⚡ WMT buys $2.4B in assets; LLY insiders sell ahead of June 15…
Published Jun 1, 2026
We read 298 filings today. Here are the ones worth your time.
207 Form 491 8-K5 Buys106 Sells
The Walton family moved $55 million out of Walmart this week. That's the largest insider sale we tracked across 298 filings.
Five insiders put their own money to work: CDW's CEO added shares, ADSK's Smith bought in, AZO's Hannasch picked up stock, VRSN's Armstrong added to his position, and Horizon Kinetics dropped serious money on TPL. Meanwhile, 106 insiders were selling.
The Walton Family Holdings Trust sold $55M of WMT on Friday. Discretionary. Not a pre-planned sale under a 10b5-1. The stock sits at $115.75, down 14% from its December peak of $135 but still 24% above last year's low. This is the third Walton family sale in two years, part of a $651.5M exit pattern. They haven't bought once in that window. Here's the wrinkle. The last two times the family trust sold, WMT rallied 5.6% over the next 30 days on average.
They sold, the stock climbed. That's not a management call on fundamentals. That's diversification against concentration. When you own 47% of a company, every sale is a rounding error against total holdings. This one moved 0.1% of their position. The family keeps selling. The stock keeps working. $55M is real money, but the percentage says this is estate planning, not an exit.
CDW's CEO just bought $2.0M worth of stock in a discretionary purchase, adding 26% to his position. The timing is , CDW is down 32% from its 52-week high of $184 as IT spending budgets remain under pressure heading into 2025. This is Nelms's first open-market buy since taking the CEO role in 2022.
Board member Stacy Smith just bought $794K of ADSK at $231, adding 12.6% to his position. Discretionary trade, not pre-planned. The stock is down 30% from its 52-week high of $329 as weak construction spending has hit demand for Autodesk's design software. Smith hasn't made an open-market purchase in over two years.
AutoZone's CEO just bought $493K of AZO at $2,935, one dollar off the 52-week low. The stock is down 33% from its peak as investors worry about slowing auto repair demand. This discretionary purchase brings his holdings to $4.6M, a rare add-on for an executive who has sold seven times in the past year.
Board member Armstrong just bought $5K of VRSN at $285, right below the 52-week high of $312. The discretionary purchase adds less than 2% to his position. It's the kind of small, symbolic buy that signals alignment without moving the needle.
Horizon Kinetics just added $406 to their TPL position in the open market. Discretionary, not pre-planned. The firm has bought TPL 51 consecutive times over the past two years without a single sale, making this less a bet and more a religion.
Apple's chairman Arthur Levinson sold $15.6M in a discretionary trade near the stock's all-time high of $315. The sale trimmed just 1.3% of his position while AAPL trades flat year-to-date despite broader tech strength. Levinson has now sold $71M over the past two years with no open-market purchases on record.
Monolithic Power's VP Saria Tseng just offloaded $12.9M in a discretionary sale, dumping 5% of her position near the stock's all-time high. This follows her April trade where MPWR rallied 18% in the following month. Her three sales over the past two years have averaged a 32.5% gain in the 30 days after each transaction, making this exit look less like cashing out and more like leaving money on the table.
MPWR $1,566.21 . 52w: $656-$1,714 . +0% YTD
THE TAPE
ABNB
CEO Brian Chesky sells $68.4M of ABNB
ANET
Andreas Bechtolsheim sells $34.5M of ANET
ANET
Andreas Bechtolsheim sells $31.1M of ANET
PANW
Lee Klarich sells $16.3M of PANW
CPAY
CEO Ronald Clarke exercises options in $15.1M of CPAY
LyondellBasell entered a new credit agreement while trading near the bottom third of its 52-week range at $66.65. The chemical giant is restructuring its debt stack at a time when shares are flat year-to-date and 20% below their highs. Companies typically refinance when rates are favorable or covenants need loosening, neither of which screams strength for a cyclical name.
Xylem entered a new material credit agreement while simultaneously creating fresh debt obligations, suggesting the water infrastructure company is restructuring its balance sheet. The timing comes as XYL trades near its 52-week low at $109, down from $154 highs earlier this year. The refinancing likely locks in better terms while the stock is depressed, giving management flexibility for capital deployment as the infrastructure spending cycle continues.
CoStar Group signed a material definitive agreement and issued a Regulation FD disclosure, typically indicating a business development requiring immediate public notice. The stock trades near its 52-week low at $32, down from $97 highs, suggesting the market has already priced in considerable headwinds. Without seeing the agreement details, investors should watch whether this represents distressed asset acquisition opportunity or further balance sheet strain at these depressed levels.