138,814

1.10%

-9.40%

Buying 1-year weakness

WHC

Whitehaven Coal

5

$418,013

-10.50%

-0.10%

Buying both weakness

AD8

Audinate Group

4

-$4,641,515

26.00%

140.80%

Selling both strength

IGO

IGO

4

$547,814

-16.80%

-41.70%

Buying both weakness

LM8

Lunnon Metals

4

$205,820

-60.00%

-78.40%

Buying both weakness

TAH

Tabcorp Holdings

4

$254,796

-3.90%

-28.20%

Buying both weakness

A1M

Aic Mines

3

-$70,089

19.10%

-8.50%

Selling 3-month strength

ALA

Arovella Therapeutics

3

$56,224

-4.20%

130.00%

Buying 3-month strength

ALX

Atlas Arteria

3

$71,481

-8.90%

-16.10%

Buying both weakness

BOL

Boom Logistics

3

$104,044

17.40%

3.90%

Buying both strength

CLV

Clover Corporation

3

$25,106

-38.50%

-57.40%

Buying both weakness

CUP

Count

3

$150,665

-21.40%

0.00%

Buying 3-month weakness

CWY

Cleanaway

3

$587,355

1.50%

10.30%

Buying both strength

DDR

Dicker Data

3

$231,278

-8.30%

28.80%

Buying 3-month weakness

DJW

Djerriwarrh Investments

3

$72,184

-1.60%

6.00%

Buying 3-month weakness

DRO

Droneshield

3

-$11,939,287

108.10%

136.90%

Buying 3-month strength

EE1

EARTHS Energy

3

$168,551

-70.70%

-70.70%

Selling both weakness

ELS

Elsight

3

$23,060

6.50%

36.70%

Buying both strength

FOS

FOS Capital

3

$13,096

-12.50%

10.50%

Buying 3-month weakness

GNC

Graincorp

3

$139,901

19.70%

22.30%

Buying 3-month weakness

HLI

Helia Group

3

-$288,418

-11.90%

30.50%

Selling 3-month weakness

IPD

Impedimed

3

$307,678

-38.00%

0.00%

Buying 3-month weakness

IPH

IPH Ltd

3

-$465,663

-7.20%

-19.90%

Selling both weakenss

KNG

Kingsland Minerals

3

$33,474

-3.50%

86.70%

Buying 3-month weakness

LLC

Lendlease Group

3

$338,348

-11.40%

-13.80%

Buying both weakness

LSF

L1 Long Short Fund

3

-$1,704,082

-4.40%

0.00%

Buying 3-month weakness

M2M

MT Malcolm Mines

3

$19,300

-20.00%

-41.50%

Buying both weakness

NHC

New Hope Corporation

3

$986,768

-12.80%

-22.70%

Buying both weakness

ORA

Orora

3

$81,375

-15.00%

-31.30%

Buying both weakness

SUM

Summit Minerals

3

$29,700

-25.00%

-37.50%

Buying both weakness

TPW

Temple & Webster

3

-$19,669,977

39.70%

224.00%

Selling both strength

XRG

Xreality Group

3

$78,019

10.00%

-29.20%

Buying 1-year weakness

As has been explained in the first piece that introduced this series, research shows that the percentage of insider trades falls away as the share price moves from around 52-week lows, to very close to the 52-week highs. Put simply, insiders buy more when their stocks are incredibly cheap, and buy less when they are expensive (or, as will be seen below, start selling)

It should come as no surprise then that the main set of conditions under which insiders in the table above were buying was "buying both weakness" - which translates to buying stock, when the share price is down over BOTH a 3-month and 1-year period. 11 of the 32 sets of transactions occurred under these conditions. As for the rest;

  • 9 instances saw insiders buying on 3-month weakness (despite 1-year positive performance) - this cohort is 'buying the dip'

  • 4 instances saw insiders buying on both 3-month and 1-year strength - these are the momentum riders

  • 3 instances saw insiders selling on both 3-month and 1-year strength - with the 1-year share price gains for Audinate (ASX: AD8), Droneshield (ASX: DRO) and Temple and Webster (ASX: TPW) up 140%, 136.9% and 224% respectively

The big counts

In the March quarter, we saw five directors buying stock in both Baby Bunting (ASX: BBN) and Whitehaven Coal (ASX: WHC).

