When an insider buys a large block of shares, the market reacts predictably: "If top management is buying in, the company must be undervalued." This is the most expensive reflex of a retail trader—believing in a single trade. At the end of April, one of the major shareholders of AB Private Lending Fund made four purchases in a single day. The first was the largest. The second, third, and fourth—each smaller than the previous, all within a few hours. If you look at the first trade in isolation, it's a confident signal. If you see all four, it's a structured accumulation of a position. Not a buy signal, but a fund's planned operation. A person can open a dozen tabs, cross-check dates, calculate the average price—and still miss the connection between trades by the same insider within a day. ASI Biont analyzes hundreds of insider transactions in seconds—grouping them by insiders, companies, time patterns, and showing not individual purchases, but the full picture. The same logic applies to other large purchases this week. A single trade is noise. A series of trades is a signal. The difference between them lies in the ability to see context. Register at https://asibiont.com and get 1500 tokens to start—see how many hidden patterns you miss by reading news one at a time.