We aggregate BSE and NSE disclosures, map promoter groups, score each event, and send one sharp Saturday digest — plus an intelligence dashboard for the signal behind every filing.
SEBI requires every promoter transaction to be disclosed within two trading days. Bloomberg terminals surface these in seconds. Institutional desks run algorithms on them. Family offices get email digests.
Retail investors get a list of PDFs on the BSE and NSE filing pages. No context. No ranking. No alerts. Just the raw regulatory feed, optimized for compliance — not for you.
We aggregate, score, and narrate every filing so you can use the information the way it was meant to be used.
We pull from BSE and NSE twice a day, normalize messy acquirer names (is "Tattvam Enterprises LLP" RIL or not?), and map every entity back to the parent. You see the company — not the shell.
Every transaction gets a score from 0–100 based on size, pattern, historical context, and timing. A ₹5 Cr ESOP sale and a ₹400 Cr conviction buy don't look the same — because they aren't.
A human reviews every high-signal event before it ships. One line per filing explaining what it means: routine, a pattern, or the first sign of something bigger.
A single transaction tells you little. A promoter's behaviour over twelve months tells you almost everything. Sanket stitches filings together so you see the shape.
DMart · Radhakishan Damani. Four consecutive quarters of accumulation, increasing size. The pattern is the signal — not any single filing.
Adani Green · promoter pledge. From 18% to 2.1% over 18 months. Each individual release is routine — the trend line is the story.
Pharma, this week. Sun, Reddy's, Cipla, and Mankind — four unrelated promoter groups, same direction, same week. Sector clusters matter.
Tata Sons · net buyer across five group companies in the last 60 days. When the parent trust moves in one direction across a portfolio, that's intelligence — not a filing.
Every filing, searchable. Every promoter family, trackable. Every pattern, visible in real time. The weekly digest is the headline — the dashboard is where you live.
Issue 01 · 04 April 2026 · no signup required
Most aggregators fire a dashboard at you. We write to you. Seven days of filings distilled into one editorial email — the top three promoter moves, why they matter, and what to watch into next week.
First-week-of-April promoter disclosures are usually a mirror of the last week of March — end-of-quarter trust transfers, ESOP exercises. Most of this week followed that pattern. Three filings did not…
I come from a world where decisions are tied closely to capital, timing, and trust. Growing up around family businesses and later working across them taught me that the real edge is rarely more information — it is better interpretation of the right signal at the right time.
I'm building Sanket because, as someone who tracks Indian markets actively, I kept noticing the same gap: some of the most useful public signals in this country still reach individual investors in an unusable form. Promoter activity is the clearest example. The data is public, the rules require it to be timely, and the institutional world consumes it through tools that cost lakhs a year. Everyone else gets a list of PDFs.
Sanket was born from that gap. We take public promoter disclosures, structure them properly, score what matters, and explain them with context — so that serious investors can spend less time parsing filings and more time thinking clearly.
This is not meant to be another noisy market dashboard. The goal is simple: turn public information into decision-grade insight for investors who care about signal over clutter.
Yes. Every filing we track is a legally-mandated public disclosure under SEBI PIT and SAST regulations. We aggregate public data — not investment advice.
The Saturday Digest is the curated weekly read — three stories, human-written. Sanket Intelligence is the full dashboard: every filing live, watchlists, alerts, pledge monitor, family tracker. Digest is free forever; Intelligence is invite-only Early Access right now.
Request it above. We're taking invites in small batches through Q2 2026 to keep the feedback loop tight. Priority goes to serious retail investors, HNIs, family offices, and independent analysts.
A 0–100 composite of size, pattern, historical precedent, and timing. You see the breakdown on every high-signal event — not a black box.
Those are broad dashboards with insider data as one of many tabs. Sanket does one thing: promoter activity, end-to-end. Signal scoring, group mapping, and written commentary is our obsession.
Get the free Saturday Digest now. Request Early Access to Sanket Intelligence — the full dashboard, invite-only until public launch.
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Sanket is in pre-launch. The product foundations — entity mapping, scoring methodology, editorial process — are built. The live data feed is being connected over the next few weeks.
Every filing example shown on this page, including the hero card and the sample digest issues, is an illustrative reconstruction built to demonstrate how Sanket reads filings. Some reference real promoter families and historical patterns; specific dates and amounts are demo. Live filings begin with the Sanket Intelligence launch.
If precision matters to you — read our methodology. It's where we explain what we use, how we score, and what we explicitly will not claim.
First-week-of-April promoter disclosures are usually a mirror of the last week of March — end-of-quarter trust transfers, ESOP exercises, tax-loss bookkeeping. Most of this week followed that pattern.
Three filings did not. They're what this issue is about.
On Wednesday, Bombay Dyeing filed a ₹186 Cr acquisition of BRITANNIA — the Wadia group's first open-market addition since December 2023. For a promoter whose public stance has been "we have enough," this is a real break in pattern.
The quantum is modest. The direction is the signal. The Wadias have been net sellers through most of 2024 as they consolidated real estate. This reverses that.
What to watch: whether this is a one-off or the start of a buying cycle. The Wadias historically accumulate in clusters — three buys in six months would confirm the pattern.
APGE saw a 1.4% reduction in promoter pledge this week — the fifth consecutive month of releases. Total Adani Green promoter pledge now sits at ~2.1%, down from 18% in mid-2023.
No headlines. No press release. Just quiet, consistent deleveraging. Adani Enterprises' pledge remains elevated; if AEL follows APGE's trajectory, the group-wide rerating argument gets a fresh leg.
Ambadi Investments picked up another 0.31% of TIINDIA this week — the Murugappa group's fourth buy in six months. TII promoter holding has quietly gone from 44.8% to 46.1% over that stretch.
When a clean-track-record promoter group adds ~1.5% of cap through patient open-market buys across six months, the historical pattern points one direction: expect M&A soon.
Last week we flagged four pharma promoters moving in the same direction. This week it became seven. The first FMCG warning sign appeared at the same time — and one of the biggest pledge increases of the year showed up where we weren't looking.
The signal sharpens when the noise stays the same.
Shanghvi Finance — Dilip Shanghvi's primary investment vehicle — added ₹312 Cr of SUNPHARMA on Wednesday. It's the third Shanghvi-linked add this calendar year, and the largest of the three.
The size is interesting. The company it now keeps is the story. In the same trading week: Cipla saw ₹98 Cr from the Hamied trust, Lupin saw ₹54 Cr from the Gupta family, and Mankind disclosed an ESOP-led pickup of ₹41 Cr. Four unrelated promoter groups, one direction.
What to watch: whether the May filings sustain the cadence. Two weeks of cluster activity is interesting. A full month is a thesis.
Where Adani Green has spent five months releasing pledge, Vedanta is going the other way. Twin Star Holdings — Anil Agarwal's primary holding vehicle — pledged an additional 1.8% of VEDL this week. The disclosure cited "general corporate purposes."
VEDL promoter pledge has now climbed from 26% to 34% over four months. The group's FY27 debt schedule is heavy and refinancing windows are tightening. Pledge increases this size, under this kind of macro, usually precede either a structural deal or a structural problem. Watch for either.
The Munjal family added ₹205 Cr of HEROMOTOCO on Tuesday — ten trading days before scheduled Q4FY26 results. The buy lands at a 14-month low for the stock.
Munjals bought ahead of Q4FY24 results too. That add was followed by a 14% move over six weeks. The pattern is small-sample but consistent — and this week's buy is the largest of the four.
Sixty-four filings. Five high-conviction signals. The Jindals returned to JSW with the largest single tranche of April. The Parekhs broke a three-year buy-only pattern at Pidilite. And the TVS family added at four times their normal clip.
The patterns are getting harder to ignore.
Sajjan Jindal Holdings increased its JSW Steel stake by ₹540 Cr on Thursday. A complementary ₹62 Cr was added at JSW Energy in the same week. Steel was nowhere on this map two weeks ago.
The last time Sajjan Jindal added ₹500+ Cr in a single tranche was October 2020. Steel ran 80% in the eighteen months that followed. We're not predicting that. But the family doesn't move this size casually.
The Parekh family disposed ₹89 Cr of PIDILITIND on Monday — their first open-market sell since March 2023. This is not an ESOP exit. It is not a routine trust transfer. It is a deliberate trim.
The size is small. The signal is the break. The Parekhs have historically signaled with patience: when they buy, they buy for years; when they sell, they sell at peaks. What to watch: a second sell within 60 days. That converts this from rebalance into a trim — and lands inside a broader FMCG theme that started softening last week.
Sundaram Clayton — the TVS family holding vehicle — added ₹268 Cr of TVSMOTOR on Friday. The size is the story: Iyengars typically add in ₹40–80 Cr clips. This is roughly 4x their median transaction over the last decade.
An add 4–5x larger than the typical Iyengar transaction, against the auto sector strength of the past 30 days. Hero last week. Tata Motors continuing. Now TVS. Auto promoter activity is no longer about any one company.