We read 304 filings today. Here are the ones worth your time.
289 Form 415 8-K3 Buys28 Sells
Pool Corp's CEO just put $1.0 million of his own money into POOL stock. Insider buys from the top chair always grab attention.
Horizon Kinetics loaded up on TPL shares while Con Edison's Miller added to his ED position. On the corporate side, Public Storage (PSA), DTE Energy (DTE), and Jacobs Solutions (J) all filed material agreements that could reshape their operations.
CEO Manuel Perez de la Mesa bought $1.0M of POOL shares in a discretionary purchase, marking a rare inside buy for the pool supply distributor. The stock trades at $207.01, near its 52-week low of $204, down 9% year-to-date as higher interest rates have crushed demand for pool construction and remodeling. This is Perez de la Mesa's first open-market purchase since 2020.
The timing exposes a fundamental conflict in housing-dependent stocks. Pool's business model relies on new pool construction and homeowner renovation spending, both dead in the water with mortgage rates above 7%. Either the CEO sees recovery signs invisible to the market, or he's betting rates must eventually fall. The sector won't recover until housing does, making this a pure bet on the Fed's next move rather than Pool's operations.
Horizon Kinetics added just $525 to its TPL position at $536, a token buy near the 52-week high of $547. The firm already owns 2.3 million shares worth $1.2 billion, making this adjustment accounting noise rather than fresh conviction. TPL has doubled this year on surging Permian royalties, but this minimal addition suggests the asset manager is done building its stake at current valuations.
Director Miller Joseph bought $109 worth of ED at $114.37, within 2% of its 52-week high. The token purchase comes as the utility trades near peak valuation despite rising interest rate pressures on dividend stocks. His minimal skin in the game hardly inspires confidence when insiders typically signal conviction with six-figure bets.
Public Storage entered a material definitive agreement while trading near the middle of its 52-week range. The REIT disclosed supplemental events alongside the contract, suggesting operational developments beyond the core agreement. Investors should review the full filing for details on the agreement's financial terms and strategic rationale, particularly given the stock's strong year-to-date performance.
DTE Energy entered into a material definitive agreement at a time when shares trade near 52-week highs following a strong 15% YTD rally. The utility's willingness to commit to contractual obligations now suggests confidence in its current operational and financial position. Investors should monitor the full agreement details when filed to assess impact on future capital allocation and earnings guidance.
Jacobs Solutions entered into a new debt agreement, adding to its financial obligations as disclosed in the 8-K filing. The engineering firm took on this debt while trading near the lower end of its 52-week range and down 4% year-to-date. The financing likely supports ongoing operations or potential acquisitions in its infrastructure and advanced facilities segments. Investors should monitor whether the proceeds fund organic growth or strategic deals.