Tickerly
PricingLog InStart Free
One step ahead of the smart money

Where the smart money is going, see it first.

See the stocks senators, company insiders and mega-funds are buying — all on one screen. A clear probability score and an AI take for every stock — simple, fast, easy to read.

Everything you need, in one subscription

Smart Money Crossover

Insider + congressional + 13F + analyst signals converge into a single score.

Stock Terminal

Candlestick charts, KPI tiles, tabbed deep-dive analysis — Bloomberg-grade density.

AI Stock Review

One click for a bull case, bear case, risk and a clear direction — in seconds, in your language.

Calendar & News

Earnings, dividends, IPOs, economic calendar and sector rotation.

Transparent Track Record

T+2/T+5 forward returns for every signal generated — proven.

Keyboard-First

Cmd+K command palette, j/k table navigation — at finance-pro speed.

What is the Smart Money Crossover?

We catch it when the so-called “smart money” — company executives (insiders), U.S. senators/representatives (Congress), and Wall Street analysts — moves in the SAME direction on a stock. A single signal can be a coincidence; but when insider buying, Congressional buying, and an analyst upgrade CROSS on the same stock, that is a strong and rare sign of confidence. This combined crossover is rarely found on a single screen anywhere else — it's our moat signal. On the cards you'll see how many signals crossed (e.g., 3/3), which ones, and the stock's real metrics. Remember: this is not investment advice, but a starting point for research.

Why follow senators?

U.S. senators are required by law to publicly disclose their stock trades within a short window. These people often have close knowledge of companies and upcoming regulations, so their purchases are seen as a “smart money” signal. Below, recent trades are grouped by senator — who traded, when, how much, and how the stock moved before/after.

What do insider trades mean?

Company executives and board members (insiders) must report to the SEC when they buy or sell shares of their own company (Form 4). An executive buying with their own money is usually a strong sign of confidence; sales can happen for many reasons such as taxes or liquidity. Below are recent trades: who, at which company, when, and the price before/after.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it legal to track members of Congress' stock trades?

Yes. Under the STOCK Act, U.S. senators and representatives must publicly disclose their stock trades. Tickerly aggregates this public data and makes it readable.

What is "smart money"?

Trades by informed actors — corporate insiders, the U.S. Congress and large institutions. When they move the same way on the same stock, we treat it as a strong signal.

Is this investment advice?

No. Tickerly is for information and research starting points only; it does not give buy/sell advice. Your decisions are your own.

Can I use it for free?

Yes. The free plan shows a daily taste of the data with no card required. For full data and AI analysis, Pro is $14.99/month.

Getting started today is free.

Explore every panel; unlock the full picture for $14.99/mo when you're ready.

Create a free account