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SEC Watch
SEC Watch scrapes, normalizes, and delivers SEC Form 4 and congressional trading data to investors tracking insider transactions in US public equities.
SEC Watch
SEC Watch is a New York City-based company founded in 2009. It provides a website that assists users in navigating the SEC website and filings. The platform aims to enhance the usability of these filings as research documents.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
—
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
—
Corporate office
—
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
What data does SEC Watch cover and where does it originate?
SEC Watch ingests Form 3, Form 4, and Form 5 filings from the SEC's EDGAR system. These are the mandatory insider-transaction reports under Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The platform also surfaces periodic transaction reports filed by members of Congress and their staff under the STOCK Act, which are submitted to House and Senate ethics offices and later published online.
How quickly are insider trades reflected on SEC Watch after filing?
The platform is designed to surface transactions on the same day they are accepted by the SEC's EDGAR system. Filings must be submitted within two business days of the transaction under Section 16 rules. The latency between the filing hitting EDGAR and appearing in the SEC Watch feed depends on the firm's polling interval, which is not publicly specified but is marketed as same-day.
Can users access SEC Watch data programmatically or only through the web interface?
SEC Watch offers an API for programmatic data access alongside its web-based subscription tiers. Quant funds and fintech platforms typically license the API to pull structured insider-transaction records directly into internal models. The web interface is oriented toward retail traders and individual investors who monitor trade alerts and browse insider activity by ticker or insider name.
Does SEC Watch interpret insider trading data or provide investment recommendations?
No. SEC Watch is a data utility, not a research or advisory service. It does not rate trades, assign sentiment scores, or issue buy and sell recommendations. The output is the raw transaction data from EDGAR filings — ticker, insider identity, role, transaction type, share count, and price. Users draw their own conclusions about whether a cluster of insider buying constitutes a signal.
Is SEC Watch affiliated with the US Securities and Exchange Commission?
No. Despite the name, SEC Watch is a private, independent commercial entity. It has no regulatory authority and no official relationship with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. The firm repackages publicly available SEC filings; it is not a government agency and does not investigate or enforce securities laws.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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