Learn more about what Form 4 is, and how you can find and use them as an investor.

Definition and Examples of SEC Form 4

Company insiders can acquire stock in several ways. They can purchase the stock with their own funds in a brokerage account, stock purchase plan, or retirement plan such as a 401(k). Or insiders also may receive stock or stock options as part of their compensation. Form 4 is used to inform the public that an insider transaction has taken place, as well as to provide details about the timing, transaction size, and share price. It also discloses if the shares are directly owned by the insider or indirectly held through a trust or other entity, and the total number of shares held after the transaction. Form 4 uses a series of codes to describe the nature of the transaction, such as a stock award, or option exercise. Here are some examples: For example, on March 13, 2020, on the heels of a market sell-off triggered by the uncertainties of the emerging global pandemic, Wells Fargo’s chairman and CEO, Charles Scharf, bought 173,000 shares of the bank’s stock with his own funds—a $5 million purchase. At the time, the stock’s price was down 42% for the year.

How Form 4 Works

Form 4 isn’t limited to corporate officer and director transactions. Purchases and sales by insiders’ family members, trusts, and other organizations that the insider may control also have to be reported. Investors who own 10% or more of the company stock also have to report their transactions on Form 4. Form 4 is used by shareholders and other groups monitoring stocks’ performances to identify short-swing transactions. Short-swing transactions are an insider’s sale and purchase, or purchase and sale, of company stock within six months. Short swings are prohibited by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; any profits from them have to be returned to the company. Shareholders can sue an insider to recover short-swing proceeds if the company doesn’t take any action. As mentioned, insiders must file Form 4s with the SEC within two business days of the transaction. They are submitted electronically via EDGAR, the SEC’s database of company and individual filings about publicly listed companies. Form 4 is available online, free to the public, along with most other EDGAR filings, such as the 10-K and the 8-K. The EDGAR search page has a guide to researching public companies, including how to access Form 4 reports. But in some cases, deciphering insider stock sales and options exercises may not be as clear. Insiders sell for many reasons, and research suggests that in some cases, it could be a positive rather than negative sign.

What It Means to Investors

While insider transactions can offer clues about a company’s stock, they aren’t necessarily a reason in itself for investors to buy or sell. Certain types of buying, like smaller purchases by middle managers, may be more meaningful than others. Another signal for caution: While there are exchange-traded funds (ETFs) for almost any type of investment strategy, none on the market today invests solely on the basis of insider buying.

Using EDGAR

If you are researching individual stocks, Form 4 is a useful tool, along with fundamental and technical analyses. You can search EDGAR by company name or ticker symbol, as well as by the names of individual officers, directors, and investors. Unless you are a skilled researcher or know specifically what you are looking for, using EDGAR to look at all of a company’s Form 4 filings can be time-consuming and unproductive. You may want to take advantage of a stock screener or insider-trade tracking service instead.

Stock Screeners

Screeners are search engines for stocks. Screeners can search thousands of stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) or Nasdaq Stock Market by hundreds of criteria, including insider buying and selling trends. Most broker dealers offer online screeners to their clients. There are also online services that track insider trading and provide subscribers with daily reports.