but are actively selling them. Over the past 12 months, they have disposed of more than 1.5 million shares. In the last three months — more than 700 thousand. Purchases? Zero.
NVIDIA insiders are behaving a bit differently. They are also selling — over 16 million shares in a year. But the difference is that they are also buying. Yes, the purchases are significantly smaller than the sales, but at least they exist.
What does this mean? Tesla insiders seem not to believe in the company's future enough to invest their own money in it. But NVIDIA, despite huge sales, still demonstrates at least some faith in its prospects.
Interestingly, Tesla has not been experiencing the best of times lately. Competition in the electric vehicle sector is growing, sales are falling, and prices are decreasing. NVIDIA, on the contrary, is riding high on the wave of the artificial intelligence boom.
Of course, insider sales can have various reasons: taxes, asset diversification, etc. But when no one from the company's management is buying its shares, it's already a red flag.