A few years ago, hedge fund Level Global Investors made $54 million
selling Dell Computer stock based on insider information from a Dell
employee. When charged with illegal insider trading, Global Investors'
co-founder Anthony Chiasson claimed he didn't know where the tip came
from.
Chiasson argued that few traders on Wall Street ever know where the inside tips they use come from because confidential information is, in his words, the "coin of the realm in securities markets."
Last week the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which oversees federal prosecutions of Wall Street, agreed. It overturned Chiasson's conviction, citing lack of evidence Chiasson received the tip directly, or knew insiders were leaking confidential information in exchange for some personal benefit.
The Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 banned insider trading but left it up to the Securities and Exchange Commission and the courts to define it. Which they have - in recent decades so broadly that confidential information is indeed the coin of the realm.
Read more: The Coin of the Realm: How Inside Traders Are Rigging America | Robert Reich
Chiasson argued that few traders on Wall Street ever know where the inside tips they use come from because confidential information is, in his words, the "coin of the realm in securities markets."
Last week the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which oversees federal prosecutions of Wall Street, agreed. It overturned Chiasson's conviction, citing lack of evidence Chiasson received the tip directly, or knew insiders were leaking confidential information in exchange for some personal benefit.
The Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 banned insider trading but left it up to the Securities and Exchange Commission and the courts to define it. Which they have - in recent decades so broadly that confidential information is indeed the coin of the realm.
Read more: The Coin of the Realm: How Inside Traders Are Rigging America | Robert Reich
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