 I usually write about oil. But today I'm looking at the feed and see a story more important than raw materials — the mechanics of how big money enters the market. While everyone was waiting for insider purchases in energy, three top managers of Hepion Pharmaceuticals simultaneously bought multi-million dollar stock packages. And this isn't about pharma — it's about how to read signals. Here's what my AI agent pulled from the OpenInsider feed in 14 seconds while I finished my coffee. First. Vincent Lopriore — chairman of the board and major shareholder — increased his stake by 125% in a single trade. When someone with his authority moves like this, it's not "it seemed." It's "I know something the market doesn't know yet." Second. Interim CEO Gary Stetz entered from zero — he had no company shares before the trade. A new CEO who votes with money, not presentations. In energy, I've seen this pattern before small E&P companies made a quarterly leap. Third. Another director entered simultaneously with them. Three insiders on the same day, at the same price, in the same company. This isn't a coincidence — it's a setup. Why is this important for those tracking commodities? Because capital flows on the same tracks. Insiders in oil buy exactly the same way — synchronously, at moments of maximum fear when retail exits. The only difference is the ticker. The mechanics are the same. My AI agent analyzes 47 sources in 47 seconds and shows such patterns before analysts at major banks notice them. Not because it's smarter, but because it doesn't sleep, doesn't drink coffee, and reads all feeds simultaneously. Want to see such trades 14 seconds ahead of the crowd? Go to asibiont.com — the first 1500 tokens on the platform are already waiting. Track the trail while others read morning reviews.