As SoFi Technologies Inc. shares fell Friday amid the fallout over Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse, the financial-technology company’s chief executive bought up stock.

SoFi Chief Executive Anthony Noto bought about $995,000 in SoFi shares SOFI, -8.37% on Friday, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that was released after the close of trading. He purchased 180,000 shares within a range of $5.495 to $5.560 per share, for an average price of $5.5283.

Shares of SoFi, the neobanking company best known for its lending products, closed Thursday at $6.09. They hit an intraday low of $5.21 in Friday’s session before finishing the trading day at $5.58, down 8.4%.

Context: Silicon Valley Bank becomes biggest bank since 2008 financial crisis to be taken over by FDIC

The purchase showed “an opportunistic tack” on the part of Noto, as he was “buying into weakness as SOFI shares fell alongside other financials due to the problems at SVB,” according to VerityData research director Ben Silverman, who tracks insider purchasing.

“We think he’s trying to signal to investors that contagion impacting names like SoFi is creating a buying opportunity,” added Silverman.

Don’t miss: Silicon Valley bites the hand that feeds it in SVB bank run

SoFi disclosed in a separate filing Friday afternoon that it “does not hold assets with Silicon Valley Bank.” The company has a lending facility of about $40 million that’s “provided through Silicon Valley Bank” but is “unaffected by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s receivership of Silicon Valley Bank,” according to that filing.

Read: Roku says it ‘does not know’ how much of its cash it will be able to recover from SVB

Noto was an “aggressive” buyer of SoFi’s stock back in December, Silverman said, scooping up $7.4 million in shares at prices below $4.60 a share across several transactions. “That was very compelling conviction, and he timed his buying perfectly,” Silverman noted.

SoFi’s stock reached a 2023 closing high of $7.72 on Feb. 2.

See also: SoFi sues over student-loan pause to force borrowers to resume making payments

Silverman observed that Noto was “a frequent but not aggressive buyer from August 2021 to June 2022, buying in a range from around $14.00 all the way down to around $5.00.”

Source: finance.yahoo.com