The Chairman Just Bought $5 Million of His Own Stock

A few days ago, I told you insider selling was a trap.

This week, the Chairman of GE Healthcare showed you the trade that isn’t.

Larry Culp committed $5 million of his personal money to GE Healthcare (GEHC) stock on Tuesday, buying 80,805 shares at an average price of $61.88.

The buy increased his direct holdings by 114.8% in a single day.

He did it the same week Wall Street analysts were lowering price targets on the stock after the company cut its 2026 profit guidance.

The stock had fallen hard, and the financial media moved on to the next downgrade.

Culp reacted differently.

A few days ago, I wrote about why insider selling is the most misunderstood signal in the market. Bezos selling Amazon, Zuckerberg selling Meta, Gates selling Microsoft for thirty years, all of it noise.

Selling is what funds yachts, estate plans, and Hawaiian Islands, and it tells you nothing about where the stock is going.

The opposite transaction is the only one that matters, and Culp just made it.

Here is why this particular buy is louder than most.

Culp is not a typical board chair.

He is the Chairman and CEO of GE Aerospace, where his personal stake is worth more than $584 million, and he was the longtime CEO of Danaher, where he still holds another $300 million.

When this kind of operator commits $5 million from his personal account to a stock that Wall Street was just downgrading, he is telling the market something the analysts missed.

The academic research is explicit about why this matters.

A landmark Wharton study by Jeng, Metrick, and Zeckhauser tracked 22 years of insider transactions and found that insider buying outperforms the market by 6-10% per year, while a separate study by Lakonishok and Lee in the Review of Financial Studies showed that companies with heavy insider buying outperform companies with heavy insider selling by 4.8% over the next 12 months.

A 2012 Journal of Finance study from Cohen, Malloy, and Pomorski refined the signal further by separating routine insider trades from opportunistic ones, finding that opportunistic trades with irregular timing right after a stock pulls back deliver the strongest forward returns by a wide margin.

The point is, we like CEOs buying shares of their own company.

Culp’s buy is the textbook definition of an opportunistic signal.

The timing came right after a price drop, the dollar amount was substantial, and the trade more than doubled his existing direct holdings…

Meanwhile, CEO Peter Arduini also bought separately.

There’s a pattern here… Four out of four insider trades on this stock over the last six months have been purchases, with zero sales.

The reason this signal works is also the reason most retail investors miss it.

Insiders sell for a hundred reasons that have nothing to do with the business, but they only buy with personal cash for one.

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YOUR ACTION PLAN

The War Room tracks these signals every day. We work through real-time SEC Form 4 filings to surface the transactions worth paying attention to, the names where insiders are committing personal capital with conviction, separated from the noise of routine selling.

As you know, inside the room you get the stocks, the sizing, and the reasoning behind every position, including the next names I am watching after Culp’s buy this week.

Tune in next week for more.


FUN FACT FRIDAY

Elon Musk Dropped a Billion-Dollar “I Believe” Bomb on Tesla!

In September 2025, Elon Musk made his largest-ever open-market purchase of Tesla stock: 2.57 million shares for roughly $1 billion — all in one day (September 12), executed across 25 separate trades at prices ranging from about $372 to $397 per share.

This was his first open-market buy since early 2020, and it came just as Tesla’s board was floating a potential $1 trillion compensation package for him tied to insane growth targets (like hitting an $8.5 trillion market cap).

The market loved the vote of confidence: Tesla shares jumped up to 6-8% in the following sessions, flipping the stock positive for the year and sparking a nice rally.

Basically, the ultimate CEO flex: “I’m not just talking about the future of Tesla… I’m betting a billion dollars on it.”

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