From: jonathon <grafolog@netcom.com>
To: Jeff Barber <jeffb@sware.com>
Message Hash: 2859bb7f710e05885d630523c874a558150495bd5bf14f99e4bc1b843b70c266
Message ID: <Pine.3.89.9606040351.A7487-0100000@netcom23>
Reply To: <199606031507.LAA15317@jafar.sware.com>
UTC Datetime: 1996-06-04 09:08:37 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 17:08:37 +0800
From: jonathon <grafolog@netcom.com>
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 17:08:37 +0800
To: Jeff Barber <jeffb@sware.com>
Subject: Re: Saw this on CNN: Anonymous Stock tips over IRC as bad???
In-Reply-To: <199606031507.LAA15317@jafar.sware.com>
Message-ID: <Pine.3.89.9606040351.A7487-0100000@netcom23>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
Jeff:
On Mon, 3 Jun 1996, Jeff Barber wrote:
> IANAL, but I think you must be wrong about this, Perry. If this were
Tim is calling any trade by an Insider, as being insider trading.
Perry is saying anybody can do insider trading.
> the case then, as an employee of company XYZ, I would never be permitted
> to buy XYZ stock (which is clearly not the case) since I *always* have
An Insider may trade stock. s/he simply has to announce
their intention to do so 30 or more days beforehand.
<< I probably have the number of days wrong, but it is
at least 30. >>
From my little black legal dictionary:
Insider: Defined in Securities and Exchagnes Act.
15 USC 78p(a) ( 1964)
An insider is every officer and director of a
corporation and any person who owns more than
ten percent of the stock of taht corporation.
Insider Trading: Buying or selling corporate stock by
by a corporate officer or other insider
who profits by his access to information not available
to the public. << Skip several paragraphs >> The prohibition
against trading on inside inforamtion is enforced regardless
of whether the trading is done by an insider, or by an
unscrupulous investor who has been tipped off by an insider.
*** end of legal defination ***
I don't have legal citations, but I do remember a scandal
in the sixties, involving secretaries passing information
on to others, who were convicted of insider trading,
amongst other things. << Not the secretaries, but those
they passed information onto, were convicted. >>
Then for those who believe that TV is real life, at
least one episode of LA Law dealt with insider trading
--- a secretary << I think -- I don't watch TV >> was
getting stock tips from an insider, and traded on that
advice. She hadn't a clue as to what she was doing,
but made a pretty penny. And was arrested for Insider
Trading. She didn't even know taht that was what she
was doing. << First aired three or four season's ago,
I think. >>
xan
jonathon
grafolog@netcom.com
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