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Insider Information You Can't Afford to Ignore

The most important business lesson I ever learned happened in a bar -- but it had nothing to do with taking advantage of the 2-for-1 happy hour.

You see, I (Austin) worked at the bar, and it was always packed, thanks to some amazing food cranked out by a feisty little southerner we called Jimmy Jazz.

Now, ol' Jazz had a couple of other passions besides cooking -- and they all involved taking advantage of 2-for-1 happy hours. So, when the owner decided to open another bar, he had one major obstacle to overcome.

Some suggested he scare Jazz straight. Others suggested he bribe him. But in the end, he didn't give his star chef an ultimatum, a pay raise -- or even any money at all. Instead, he offered him a partial ownership stake in the new business.

Three years sober!
The food is better than ever, too. In business, the best way to ensure your "star players" really perform for you is to make sure that their interests are 100% aligned with yours.

That's why insider ownership should be a top concern any time you consider buying a stock. After all, if the people running the business don't own a share of it, what incentive do they have to make decisions that are in your best interest?

Recent debacles at AIG (NYSE: AIG  ) , JPMorgan (NYSE: JPM  ) , and Merrill Lynch have proved that multimillion-dollar compensation packages, fleets of private jets, and offices decked out with $87,000 oriental rugs simply aren't enough to insure that top brass will do what's best for shareholders.

Here's something else to consider ... stock option grants are not the same as inside ownership. They're dilutive to existing shareholders and carry zero downside risk to the option holder. Worse yet, if the stock tanks, shareholders lose real money -- but management's options will simply expire at no cost to them.

The only insider information you'll ever need
Motley Fool co-founder Tom Gardner goes so far as to say that insider ownership may be the single most important factor determining whether a stock is a long-run winner or loser. In fact, at a recent Fool member event, he told the audience:

If you forced me to shield myself from all but one factor and invest my capital for the rest of my life, only able to have a single-factor model as an investor, I wouldn't look for growth. I wouldn't look for a great balance sheet. What I would do is focus only on insider ownership.

So my Foolish colleague Matt and I recently sat down and did just that. If you'd like to follow along on your own, simply follow these steps:

  • Go to or your favorite financial website (Motley Fool CAPS, for instance).
  • Enter the company's ticker.
  • Find the "SEC Filings" section.
  • Look for the most recent proxy statement -- also known as Form 14(a).

Typically, this form will include a table showing the percentages of stock owned by the CEO, CFO, directors, and other top executives. You can also find updated information about insider transactions, including shares bought or sold, and the latest accounts of an executive's holdings, on a company's Form 4 filings.

After running our screen, here's a list of companies we came up with that have significant insider ownership, plus have strong revenue and net income growth over the past five years, and high returns on equity -- all factors we think make for a compelling investment opportunity:

Stock

Insider Ownership

Revenue Growth*

Net Income Growth*

Return on Equity

Net Income Margin

Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT  )

13%

13%

17%

50%

28%

Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL  )

23%

19%

18%

26%

24%

America Movil (NYSE: AMX  )

30%

30%

30%

45%

17%

Carnival (NYSE: CCL  )

24%

17%

14%

12%

16%

Google (Nasdaq: GOOG  )

23%

72%

109%

17%

19%

Urban Outfitters

23%

27%

33%

21%

11%

Paychex

11%

12%

13%

45%

27%

TD AMERITRADE

14%

26%

39%

27%

31%

Garmin

44%

44%

33%

32%

21%

Public Storage

20%

14%

23%

11%

54%

*Five-Year Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR). All data provided by Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's.

Granted, we aren't recommending that you buy any of these companies without further research and proper due diligence. But we are suggesting that given these characteristics -- specifically their significant levels of insider ownership -- each is worthy of your consideration. Here's why we're so convinced.

So far, way good
Since 2002, Tom Gardner, his brother, David, and their entire Motley Fool Stock Advisor team have dedicated themselves to finding great businesses where insiders own meaningful stakes. Granted, they've recommended businesses where insiders don't own significant stakes, but their biggest winners speak for themselves:

Stock

Insider Ownership % at Time of Recommendation

% Gain Since Recommendation

Marvel

64%

603%

Activision

9%

472%

Quality Systems

35%

840%

In fact, of the top 10 performing picks on the Stock Advisor scorecard -- which are up an average of 330% -- only two had less than 5% insider ownership when they were selected -- while six had double-digit percentages.

Of course, that's not the only reason these businesses have performed so well over the past few years. But as you can see, finding management that isn't afraid eat its own cooking (just like Jimmy Jazz!), and will dedicate itself to building shareholder value over the long term, can lead you to some fantastic wealth-building opportunities.

Now it's your turn
In addition to the stocks we mentioned above, we'd love to hear which companies you think are compelling investment opportunities right now, and why. Simply use the comment function below to chime in.

And if you'd like to see which stocks Matt and the rest of the Stock Advisor team are officially recommending -- including their top two picks for new investment money -- we invite you to try Stock Advisor absolutely free for 30 days.

To learn more about this free 30-day trial simply click here. There is no obligation to subscribe.

Take a deep breath, 'cause here we go: Marvel, Activision, and Quality Systems are Motley Fool Stock Advisor recommendations. America Movil and Garmin are Motley Fool Global Gains selections. Microsoft and Paychex are Motley Fool Inside Value picks. Paychex is also a Motley Fool Income Investor pick. Google is a Motley Fool Rule Breakers pick. Phew.

Matthew Argersinger and Austin Edwards both love a good 2-for-1 happy hour -- especially when the other is paying. Matt doesn't own shares of any stock mentioned. Austin owns shares of Google. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.


Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On May 02, 2009, at 10:48 AM, henryking54 wrote:

    The proxy statement is Schedule 14A, not Form 14(a).

  • Report this Comment On May 04, 2009, at 1:13 PM, Ibeatmykids wrote:

    well well well, looks like the articles are becoming a little more bullish. I am sure some doomsdayers will start chiming in here very soon about the market tanking tomorrow and when it doesn't they meant the next day and so on and so forth. I cant wait for the golden cross. Then I will make some incredible money.

  • Report this Comment On May 04, 2009, at 2:15 PM, SteamedCrab wrote:

    What was the % of insider ownership at Enron in it's heyday? Not being a smartass, just curious.

  • Report this Comment On May 04, 2009, at 6:41 PM, Beavexer wrote:

    MVL? Marvel Entertainment, Inc.?

    Not MKL - Markel Corporation?

  • Report this Comment On May 04, 2009, at 11:18 PM, idiotisk wrote:

    Many years ago, too many to count, as a FI-nance major at UT Austin (compared to (fe-NANCE at Harvard), Dr. McAnally noted a good marker was when manager's were actually buying their own stock, not just exercising stock options, but actually buying the stock. It wasn't as diagnostic when they were selling because they could be selling to buy the new house, yacht or put Jr. in Harvard.

  • Report this Comment On May 05, 2009, at 2:14 PM, GalacticTraveler wrote:

    As per the invitation to have some Fool check into a stock which readers think might be a winner, I'd like some opinions on a small-cap newcomer in the medical devices arena, CSII (earnings call 5 May, 5 pm EST)

  • Report this Comment On May 05, 2009, at 5:31 PM, GalacticTraveler wrote:

    Actually, correct date for earnings call for CSII is 6 May, 5 pm EST

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