Data sourced directly from 9 European financial regulators
9 COUNTRIESIn most major markets, CEOs, CFOs, board members, and their close associates must publicly disclose their trades in company shares within three business days. These filings reveal when the people who know a company best are putting their own money on the line. That's the kind of signal that's hard to fake.
European insider transaction data is notoriously fragmented — scattered across dozens of national regulators, each with their own formats, languages, and disclosure systems. Some publish clean CSV exports, others bury everything in individual PDF filings, and a few use legacy web platforms that feel like they haven't been updated since 2005. We scrape them all, every day, and normalize everything into one clean, searchable dashboard.
We deliberately filter out options exercises, stock awards, gifts, transfers, and other non-market transactions. When an insider spends their own money to buy shares on the open market, that's a genuine conviction signal — they're putting their own capital at risk. Options exercises and share awards, on the other hand, are typically part of pre-arranged compensation plans and tell you very little about an insider's view on the company's prospects. By focusing exclusively on market purchases and sales, we cut through the noise and give you the transactions that actually matter.