🚨 INSIDERS ARE OFFLOADING STOCKS AT RECORD SPEED

Over the past few weeks, selling by corporate insiders has picked up sharply.

Looking at just the last week, the top 50 insider transactions were all sells.

Why should this raise eyebrows?

Because insiders — CEOs, board members, and major shareholders — usually see business slowdowns, weakening demand, and financial pressure before it becomes visible in public data.

When many of them cut exposure at the same time, it often signals caution about what’s ahead.

And the data seems to back that up.

Today alone, U.S. 2025 payroll figures were revised lower by -862,000, the biggest downward revision since the 2009 financial crisis.

Hiring in the U.S. is also falling sharply and has now dropped to 2020 pandemic-era levels.

Last week, nine major U.S. companies filed for bankruptcy — something previously seen only during 2001, 2008, and 2020.

All of this points to rising economic stress, while large players quietly step away from risk.

At the same time, retail money is flooding into U.S. equities at record levels — classic late-cycle euphoria.

I’m not saying a crash is guaranteed tomorrow, but history suggests caution when smart money is reducing exposure while retail goes all-in.