Trivium Real Estate Socimi SA
MAD:YTRI
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We don't have any information about YTRI's insider trading.
Trivium Real Estate Socimi SA
Glance View
Trivium Real Estate SOCIMI SA is a Spanish real estate investment company, similar to a REIT. It buys and owns commercial property, especially office buildings, and earns money mainly from renting those spaces to tenants. Its business is about holding properties for long-term rental income rather than developing and selling buildings. The company’s customers are businesses that need office space, and its income comes from lease payments and related property services. That makes Trivium a landlord in the commercial property chain: it supplies usable buildings to companies that want a well-located, professionally managed place to work. Its performance depends on keeping properties occupied, maintaining them well, and signing leases on terms that fit the market. What makes this business model different is that it is asset-backed and fairly simple to understand: the value comes from real buildings and recurring rent, not from manufacturing or software sales. As a SOCIMI, Trivium follows the Spanish listed real estate model, which is built around owning income-producing property and passing that rental cash flow through to shareholders.
What is Insider Trading?
Insider trading refers to the buying or selling of a company's stock by individuals with access to non-public, material information about the company.
While legal insider trading occurs when insiders follow disclosure rules, illegal insider trading involves trading based on confidential information and is prohibited by law.
Why is Insider Trading Important?
It isn't a coincidence that corporate executives seem to always buy at the right times. After all, they have access to every bit of company information you could ever want.
However, the fact that company executives have unique insights doesn't mean that individual investors are always left in the dark. Insider trading data is out there for all who want to use it.
Insiders might sell their shares for any number of reasons, but they buy them for only one: they think the price will rise.