Finansinspektionen (FI) · Nasdaq Stockholm (OMX) · SEK
315+ TRANSACTIONSSweden has more listed companies per capita than almost any country in the world. Nasdaq Stockholm hosts over 1,000 companies — from global giants like Spotify and Ericsson to the thriving Swedish small-cap ecosystem that's produced an outsized number of world-class tech, gaming, and fintech companies. And the insider data is excellent.
Finansinspektionen publishes insider transactions in a clean, structured HTML table on fi.se. No PDFs to parse, no APIs to wrestle with — just well-organized data that's easy to work with. Sweden was an early adopter of electronic insider transaction reporting, and it shows. The data quality here is consistently among the best we see.
We scrape FI's register daily, pulling every insider transaction with full details. Swedish data comes in SEK, and includes the insider's name, role, company, transaction type, volume, price, and total value. With over 315 transactions, Sweden is one of our top data sources — and given the depth of the Swedish market, that number keeps growing.
Sweden's stock market culture runs deep. Swedish retail and institutional investors closely follow insider buying signals, and for good reason — the market is full of high-quality companies where management has significant personal stakes. The Swedish small-cap and mid-cap space is especially rich for insider signal hunters. When the founder-CEO of a Swedish SaaS company starts buying, it's often because they know something the market hasn't figured out yet.
We track insider activity across Nasdaq Stockholm — from large caps like Ericsson, Volvo, H&M, Atlas Copco, and Hexagon to the vibrant Swedish small-cap market where insider buying can be a game-changer.
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