---
title: "Used the new CLI commands for a few days, focusing on insider-trades and investors."
type: "Topics"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/topics/39890002.md"
description: "After trying out this update, the two features that impressed me the most were the commands related to &#34;smart money&#34;: insider-trades and investors. One shows insider trades, the other shows institutional holdings. Let me share some practical experience. insider-trades — you can know in seconds whether executives are buying or selling. In the past, to check insider trades, you had to go to the SEC website and dig through Form 4. Find the stock, find the person, check the date, check the number of shares, check the price... the whole process took at least five minutes..."
datetime: "2026-04-14T06:47:39.000Z"
locales:
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/topics/39890002.md)
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/topics/39890002.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/topics/39890002.md)
author: "[徐同学](https://longbridge.com/en/profiles/1450665.md)"
---

# Used the new CLI commands for a few days, focusing on insider-trades and investors.

After trying out this update, the two commands that impressed me the most are related to "smart money": `insider-trades` and `investors`.

One looks at insider trading, the other at institutional holdings. Let me share some practical experience using them.

* * *

### `insider-trades` — Know in seconds whether executives are buying or selling

In the past, to check insider trades, you had to dig through Form 4 on the SEC website. Find the stock, find the person, check the date, number of shares, price... the whole process took at least five minutes.

Now it's done with one command:

text

longbridge insider-trades NVDA

It outputs a complete record: who, what position, transaction date, buy or sell, number of shares, price per share.

**A real scenario.**

Last week, a small-cap stock I held suddenly dropped quite a bit, and I felt unsure. In the past, I might have searched for news, looked at financial reports, asked around. This time, I directly ran `insider-trades` on the ticker.

I found that the CEO and CTO had each bought twice in the past month, totaling over a hundred thousand shares, with an average price higher than the current stock price.

Although you can't make decisions based solely on this, it at least indicates that insiders don't think the current price is expensive. I didn't sell, held on. It later rebounded.

I now run this command once a week, scanning all my holdings. Seeing consecutive buys gives me peace of mind; seeing concentrated selling raises a flag.

* * *

### `investors` — Copy institutional moves without waiting for someone to compile the data

Another frequently used one is `investors`, based on SEC 13F data, showing active fund managers' holdings.

**Two use cases I find most practical.**

**First, check the leaderboard.**

text

longbridge investors

It directly outputs a recent leaderboard of active fund managers, showing who increased or decreased holdings, clear at a glance. Previously, you had to wait for someone to compile and publish it; now you can check anytime.

**Second, look up a specific investor by CIK.**

longbridge investors 0001067983

This CIK is for Berkshire Hathaway. Running it directly shows Buffett's latest holdings, and it includes **real-time prices**—this is better than many 13F summary websites, which usually only show quarter-end prices.

I tried looking up another well-known fund and found they had significantly increased their position in a certain consumer stock last quarter. Following this clue, I checked that company's financial reports and recent trends, and there was indeed fundamental support.

It's not about blindly following, but it at least provides a **starting point for screening targets**.

### Using these two commands together

One looks at insiders (insider-trades), the other at institutions (investors).

Want to confirm if insiders are truly optimistic → `insider-trades`

Want to know where smart money is flowing → `investors`

My current workflow is roughly:

Use `investors` to scan the portfolio adjustments of top institutions, find a few targets that were added by multiple firms.

Screen out the interesting ones, then use `insider-trades` to see what insiders at these companies have been doing recently.

If both institutions and insiders are buying, add to the watchlist, and further examine financial reports and fundamentals.

Can't guarantee profits, but at least there's an extra layer of data support when making decisions.

### A final word

Previously, CLI felt like "can query data." These two commands make me feel like "can assist in judgment." No need to dig through the SEC website, no need to wait for someone to compile 13F tables. Run it yourself anytime, check anytime.

If you also frequently track insider trades or institutional holdings, these two commands are worth spending ten minutes to try.

### Related Stocks

- [BRK.B.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BRK.B.US.md)
- [BRK.A.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BRK.A.US.md)
- [NVDA.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/NVDA.US.md)
- [07777.HK](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/07777.HK.md)
- [NVDL.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/NVDL.US.md)
- [07788.HK](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/07788.HK.md)
- [07388.HK](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/07388.HK.md)
- [NVDY.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/NVDY.US.md)
- [NVDD.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/NVDD.US.md)
- [NVDX.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/NVDX.US.md)
- [NVDQ.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/NVDQ.US.md)