Insider trading: everyone's doing it.

AuthorMangu-Ward, Katherine
PositionCitings - Brief article

A quarter of all public company deals may involve some kind of insider trading, according to a working paper by Patrick Augustin of McGill University, and Menachem Brenner and Marti G. Subrahmanyam of New York University. After looking at hundreds of transactions from 1996 to 2012, the researchers concluded that our existing laws are not very good at preventing insiders from cashing in on certain kinds of deals.

Is all this insider trading really bad news? Markets run on asymmetrical information. Stock prices bounce around because investors are doing their best to use their own superior information for personal gain. "Insider information" is just one kind of asymmetry, and not a particularly insidious one. Insider trading is a victimless crime.

What's more, it tends...

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