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The SEC publishes a few thousand executive filings every week. Nobody reads them all. Equilar reads them all and sells what they find for $25,000 a year. Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal and the Information pick up the obvious stories and skip the rest. Nobody publishes the in-between.

FiledWeekly is for the in-between.

What you'll get

A Tuesday email. One lead story, usually 600 to 800 words on the week's most consequential filing in whatever shape it takes: a CEO sale, a comp package, a board fight. Three or four short hits on filings that don't carry a full story but are worth knowing happened. A benchmark or visual when the data warrants it. A methodology footer naming the primary source for every claim.

It comes from one person reading every Form 4, every DEF 14A, and every 8-K Item 5.02 filed by 25 tracked companies. The mega-cap names you'd expect plus a handful of mid-caps where the governance noise is loudest. The universe will expand. The point is depth, not breadth.

What you won't get

Stock recommendations. Insider trade alerts. A research report. A newsletter that confuses "everything filed" with "things worth writing about."

The market already has products that ping you the second a Form 4 lands. Yahoo Finance does it. Bloomberg does it. Unusual Whales does it for retail. FiledWeekly is the product that ignores 97% of those filings because they don't matter, and tells you the 3% that do.

Three rules

Every numerical claim links to a primary source. If a CEO sold $5M of stock, there's a Form 4 link. No "people are saying," no anonymous analyst quotes.

The methodology gets named when it triggered the story. If a package crossed a peer-group threshold, the issue says so explicitly, with the threshold.

No predictions about stock prices. Not now, not later. Pattern recognition on filings is editorial work. Pretending otherwise is how a publication loses credibility before earning it.

Reply

If there's a company, executive, or filing type you'd like covered, reply. Reader requests will frequently become lead stories. The publication is being built around what readers want to read, not what an editorial calendar happens to fill.

The first regular issue ships when the writing catches up with the data layer underneath it. Probably weeks, not months. You'll get a heads-up the day before.

Thanks for being early.

FiledWeekly

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