Tracking daily capital inflows for specific tickers requires access to real-time, aggregated market data, which is a specialized data point often available through platforms like Fintel with dedicated tools. A direct list of "highest inflows" across all tickers for a single day, such as February 5th, 2026, is not typically published in general news feeds or standard SEC filings.
However, Fintel's platform provides several indicators that can help identify significant capital movements:
- Institutional Ownership Data (13F Filings): While these filings provide a quarterly snapshot of institutional holdings, they are crucial for understanding longer-term capital allocation trends. For instance, recent 13F filings from January 2026 show institutional activity in various warrants and bonds, indicating shifts in institutional portfolios.1 Significant changes in reported value or shares held by institutions can signal substantial inflows or outflows over the reporting period.
- Options Flow and Unusual Volume: Fintel offers tools like "Options Flow - Latest Day (Stocks)" and "Unusual Volume" which can highlight tickers experiencing significant options trading activity or abnormal trading volumes. These can often be precursors or indicators of underlying capital movement and increased investor interest, suggesting potential inflows or outflows.1
- SEC Filings Analysis: Detailed SEC filings, such as the Ferrovial SE (FER) filings from February 2026, provide comprehensive financial data, including revenue, EBITDA, and order book figures, which can indirectly influence investor sentiment and capital flows.2 While not direct inflow data, these reports offer fundamental insights that drive investment decisions.
To identify tickers with high inflows, users would typically leverage Fintel's screening tools, which allow for filtering by metrics such as institutional buying activity, unusual options volume, or significant changes in short interest. These tools provide a more dynamic view of capital movement than static reports.