
New money, same old message
Speece Thorson just scooped up 78,191 shares of Insight Enterprises, a buy estimated at about $6.39 million. That’s not pocket change — it’s the kind of move that makes investors lean in and ask, “Okay, what do they know?”
Why you should care
Insider buying isn’t a guaranteed moonshot signal, but it can be a useful tell. When an executive or major insider commits millions, it usually suggests they think the market is mispricing the stock, the business is on steadier footing than it looks, or both.
For Insight Enterprises, this could be a confidence boost for anyone watching the name. Investors often treat these purchases like a subtle vote of confidence — not a loud earnings beat, but more like the financial equivalent of someone saying, “I’ll take the over.”
Big picture
The real takeaway here is simple: a meaningful insider buy can help reset sentiment, even if it doesn’t change the company’s fundamentals overnight. Big picture: when insiders spend real cash, the market tends to notice.
