Stocks where promoters, directors or key insiders disclosed share acquisitions under SEBI PIT rules — ranked by value.
Under SEBI's Prohibition of Insider Trading (PIT) regulations, promoters, directors and designated persons must disclose their trades in their own company's shares. When insiders buy, it is often read as a conviction signal — the people with the most information are putting their own money in.
This screen lists recent insider and promoter BUY disclosures, ranked by value in ₹ crore, with the acquirer's name and role shown for each.
Disclosures are sourced from NSE's SEBI PIT filings over a trailing window, filtered to genuine BUY transactions (allotments, ESOPs and non-buy/sell rows are excluded).
Each row shows the acquirer, their role (promoter, director, KMP, etc.), the disclosed value in ₹ crore, and the disclosure date.
Insider buying is a conviction signal, not a guarantee — disclosures are reported with a lag and a single purchase can have many motives. It is information, not advice.
What are SEBI PIT disclosures?
Under SEBI's Prohibition of Insider Trading regulations, promoters, directors and designated persons must disclose trades in their own company's shares above a threshold. These filings are public and are the source for this screen.
Why does insider buying matter?
Insiders have the most information about their own company, so when they buy with their own money it is often read as a conviction signal. It is one input, not a recommendation.
How recent are these disclosures?
Strota reads PIT filings over a trailing window and shows the disclosure date for each row. Filings are reported with a regulatory lag, so the trade may have occurred a few days before disclosure.
Does insider buying guarantee the stock will rise?
No. It signals insider conviction, but disclosures lag, purchases can have many motives, and it is not buy/sell advice. Always combine it with your own analysis.