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Journal of Pediatric Ophthalmology & Strabismus, 2016
This chapter studies the international market malpractice of insider trading where officials holding a fiduciary duty towards the company, violate the same to utilise company specific and price sensitive information to trade in company securities before such information is announced to the public investors.
Helen, Jiang, Joseph, Panarelli
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This chapter studies the international market malpractice of insider trading where officials holding a fiduciary duty towards the company, violate the same to utilise company specific and price sensitive information to trade in company securities before such information is announced to the public investors.
Helen, Jiang, Joseph, Panarelli
+5 more sources
Proceedings of the 2013 IEEE/ACM International Conference on Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining, 2013
How do company insiders trade? Do their trading behaviors differ based on their roles (e.g., CEO vs. CFO)? Do those behaviors change over time (e.g., impacted by the 2008 market crash)? Can we identify insiders who have similar trading behaviors? And what does that tell us? This work presents the first academic, large-scale exploratory study of insider
Acar Tamersoy +5 more
openaire +1 more source
How do company insiders trade? Do their trading behaviors differ based on their roles (e.g., CEO vs. CFO)? Do those behaviors change over time (e.g., impacted by the 2008 market crash)? Can we identify insiders who have similar trading behaviors? And what does that tell us? This work presents the first academic, large-scale exploratory study of insider
Acar Tamersoy +5 more
openaire +1 more source
Journal of Investment Compliance, 2007
PurposeThis paper aims to remind investment firms of the importance of policies, procedures, and supervisory controls to detect the misuse of material, non‐public information.Design/methodology/approachSummarizes a recent increase in regulatory concern over insider trading and suggests that firms review their “information wall” procedures.FindingsAt a ...
Timothy P. Burke, Hope M. Jarkowski
openaire +2 more sources
PurposeThis paper aims to remind investment firms of the importance of policies, procedures, and supervisory controls to detect the misuse of material, non‐public information.Design/methodology/approachSummarizes a recent increase in regulatory concern over insider trading and suggests that firms review their “information wall” procedures.FindingsAt a ...
Timothy P. Burke, Hope M. Jarkowski
openaire +2 more sources
2013
Insider-controlled companies have often been seen as a risky option where governance is concerned, but is a company ownership a red herring?
Mc Cahery, J.A., Vermeulen, E.P.M.
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Insider-controlled companies have often been seen as a risky option where governance is concerned, but is a company ownership a red herring?
Mc Cahery, J.A., Vermeulen, E.P.M.
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The Journal of Investing, 2000
In some countries, insiders are required to promptly report their trades to the relevant authorities. These reported trades allow us to evaluate how much abnormal return, if any, insiders generate. More important, we can assess whether it is worthwhile to emulate the insider9s behavior.
Stan E. Beckers, Ulrich Gathmann
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In some countries, insiders are required to promptly report their trades to the relevant authorities. These reported trades allow us to evaluate how much abnormal return, if any, insiders generate. More important, we can assess whether it is worthwhile to emulate the insider9s behavior.
Stan E. Beckers, Ulrich Gathmann
openaire +1 more source
Business and Professional Ethics Journal, 1987
To engage in insider trading is, roughly speaking, to buy or sell securities on the basis of privileged information. Suppose, for example, that the president of a company learns that another company wants to take his over. Suppose he secretly buys a large amount of his company's stock and makes a handsome profit when the public at large is finally ...
openaire +1 more source
To engage in insider trading is, roughly speaking, to buy or sell securities on the basis of privileged information. Suppose, for example, that the president of a company learns that another company wants to take his over. Suppose he secretly buys a large amount of his company's stock and makes a handsome profit when the public at large is finally ...
openaire +1 more source
2002
Abstract Traders engage in insider trading when they base their trades on material information about the value of an instrument that is not publicly available. Most insider trading involves private information that corporate managers know about the prospects of their companies.
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Abstract Traders engage in insider trading when they base their trades on material information about the value of an instrument that is not publicly available. Most insider trading involves private information that corporate managers know about the prospects of their companies.
+4 more sources

