Press release
How to Build a Follow the Directors ASX Watchlist in Under an Hour
Most investors say they want to follow insider activity. Very few build a system for it. They notice a director buy when it appears in a headline, miss three quieter filings the same week, then overreact to one small sale because it lands in their feed. That is not a watchlist. That is noise with a notification bell.A useful director watchlist does not need to be complicated. In under an hour, you can create a weekly routine that shows which ASX directors are buying, which are selling, which trades matter, and which ones can be ignored. The aim is not to copy directors blindly. They can be early, wrong, overconfident, or trading for personal reasons. The aim is to use their behaviour as one layer of evidence before the market fully joins the dots.
Start with the right universe
Do not begin with every ASX company. That sounds thorough, but it creates too much rubbish. Start with a universe you can actually review. For most retail investors, that means three groups: companies you already own, companies on your research list, and companies in a sector where director buying often matters. Small-cap resources, early-stage industrials, founder-led technology names, and turnaround situations are usually more useful than very large, liquid companies where director trades are often less material.
Create a spreadsheet with columns for ticker, company name, sector, market cap, why it is on the list, last close, cash position if relevant, latest material announcement, latest director trade, trade type, trade value, and follow-up action. Keep it boring. The spreadsheet is not there to impress anyone. It is there to stop you relying on memory.
Filter for signal, not activity
The next step is to classify trades. Use simple labels: on-market buy, placement participation, entitlement participation, option exercise, performance rights issue, DRP, on-market sell, off-market transfer, and other. This one step removes a lot of confusion. An on-market buy is not the same as a performance rights grant. A sale to pay tax is not the same as a steady sell-down. A transfer between related entities may not change exposure at all.
Weight clustered buys more heavily. If one director buys A$12,000, note it. If the chair, managing director, and two non-executive directors each buy meaningful parcels within the same month, raise the company's priority. Clustered buying after a weak result, a failed raise, or a long share price fall can be especially interesting because it suggests the board sees a gap between market perception and internal expectations.
Be careful with sells. A single director sale is not automatically bearish. People sell for tax, divorce, estate planning, property purchases, portfolio balance, or because a large holding has become too concentrated. What matters is pattern, timing, and explanation. Several directors selling after a promotional run, without clear reasons, while the company has limited cash, is different from a founder selling a small percentage after years of building a large stake.
A workable weekly routine is simple. On Friday afternoon or Monday morning, scan director changes from the past week. Add only trades above your threshold or trades that are unusual. Check whether the company released price-sensitive news in the previous month. Check the latest cash position if it is a small cap. Then decide one of four actions: ignore, monitor, research, or act. Most entries should be ignore or monitor. If everything feels urgent, your filters are too loose.
Make the watchlist earn its place
Here is a worked example. You follow 40 ASX small caps across resources, healthcare, and software. In one week, you see eight director changes. Three are performance rights issues, two are DRP acquisitions below A$5,000, one is an off-market transfer, and two are on-market buys. The first on-market buy is a non-executive director buying A$8,500 after an AGM. You note it but do nothing. The second is a managing director buying A$95,000 on market two weeks after a sell-off caused by delayed contract timing. Cash runway is more than six quarters, no major holder has sold, and the company recently reaffirmed guidance. That one moves to research.
This is where doing everything manually starts to break down. You can scan ASX announcements yourself, but the process gets slow once your list grows or you want to compare several months of activity. At the payoff step, using insider trade research(https://insidertraderesearch.com/) keeps the routine focused on judgement rather than document hunting, because the value is in filtering type, size, timing, and clusters across the names you care about.
The point of a follow-the-directors watchlist is discipline. You are not trying to become an insider. You are trying to notice when the people closest to the company choose to increase or reduce their own exposure. Spend one hour setting the system up, then twenty minutes a week maintaining it. The routine will not catch every winner, but it will stop you from treating every director headline as equally important. That alone is worth the effort.
Add one more column for mistakes. Each time a director signal leads you astray, record why. Was the buy too small, the company too cash hungry, the sector too speculative, or the valuation already stretched? Over a few months, this becomes your own filter. You stop copying trades and start learning which insider moves actually deserve your attention.
That is the difference between a watchlist and a tip sheet. A tip sheet tells you what happened. A watchlist tells you what is worth investigating next. Keep the process light enough to repeat every week. The value comes from consistency, not from building a spreadsheet so complicated that you stop updating it after two Fridays. A simple list that gets reviewed beats a perfect system that never becomes a habit. That is especially true in thinly traded small caps, where one overlooked filing can change the risk quickly.
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