Insiders are Buying These 10 Undervalued Bank Stocks

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Warren Buffett is often asked about his secret of spotting great businesses in plain sight. His answer almost always talks about spending hours and hours reading company reports. If you read carefully and pay attention, according to Buffett, you can find a business's strengths and weaknesses in its annual reports. But can an average investor really start from the beginning and pour time and resources in finding undervalued stocks just by reading reports? Amid a huge influx of news, events, data points and analyses, it has become extremely difficult for an average investor to find undervalued stocks to invest in.

Finding Undervalued Stocks by Keenly Watching Insider Activity

Following insider trades is one of the ways you could increase your chances of spotting stocks trading below their intrinsic value. In a research paper titled Aggregate insider trading: Contrarian beliefs or superior information? researchers Xiaoquan Jiang and Mir A. Zaman talk in detail about how insiders sometimes act as contrarian investors, going against the market by buying or selling their company shares when they see big/irrational changes in stock prices. The research said that "noise" traders can sometimes drive a stock's price away from its intrinsic value. When insiders perceive a difference between the true value of their stock and market value, they may make moves and buy the stock in question. The research paper also cites important research by Konan Chan, David L. Ikenberry and Inmoo Lee, who talked about evidence showing how insiders respond to the market mispricing stocks by repurchases.  Their paper, titled Do managers time the market?, cited a survey in which two-thirds of the surveyed CFOs said that the extent to which their stock is mispriced is an important factor in issuing equity.

Timing The Market with Insider Activity?

But does it make sense for an average investor to pay attention to insider trading activity with an intention to make profit? In their research paper titled Are Insider Trades Informative? Josef Lakonishok from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Inmoo Lee from Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology processed insider stock trading activities for securities listed on NYSE, AMEX, and Nasdaq during the 1975–1995 period. They observed that insider trading activity, despite the attention and buzz it creates, does not cause big stock price changes "around the time of insider trading or around the reporting dates." The researchers said this could bode well for an average investor who could track insider buying and selling activity and time the market. They also said insider activity around small-cap companies is more informational when compared to large-cap companies since bigger companies are often priced efficiently: