Latest 13F quarter: Q1 2026 (period ending ).
As of Q1 2026, finshort tracks $60.72T in US-listed equity positions reported across 8,795 institutional investors and 13,667 stocks, sourced directly from SEC Form 13F-HR filings. Institutional investors managing over $100 million must disclose their long equity positions each quarter, giving a transparent view of how the largest money managers are positioned.
The largest net institutional buying this quarter was in VSMAX (+$842.61B), BRKA (+$249.00B), JNJ (+$139.12B); the largest net selling was in MSFT (-$620.18B), VOO (-$282.84B), NVDA (-$211.62B). The largest 13F filers by portfolio value are BlackRock, Inc., VANGUARD CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC, STATE STREET CORP; the most widely-held stocks are MSFT (6,186 holders), AAPL (6,091 holders), AMZN (5,991 holders).
Form 13F-HR is a quarterly report that US institutional investment managers with at least $100 million in qualifying assets must file with the SEC. It discloses their long positions in US-listed equities, options, and convertible securities as of the last day of each calendar quarter. It does not include short positions, cash, or most non-US holdings.
Net institutional buying is the change in total shares held by all 13F filers for a stock between two consecutive quarters. A positive figure means institutions added more shares than they sold; a negative figure means they reduced their collective stake.
13F filings are due 45 days after each calendar quarter ends, so the latest complete quarter shown here reflects positions as of March 31, 2026. finshort refreshes these rankings daily as new and amended filings arrive on SEC EDGAR.
13F value only counts shares held by institutions required to file, valued at the quarter-end price. Retail investors, insiders, passive holders below the reporting threshold, and most foreign holders are not included, so the 13F total is always a subset of a company's full market capitalization.