When a company's officers, directors, and big institutions buy or sell, they have to file it with the SEC — and when members of Congress trade, they have to disclose it under the STOCK Act. We read every one of those filings the moment it lands and push the signal to you — translated, sourced, and clear.
Every disclosure that matters is already out there, for free — on the SEC's EDGAR system and in the periodic transaction reports members of Congress must file under the STOCK Act. The catch is that it's written for lawyers, scattered across thousands of filings a day, and effectively invisible until a headline catches up — by which point it's old news.
A Form 4 is a grid of transaction codes and footnotes. A 13F is a 40-page table of CUSIPs. A congressional disclosure is a scanned PDF with dollar ranges. The information is all there — it's just not written for a human in a hurry.
Thousands of filings hit EDGAR every single day, and congressional trades trickle out across hundreds of separate disclosures. The handful worth knowing about are mixed in with routine paperwork, with no one flagging which is which.
By the time a filing becomes a story you happen to scroll past, the moment has usually passed. The edge was in reading it when it was filed — not days later.
Money Sentinel never predicts, rates, or recommends. It reads the public record — the same disclosures any regulator, reporter, or research desk relies on — and tells you, plainly, what a company, its insiders, and members of Congress actually put on file. Every alert links back to the original document so you can read it yourself.
No dashboards to learn, no jargon to decode. The work happens before it reaches you — you just read the result over coffee.
The moment a disclosure hits SEC EDGAR — or a member of Congress files a STOCK Act trade — we pull it in and parse it: insider trades, institutional holdings, material corporate events, and congressional transactions.
The transaction codes, footnotes, and tables get turned into one clear sentence a person can actually read: who filed, what they did, and how much.
The day's notable filings arrive in one clean email each morning — free, forever. On the paid tier, the signal reaches you in real time as it's filed.
Each alert states what was filed in one line, gives you the context in a sentence, and links straight to the original document — an SEC filing or a congressional STOCK Act disclosure. No ratings, no price targets, no "buy" — just the filing, made legible.
Tickers, names, and dollar figures above are illustrative examples of the alert format, not real filings or recommendations.
Money Sentinel is a publisher, not a brokerage and not an adviser. The public filings cost nothing, and our job is simply to read them and pass along what's there. So the daily alert stays free — that's the model, not a trial.
If you want the signal faster and deeper, Pro adds the things that take real-time infrastructure to run.
There is no shortage of loud voices telling you what to buy. Money Sentinel is the quiet one in the corner that just hands you the document.
Everything we publish is drawn from the public record — filings on SEC EDGAR and STOCK Act disclosures from members of Congress — and circulated the same way to every reader. We don't tailor anything to your situation, we don't rate securities, and we never tell you to buy or sell. That's a deliberate line — it's what keeps us a plain-English news source instead of a financial salesperson.
Each alert carries a direct link to the original SEC filing. Read what we read, in one click.
One impersonal, general-circulation publication. No personalized advice, no model portfolios.
We tell you what was filed and, where useful, what that kind of filing has historically meant — and stop there.
The daily alert is genuinely free and stays free. Pro is for people who want the filing the second it posts — and the full history behind it.
Pro pricing shown for illustration; final price set at launch (expected $25–40/mo). Annual option available.
Form 4 insider transactions, 13F and 13D/G institutional holdings, and 8-K material-event filings. We also cover the periodic transaction reports that members of Congress are required to file under the STOCK Act, published by the Clerk of the House and the Secretary of the Senate. All of this data is public. Money Sentinel is independent and is not affiliated with or endorsed by the SEC, Congress, or any government body.Form 4 buys and sells, 13F institutional positions, and 8-K material events, straight from SEC EDGAR. The other side is congressional: the stock trades members of Congress are required to disclose under the STOCK Act. Same plain-English treatment, same source link on every alert, same rule — we tell you what was filed, never what to do about it. It's information, not advice.Join the free daily alert and get the day's notable SEC + congressional filings, in plain English, each morning.