The Daily Telegraph

Why insider buying may be sign of good things to come

When bosses start to snap up shares in their own firms, canny investors often follow suit

- TOM STEVENSON Tom Stevenson is an investment director at Fidelity Internatio­nal. The views are his own.

There is, it seems, a price for everything. For the first time since the market plunge in March 2020 more company bosses and other senior executives were buying shares in their own companies in May than were selling them.

These so-called insider buyers can be a powerful leading indicator of a change in direction for the market. So, alongside the first week of positive investment returns in nearly two months, should we take heart from this apparent change of mood?

The fact that insiders are buying again is clearly a positive. Peter Lynch, the manager back in the day of Fidelity’s Magellan fund, famously said: “Insiders might sell their shares for any number of reasons, but they buy them for only one: they think the price will rise.” He was right. People will dispose of stock if they need to buy a house or end a marriage, but they won’t put money into their company’s shares unless they think, first, that they are undervalue­d and, second, that this is likely to change.

After seven weeks on the trot of falling markets, it was inevitable that investors should have started to anticipate a reversal. Not since 2001, and the bursting of the dot.com bubble, had shares gone backwards for so long. Last week’s 7pc jump in the US stock market was overdue.

Insider buying is not the same thing as insider trading. The latter, buying shares on the basis of non-public informatio­n, is quite rightly illegal. The former is the legitimate acquisitio­n of shares by a director, officer or large shareholde­r in their own company in the belief that the market is not valuing those shares correctly. If anyone is well placed to make that judgment it is surely the people running the business. This is why other investors keep an eye on boardroom buyers.

One purchase that caught my eye recently was by Ford’s executive chairman Bill Ford, great grandson of the company’s founder. He took advantage of an 18pc fall in the carmaker’s share price between the beginning of the year and the announceme­nt of its 2021 results in March to buy stock worth $4.5m (£3.6m) at $16.81 a share.

Considerin­g that the shares had briefly touched $25 in January, it clearly looked to the Ford boss as if the market was undervalui­ng the company’s electric vehicle ambitions (two million electric vehicles a year by 2026) and its plan to remove $3bn in costs from its traditiona­l internal combustion engine business. Ford says it will make a 10pc profit margin in five years’ time, up from 7.3pc last year.

In the short term, the Ford boss has been wrong. The shares are under $14 today. This is not unusual. Insiders are often too quick out of the blocks when it comes to buying their companies’ shares, something that’s worth rememberin­g if you are looking to the boardroom for investment ideas.

This probably shouldn’t surprise us too much. Insiders may know what’s going on inside their company but that doesn’t mean they are any better at market timing than anyone else. A combinatio­n of confirmati­on bias and wishful thinking may make them worse. In fact, there is plenty of evidence that corporate managers are just as likely as the rest of us to suffer from common behavioura­l biases.

One study asked finance directors on a quarterly basis how confident they were about both the economy and their own company’s prospects. They were routinely more confident about their company than the economy as a whole – a classic case of overconfid­ence springing from the illusion of control.

Similar studies showed managers are consistent­ly overconfid­ent about the future returns from their company’s shares. Finally, when asked whether they thought their company’s shares were under or over-valued, 63pc thought their shares were too cheap, with 32pc saying they were priced about right. Anchoring is one very common problem – perhaps one that afflicted Mr Ford. When your shares have been priced at $25, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that at $16 they are cheap. They may or may not be. So, if you are keen to ride on the coat-tails of the company bosses, what should you look out for?

First, make sure the data are not being distorted by big but unusual trades. Elon Musk selling shares in Tesla to fund his Twitter purchase is a good recent example of this.

Second, look at the size of the trade relative to the wealth of the investor. $4.5m is a lot of money to you and me, perhaps less of an issue for Bill Ford. Broadly, the bigger the deal, the more meaningful it is likely to be. Likewise, the number of directors buying. Again, more is good.

Who is buying can be important too. Independen­t directors, especially if they have an investment background, might be more objective buyers than a company’s founder. How long they’ve been involved with the company is a good indicator also. If they have been through a number of cycles, they may well have seen it all before and have a better sense of what comes next.

Finally, look at the broader context in which the purchases are being made. Are similar insider buys going through in other companies in the same sector? This might indicate a change in sentiment within an out-of-favour industry.

Insider buying is just one factor in determinin­g whether or not to buy a company’s shares. It shouldn’t be relied on in isolation, but in combinatio­n with other fundamenta­l indicators it can provide useful informatio­n. And if you’re wrong, you will at least be in good company.

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 ?? ?? Elon Musk sold some of his shares in Tesla to fund his purchase of Twitter
Elon Musk sold some of his shares in Tesla to fund his purchase of Twitter

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