 When a CEO of a public company invests personal funds in shares of their own business, it is not just news for investors. For the compliance department, it is a signal that requires immediate action. Why? Because a large insider purchase is both a vote of confidence and a legal minefield. If the transaction was not properly documented, if information about it did not go through established channels, if the purchase date coincided with a period when the CEO had access to non-public reports — the company gets not a rise in capitalization, but an investigation. The problem is that compliance teams physically cannot check every transaction manually. Especially when there are dozens of insiders and hundreds of transactions per quarter. This is where AI automation turns from an option into a necessity: the algorithm instantly checks the transaction date against the closed period calendar, verifies the disclosure form, and finds inconsistencies in trading patterns. A large CEO purchase is not always a violation. But it is always a reason to check whether your compliance will work before the regulator does. Check your risks at asibiont.com