 HEADLINE: Insiders Buy Silence, Sell Noise There is a pattern in the market that I have been tracking for many years: when the CEO of a real business buys shares of his own company, it is not news for the press. It is silence. No one writes headlines about a shipping company whose owner increased his stake. And when the head of an AI startup sells — it is noise that drowns out the signal. Look at two parallel stories from recent weeks. The first is a company from the real sector. Shipping, oil, logistics. Its CEO bought a large block of shares. Not options, not a bonus program — personal money. In SEC reports, it looks like a dry line: "Acquisition of common stock." No comments, no press releases. Just a man put his capital where he sees the future. The second is one of the most hyped AI companies in the infrastructure segment. Its CEO sold shares worth tens of millions of dollars this month. The company's debt is billions, secured by GPUs. Interest rates are double-digit. The business is tied to a single chip supplier. And the person who knows this company from the inside better than anyone is getting out. The difference between these stories is not in the money. The difference is in the story they sell you. In the first case — silence. In the second — loud press releases, hype, promises. Insiders read the balance sheet, not the headlines. ASI Biont analyzes precisely these patterns — capital movements that happen before news hits the feed. 1500 tokens at the start for each new user. To see not the noise, but the signal.