The Top 3 Stocks Insiders Are Selling, but You Shouldn’t

 | Oct 26, 2023 03:15PM ET

Insider selling can signal horrible things to come for stock prices but is not always a harbinger of doom. Share-based compensation is a common practice among publicly traded and private corporations and can result in an active insider market. Remember, insiders aren’t allowed to sell their shares at will; they are restricted by Federal, state, and exchange regulations that could land them in jail for making knee-jerk inside trades that front-run the market.

The stocks we’re looking at today fall into that category: stocks with actively selling insiders caused by share-based compensation, but that is the worst that can be said. All 3 have solid businesses and an outlook for shareholder returns that makes them attractive opportunities.

h2 Unity Software flexes pricing power /h2

Unity Software Inc (NYSE:U) received some mixed coverage following its announcement about prices. The company is altering its pricing structure in favor of revenue growth, which has some analysts concerned it will drive game-development business away. What investors should be aware of is that fees only impact new clients using premium services whose games cross two significant thresholds. Ultimately, only games with high volume will be charged, and those games require more resources to operate.

The caveat regarding the analysts' downgrades is that for every negative comment, there is a positive, and the sentiment in the stock is holding firm. Insidertrades.com tracks 19 analysts with current ratings that have the stock pegged at firm Hold, verging on Moderate Buy with an equally firm price target. That target assumes a 60% upside from current stock price levels.

Unity insiders made 17 sales over the past 90 days. The sales are by 11 insiders, including several C-suite execs and directors. The sales are small and regular, consistent with share-based compensation, and leave insider holdings at a still-robust 9%. The worry is from the institutional angle. The institutions sold heavily in Q3 and may continue to do so in Q4. The caveat for bears is that this company is expected to grow revenue by 20% this year to the next, and the estimates may be too low. The company has outperformed regularly, and the new fees, which take effect in January 2024, have yet to be factored in.