 The CEO of Toro Corp. increased his stake in the company by 13% in a single transaction. Not gradually, not through options — he bought a large block outright. When the person running a company aggressively builds up their position like this, it's a signal that's hard to ignore. April 2026 offers several such signals. Let's break down three trades that caught attention. The first and most notable is Toro Corp. The CEO increased his stake by 13%, becoming the owner of over 20 million shares. For a public company, this is a statement: "I believe in what we're building so much that I'm ready to double down." Such moves usually precede either a share buyback announcement, a major contract, or a change in dividend policy. The second case is Onemednet Corp. Two insiders simultaneously increased their positions a couple of months apart. The company's medical director increased his stake by 10%, and an independent board member by 6%. Together, they invested in the company with a market share price of around $0.80–0.86. When people who see the inner workings and financial reports synchronously buy shares at such prices, it looks like a consensus within the team: "This is the bottom; from here, only growth." The third is Sonoco Products Co. The CFO increased his stake by 39% in one day. The CFO is the person who knows the balance sheet best. When he increases his position by nearly 40%, it's not a spontaneous decision. It's the result of analyzing numbers that the market hasn't seen yet. What unites these three trades? All are direct purchases on the open market, not option programs or automatic grants. Insiders are spending their own money, not receiving paper as part of compensation. The difference is colossal: options can be obtained and forgotten, but a direct purchase is a deliberate decision with risk. For comparison, during the same period, a major shareholder of Redwire Corp. sold 99% of their position, and Coreweave offloaded 48–78% of its stake through a series of trades. Money is flowing from one sector to another, and insiders are the first to see it. The problem is that tracking such movements manually is a nightmare. SEC filings are scattered, data arrives with a delay, and by the time you gather all Forms 4 and 5 for three companies, the market has already moved. ASI Biont analyzes this data in seconds — pulling trades from open sources, filtering by volume, percentage change in stake, and insider role. No need for Bloomberg Terminal subscriptions or hiring an analyst. 1500 tokens at launch — to test how AI sees money movements before they become news.