We read 158 filings today. Here are the ones worth your time.
145 Form 413 8-K82 Buys57 Sells
CDNS insider Anirudh Devgan just sold $18.9 million in stock. That's the largest insider move we tracked this week.
On the buy side, CRM's Kirk David Blair stepped in with a purchase, while LDOS's Gregory Dahlberg and two AME insiders, Dean Seavers and Anthony Conti, added shares. CMCSA's Jennifer Khoury filed on the sell side.
CDNS president Anirudh Devgan just unloaded $18.9M in stock through a discretionary transaction, his largest single sale in over two years. The timing stands out: shares are down 7% year-to-date and trading 23% below their 52-week high of $376, yet Devgan chose to exit at $289.64 rather than wait for a recovery. The sale comes as the EDA software leader faces questions about AI chip design cycle sustainability.
Devgan's move conflicts with the bullish narrative around AI-driven semiconductor design demand that has powered Cadence's premium valuation. While peers like Synopsys ride the AI infrastructure wave higher, CDNS insiders are taking chips off the table at depressed prices. The discretionary nature of this $18.9M exit suggests Devgan sees limited near-term upside, even as the company's tools remain critical to next-generation chip development.
Director Blair bought $500K of Salesforce at $194, with shares down 23% this year and 34% off their 52-week high. The purchase comes as enterprise software spending slows and AI competition intensifies from Microsoft and Google. Blair hasn't filed an insider buy since 2021, when shares were climbing through their peak.
EVP Khoury put $308K into Comcast at $28.57, adding shares while the cable giant trades in the middle of its 52-week range. The timing follows Disney's deal to take full control of Hulu, reshuffling the streaming landscape where Comcast's Peacock competes. Insiders bought the last dip at $27 before shares climbed 15%.
Director Dahlberg put $251K into LDOS at $167, down 19% from its January peak but well above the 52-week low. The defense contractor just reported record backlog of $39 billion and raised full-year guidance. Insiders have been net buyers over the past six months as the stock consolidates after a strong 2024 run.
Director Dean Seavers bought $202K of Ametek at $212, well off the $242 high but above the midpoint of its range. The industrial manufacturer has pulled back 12% from peak as investors question aerospace exposure amid Boeing's production cuts. Seavers has been a buyer during similar pullbacks, with his 2023 purchase at $155 preceding a 40% climb.
Director Conti bought $202K of AME at $212, just 12% below the 52-week high of $242. The industrial instruments maker has recovered sharply from its $145 low as aerospace and automation orders accelerate. Conti's timing looks aggressive given the stock's premium valuation near recent peaks.
CFO Jean-Briac Perrette unloaded $18.1M in WBD stock at $27.35, just 9% below the 52-week high of $30. Warner's shares have recovered sharply from their $8 low as the company cut $3B in costs and resolved NBA rights disputes. The massive exit comes as streaming losses narrow but theatrical releases remain unpredictable.
Hilton entered a material definitive agreement, though specific terms were not disclosed in the filing. The stock trades near the middle of its 52-week range despite modest YTD gains, suggesting investors are waiting for clarity on the deal's structure. The agreement could involve franchise expansion, technology partnerships, or capital deployment given Hilton's asset-light model. Investors should monitor upcoming conference calls for management's strategic rationale and financial impact guidance.
Phillips 66 entered a material debt agreement, adding new financial obligations to its capital structure. The timing follows a strong stock rally, with shares near 52-week highs after gaining 33% year-to-date. The company may be taking advantage of favorable market conditions to fund capital projects or refinance existing debt at competitive rates.