Finance

Insiders Piled On These 3 Stocks in Q4—One Stands Out

AI Image Produced Under the Direction of Shannon Harms

Important Points

  • The buyout accelerated in late 2025 with three names, directors and executives added in the disclosure.
  • One pick pairs a heavy internal identity with a strong float, which can increase movement when selling ramps.
  • The team includes a high yield transformative story, a strong med-tech combination, and active speculative play.

Insider buying was hot in Q4 2025, with money flowing into undervalued names. The question, as always, is whether these purchases reflect the real value investors should have or if management is trying to prop up their markets. In this case, insiders highlight the value and opportunities in three stocks, but one stands out. Its technology is simple, effective, and necessary, making it a disruptive force in a rapidly growing industry.

The Most Caught Light Gathered Inside

Alight (NYSE: ALIT) is a cloud-based employee engagement platform. Yours resources help employers and employees connect after termination of employment, providing scheduling, time off requests, financial services, and full utilization of benefits. Insiders, including a list of directors, have been buying the stock, raising activity in 2025 to a Q4 high. The group owns about 2% of the stock, not a huge amount, but significant given the shopping activity and institutional assets. Institutions own almost all of the remaining shares and have been accumulating, getting what the market has to offer.

Short interest is a factor in stock price declines. While institutions are buying, the activity is not aggressive or sufficient to eliminate the short sale. Short interest is down from its peaks but still high, close to 7% and weighing on this market. Problems include slow growth, volatility and high debt. Mitigation factors include profits and dividends, which are valued at 12% per annum beginning in 2026. This small stock comes with risks, but profit is not counted among them. It compares favorably with the EPS outlook, which predicts a lower payout ratio of 28% in 2026 and improvement in the coming years.



The stock’s price action is sketchy, but it suggests overextended expansion and growing potential for a rebound. While stock prices are falling, volume is increasing and indicators like the MACD are suggesting that the bulls are regaining control. Trading near $1.30, the stock is below analysts’ low target, with a potential upside of 200% relative to consensus.

The ALIT stock chart is showing a lower high and rising volume as the note highlights insider buying activity.

Cooper Companies Insiders Confirm Growth Outlook

The Cooper Companies (NASDAQ: COO ) doesn’t pay dividends, it chooses to reinvest in growth. The growth outlook is not strong, but includes continued improvement in revenue and profitability driving its investor value. A med tech company, Cooper’s main focus is vision and women’s health, and insiders are piling up the shares. Insiders, including the CEO and several directors, purchased approximately $2.6 million in shares during Q4 2026, bringing their holdings to approximately 3% of the shares.

Institutions and analysts are also bullish on this stock, indicating a rally within the market. Institutions, which own about 24% of the stock, are up for buying in 2025 and are on track to set another high in Q1 2026. Analysts, the visible face of the sell view, rate the stock as Neutral Buy, coverage is strong, sentiment is strong, and price target trends suggest a downside of 12%. The 12% high is significant as it places the market at a long-term high, near the midpoint of the long-term trading range, and above key moving averages where it is likely to continue to advance.

COO's stock chart is moving back towards the key moving-middle as the callout notes buying inside and increasing volume.

AirJoule: Technology Data Centers (and Other Industries) Will Have to Own

AirJoule Technologies (NASDAQ: AIRJ) is a small business that makes dehumidifiers. However, their improved designs are 75% to 90% more efficient than refrigerator-based systems, to provide much needed assistance and the lowest cost in most industries. While many industries rely on humidity control, the data center industry stands out.

Data centers are expanding, with top-tier 1-gigawatt facilities starting in the $35 billion range, and their components are more sensitive to moisture. Not only can corrosion cause system malfunction, but improper drops and condensation can cause damage to optical data transmission.

AirJoule insiders, including the CEO, CFO, and several directors, bought more in Q4 and 2025. This is important because of the price and their holding, which runs at 40%. Meanwhile, institutions are also accumulating shares, owning about 60% of the market, making it a tightly held market. Analysts, who rate the stock as a Moderate Buy consensus, are predicting an increase of more than 100% at the lower end of their target range and 200% at the consensus. The motivation for this move will likely come later in the year as sales and marketing begin.

The AIRJ stock chart shows a downward trend with increasing volume such as insider signaling and institutional buying.

Companies in this article:

Company Current Price Price Changes Dividend Yield The P/E ratio Consensus ratio Consensus Price Target
Light (ALIT) $1.31 +0.4% 12.26% -0.32 Hold on $3.98
AirJoule Technologies (AIRJ) $3.27 +1.4% N/A -21.70 Buy Medium $9.50
Cooper Companies (COO) $82.20 -1.0% N/A 43.72 Buy Medium $90.77
Thomas Hughes

Experience

Thomas Hughes has been a contributing writer for InsiderTrades.com since 2019.

  • Professional Background: Thomas Hughes is the Managing Partner of Passive Market Intelligence LLC, a market research platform he founded in 2023 with the motto: “We watch the market so you don’t.” He has worked as a blogger, stock market analyst, and independent analyst since 2010 and has been involved in trading and investing since 2005.
  • Confirmation: He has an Associate of Arts in Culinary Technology-training that has enhanced his discipline, attention to detail, and ability to anticipate results, all of which continue in his work as a market analyst.
  • Financial Experience: Thomas has been writing about finance and investing since 2011, when he discovered it could be more than a personal passion—it could be a career. He has been a contributing writer for InsiderTrades.com since 2019.
  • Writing Focus: He specializes in the S&P 500, small-cap stocks, high-yield diversification strategies, consumer staples, retail, technology, oil, and equities. His analysis combines chart-based technical setups with key fundamentals, helping readers identify potential trends.
  • How to Invest: Thomas takes a hybrid approach that combines technical analysis with in-depth fundamental research. He often writes about macroeconomic shifts, wage trends, and sentiment-based trading signals.
  • Motivation: Thomas became interested in stocks after attending a seminar on buying and selling your own stocks. That experience opened his eyes to the power of the market and sparked a lifelong interest in investing.
  • Fun fact: Thomas picked up a model railroad by accident a few years ago—and now he can’t stop using the railroad.
  • Areas of Expertise: Technical and fundamental analysis, S&P 500, retail and consumer sectors, equities, market trends

Education

Associate of Arts in Culinary Technology

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