A Knowledge Problem with Insider Trading Law
Reihan Salam at The Daily is of course glad hedge fund villain Raj Rajaratnam was convicted for insider trading, blah blah, but spells out one of the perverse results of keeping those who know the most about companies (theoretically) from helping spread that knowledge and help bake it into the price of stock through the buying and selling of stocks in those companies:
The basic idea behind these [insider trading] rules is that officers, directors and stockholders that own at least 10 percent of a company should not be allowed to use inside information to influence their investment decisions. Say a senior executive knows that his company is about to post huge losses in the next quarter. He might use this information to dump the company's stock before outside investors catch wind of the bad news and the stock price plummets. Similarly, investors who own a big stake in a company can bend the ear of directors or executives to gain the material nonpublic information, i.e., information that only insiders have that could affect the movement of the stock price. The SEC demands that insiders file statements that reveal all of the equity securities they own, to guard against just this kind of behavior.
The result of these regulations is that American investors, large and small, keep the executives running the big public companies they invest in at arm's length. They don't forge long-term relationships based in mutual trust. Instead, thousands of anonymous investors pump money in and out of these companies, knowing nothing more than what appears in annual and quarterly reports….
As a result, the executives and directors of big public companies can get away with almost anything, as their investors are widely dispersed and legally barred from profiting from any effort to get under the hood of the company. The corporate scandals that marked the Enron era — the headlong rush into toxic assets, the corruption of corporate boards — all can be traced to the resulting lack of accountability. Ironically enough, insider trading rules work all too well. They've not only restored confidence in the stock market. They've created the illusion that it is safe to invest in a company without doing any due diligence of your own.
Privately held companies understand the benefits of linking ownership with oversight and with the ability to act to profit on that oversight:
Contrast this with venture capitalists, who devote considerable energy to getting to know the entrepreneurs they back. It's not unusual for VCs to offer advice to the startups they invest in, and to devour all of the information they can to keep their partners on track. The best VCs understand that this nitty-gritty engagement in their investments can make all the difference between success and failure.
Insider trading laws have been looked at askance here at Reason by Michael McMenamin and me.
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Q: How many flies does it take to screw in a light bulb?
A: Two. But nobody knows how they get in there.
So where is the Friday afternoon thread on Osama's porn collection?
I just need to read the right threads I guess 😉
...which is entirely a contractual issue between him and the company, not the basis of any legitimate law.
In particular, the "outside investors" who are precluded by the insider trading from taking advantage of the bad news are not you and me: they are large institutional investment firms and traders.
Insider trading laws are yet another example of large corporations bending government legislation and regulation to serve themselves while pretending to serve the public at large.
Lemme get this straight: A law that penalizes the use and dissemination of valuable information actually reduces the amount of information in circulation?
Holy shit. How could anyone have seen that coming!
Also, what if someone who was going to buy stock a company doesn't because he receives an inside tip that bad news is coming. Or, alternatively, someone who was going to sell his shares, but doesn't because an insider tells him of good quarterly results coming soon. These inactions are still effectively the equivalent of insider trading, but are non-punishable offenses. A complete double standard.
As a former executive at a publicly traded company, I can tell you that the rules around "material non-public disclosure" and prohibitions on insiders from trading on this information have value. Insiders can manipulate the timing and characterization of material news in ways that distort the information available to the public. Insiders have a fiduciary duty to NOT do so, but the ability to prove fraud is nearly impossible to outright impossible.
Since that is the case, such rules make information playing field of MATERIAL news reasonably level, allowing investors to invest with some confidence and dissuading insiders from distorting their disclosure for narrow, non-fiduciary purposes.
It ain't perfect, but nothing is.
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Is the concern with Insider Trading like the whole Pete Rose thing, where people inside the company can produce negative results to profit on them?
I never said the following:
"Reihan Salam at The Daily is of course glad hedge fund villain Raj Rajaratnam was convicted for insider trading, blah blah ..."
I said something very specific:
"Though the federal government's case against Rajaratnam may have overreached in some respects, there is no question that he bribed people like disgraced former Intel executive Rajiv Goel into betraying their employers, and that alone merits jail time."
That is not the same thing as insider trading. It is bribing an officer of a company to betray his responsibilities to that company. You might think that this kind of behavior should be legal, and that's fair enough. I respectfully disagree.
So much excellent information on here and really I dont know much about this. Thanks for sharing your interesting points of view.
Interesting article, it really makes someone think. I always like to read thought provoking articles about things like this. Keep the great posts coming. Thanks again for sharing it with us.