  • For Baby Bunting, the total was a modest $138,000, with most of the transactions occurring on the 22nd and 23rd of February which, as can be seen below, has proven to be a nice little trade so far.

BBN 2024-04-10 14-14-09
Baby Bunting price chart with director buys marked in green (Source: TradingView)
  • For Whitehaven Coal, the total was a modest $418,000, with most of the transactions occurring on the 16th and 20th of February.

WHC 2024-04-10 14-15-11
Whitehaven Coal price chart with director buys marked in green (Source: TradingView)

Selling into strength: It's not always bad

The analysis below was contributed by Kerry Sun.

Picture this: You're the Managing Director, Founder and/or Chief Executive of a richly valued but fast-growing company. Between mid-2021 and mid-to-late 2022, your company's valuation took a significant hit, down anywhere from 20 to 70%. Valuations have rebounded sharply in the past couple of months, reaching or even surpassing the highs of mid-2021. Your company is reporting record earnings and expects another set of record numbers for the year ahead. Given all this, selling some shares might sound pretty reasonable.

This has been the case for several directors in the March quarter. Although their selling activities initially caused some short-term fluctuations in share prices, in the majority of instances, the share prices quickly recovered.

The companies that fit the above description include (amount sold plus % of market cap):

  • Audinate ($4.6 million or 0.27%)

  • Droneshield ($11.9 million or 2.52%)

  • DUG Technology ($666,970 or 0.21%)

  • Helia Group ($288,418 or 0.03%)

  • Temple & Webster ($19.7 million or 1.36%)

  • Ventia Services ($5.6 million or 0.18%)

  • Wisetech Global ($600,000 or less than 0.01%)

One of the most intriguing selldowns was from DUG Technology - a $330 million market cap company that provides high-performance computing as a service (i.e. clients access supercomputing resources via the cloud, without the need to own their own infrastructure). In late November 2023, Managing Director Matthew Lamont sold 2.5 million shares ($4.6 million) and in the March quarter, Non-Executive Director Louise Bowner sold a further $666,970 worth of shares.

Both selldowns resulted in some short-term share price volatility. Although it might have taken a few weeks for the stock to stabilise, it eventually resumed its upward trajectory, fuelled by the accelerating demand for AI.

DUG
DUG Technology share price chart with sell-downs marked in red (Source: TradingView)

A Fund Manager's Perspective

The analysis below was contributed by Dr David Allen

“Follow the money!”, the line immortalised in the 1970s’ classic All the President’s Men reminds us that the source of political corruption can be brought to light by following the financial paper trail.

In the same vein, forensically scrutinising insider transactions is an invaluable way of helping to anticipate moves in company revenue, earnings and prices. We are in no way suggesting corruption is afoot, merely self interest. Indeed, last quarter, in this column, we noted that the CEO of Liontown (ASX: LTR) had disposed of around $1m worth of stock in December. A few days after that wire was published, the company disclosed that its financing syndicate had fallen through, and the stock price fell 26% in a day.

LTR
Liontown share price chart with CEO's sell-down marked in red (Source: TradingView)

What are we seeing at Plato this quarter?

In our long/short fund, we sold out of intellectual property services firm IPH Ltd (ASX: IPH). The CEO and Managing Director sold 100,000 shares on 27 February.

IPH 2024-04-12 09-12-24
IPH share price chart with CEO sell-downs marked in red (Source: TradingView)

Several observations piqued our interest.

  • First, the size of the transaction (over $600k).

  • Secondly, CEO and CFO transactions are the most informative.

Further, the stock price had been weak, off around 40% since 2022. As Chris rightly pointed out, insider selling after periods of stock price weakness is unusual and tends to be a bad omen for things to come.

We are also seeing a number of other warnings signs for IPH Ltd using Plato’s 150 Red Flags. Cashflow margin has been falling over the last two years, there has been an increased capitalisation of intangibles, our models suggest aggressive accounting, and of course the CEO is selling when the stock price has already taken a beating.

This article first appeared on Livewire Markets.

Written By

Chris Conway

Managing Editor

Chris is the Managing Editor at Livewire Markets and Market Index. His passion is equity research, portfolio construction, and investment education. He is also very keen on the powerful processes that can help all investors identify great opportunities and outperform the market, and wants to bring them to life and share them with you.

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