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A younger member of the Tisch family spent nearly $20 million in recent days buying up more shares of Loews Corp ., according to securities filings and VerityData. Benjamin Tisch, the son of Loews CEO James Tisch, bought about $18.8 million worth of stock over three days. Loews — The conglomerate's senior vice president Benjamin Tisch scooped up about $18.8 million worth of stock from May 31 to June 2. It is first buy on record for Benjamin Tisch. StepStone Group — Head of strategy Michael McCabe bought $2.2 million worth of the asset management firm's stock in the first five days of June.
Persons: Tisch, Benjamin Tisch, James Tisch, Michael McCabe, Daryl Bible, Bible, Christopher Rondeau, Jan De Witte, Eric Schwartz Organizations: Loews Corp, Loews, CNA Financial, CNA, Fortress Investment Group, VerityData, StepStone, , T Bank, Truist, Integra LifeSciences
The biggest buy came from RenaissanceRE CEO Kevin O'Donnell, who bought $2.5 million worth of the insurer's stock, according to securities filings and VerityData. Kiani's roughly $1 million purchase comes after he scooped up $6 million of the stock in November and December of 2022. 1) RenaissanceRE — O'Donnell bought $2.5 million worth of shares on May 26 as part of a secondary offering. 4) Masimo — Kiani spent just over $1 million on Masimo stock on May 25, building on a $6 million purchase from late last year. 5) Driven Brands — CEO Jonathan Fitzpatrick bought nearly $1 million worth of the automotive services company's stock on Tuesday.
Persons: Kevin O'Donnell, Validus, O'Donnell, Joe Kiani, Masimo, RenaissanceRE — O'Donnell, Bernard Lanigan, Kevin Dallas, — Kiani, Jonathan Fitzpatrick Organizations: AIG, Politan, Tech, Politan Capital Locations: RenaissanceRe, VerityData
Several regional banks saw insiders buy shares over the past seven days, according to VerityData. Insider buying is tracked by some professional investors as a potential sign of company quality. Here are the five U.S. companies with the biggest insider buying over the past week, according to VerityData. Buying the dip was a theme of all of the top five insider buying companies. See more about Insider Buying on CNBC's " Last Call ," weekdays at 7 p.m.
Berkshire Hathaway vice president Gregory Abel bought nearly $25 million worth of Berkshire's class A stock last week, filings show. He previously bought $68 million worth of Berkshire stock in September. Berkshire's class A shares, and the "Baby Berkshire" class B shares, both have dropped about 3.4% this year, underperforming the S & P 500. Berkshire Hathaway vice chair Greg Abel bought $24.6 million worth of Berkshire's class A stock on March 17. Capri Holdings CEO John Idol bought nearly $10 million worth of stock on March 16.
Twilio CEO Jeff Lawson bought $10 million worth of his company's stock last week, putting him at the top of the list for insider buying, according to VerityData and securities filings. Twilio, like many other tech stocks, deflated in 2022, and the stock is down about 80% since mid-October 2021. A $10 million buy from Twilio CEO Jeff Lawson on Feb. 24. A nearly $2 million buy from Impinj chairman Steve Sanghi on Feb. 23. On the smaller side, Charles Rivers Labs director Richard Wallman made his second insider buy in three months.
PayPal CEO Dan Schulman scooped up more than 26,000 shares of his company's stock last week, at a cost of nearly $2 million, according to VerityData and securities filings. Prior to that, Schulman had been a consistent seller of PayPal stock, according to VerityData. PayPal : $1.99 million buy from CEO Dan Schulman on Feb. 17. ConocoPhillips : $0.63 million buy from director Al Walker on Feb. 17 Wintrust Financial : $0.61 million buy from director Brian Kenney on Feb. 16 Devon Energy : $0.53 million buy from CEO Richard Muncrief on Feb. 17. Markel : $0.53 million buy from director Greta Harris on Feb. 17.
Several insiders of corporate America spent big on their own stock as part of their holiday shopping, often finding major discounts. This move is in addition to the roughly $2.3 million worth of shares that Soto scooped up earlier this year. The fintech stock has struggled mightily this year, falling more than 70% to trade below $5 per share. Insider buying and selling is a metric tracked by many professional investors as one measure of a company's quality. Melamed had previously been a seller, so whose recent moves represent a notable reversal, according to Verity.
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