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Stansberry Investor Hour

This One Filing Can Tell You When to Buy or Sell Stocks

Stansberry Investor Hour

Stansberry Research

Business, Investing

4.3680 Ratings

🗓️ 31 March 2026

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this week's Stansberry Investor Hour, Dan welcomes Michelle Leder back to the show. Michelle is the creator of footnoted.com, an information service dedicated to finding opportunities and early warning signals buried in U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") filings.

 

Michelle kicks things off by explaining what company proxy statements are and why they matter for investors. She says the summary compensation table and footnotes found in these documents let you know not only how much management is being paid but also what motivates their actions. Michelle emphasizes that as an investor, you need to know whether the company has your best interests in mind. She also says to look at director pay, as some officers sit on the boards of multiple companies and may not be likely to "rock the boat" and push for change. Another key component to examine is the related-party transactions that show you any disclosures in company spending. (0:00)

 

Next, Michelle says that observing who the owners and top investors are is critical. You should also know how many shares investors have. She says knowing this will let you know if they "have any skin in the game" and will work to ensure that shareholders are being considered. Another aspect to look at is shareholder proposals. Michelle states that there's an argument to be made that proposals should come from shareholders with substantial positions rather than those with smaller stakes. And she gives her thoughts on AI utilization in SEC filings. (19:17)

 

Finally, Michelle shares one stock that she warned her subscribers about before it fell dramatically over the past year. While some had believed that the stock would perform well, Michelle says the SEC filings were the key indicator to stay away from the company. She also addresses other small details that she looks for to evaluate a company's health and her strategy for short-term signals. (40:25)

Transcript

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0:00.0

Today we are going to talk about the sexiest SEC filing there is.

0:06.3

I know it sounds like there's no such thing, but there is.

0:10.0

And we're going to talk to the leading expert who knows these filings better than anybody.

0:15.0

Michelle Letter from footnoted.com.

0:18.5

She has read more of these things than anybody I know, and she's going to give us five ways

0:23.3

to dive in and look for the gold and the garbage, the things you need to know as an investor

0:29.6

to tell you to buy, sell, or avoid stocks. They're not things the company's going to tell you,

0:35.7

but there are things the company has to put out in a public filing.

0:39.2

So you've got to know how and where to find them.

0:43.1

And Michelle can help you do that today.

0:52.7

Michelle, welcome back to the show. It's been a very so long I don't even remember.

0:58.0

Me either, Dan. Thanks for having me on. All right. We're going to talk about stuff today that I just want our listeners. I promise you, you probably don't know any of this, but you really should, and it could change your life as an investor.

1:13.0

And Michelle is better at it than anybody.

1:16.4

And actually, Michelle, we're having you on here in, you know, we're getting towards spring.

1:21.6

And maybe you could tell our listeners why that time of year speaks especially well to your expertise and your focus as an

1:30.3

analyst and an investor? Yeah, well, spring is traditionally proxy season. And if you own

1:37.6

individual stocks, you're going to get these, you know, either online or some people get it old-fashioned, old school way in the mail.

1:47.5

It's actually kind of funny.

1:48.7

I thought I had registered for everything online, and I still get a couple of paper proxies in the mail,

1:55.1

and I don't know how to turn them off because I'd rather recycle the paper.

1:59.3

But, you know, basically, you know, at its heart,

2:02.3

the proxy is an invitation to the annual meeting, you know, and most people don't go to the

...

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