U.S. corporate crisis bailouts may prove bonanza for
insider trading, new study warns
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[March 26, 2020] By
Chris Prentice and Lawrence Delevingne
WASHINGTON/
BOSTON (Reuters) - White-collar
crime prosecutors and defense attorneys are likely to be busy following
a massive economic stimulus package from the U.S. Congress aimed at
mitigating the fallout from the coronavirus, according to a new academic
study of insider trading.
The research, from scholars at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton
School, Stanford University, University of Cambridge and IESE Business
School, found insider trading profitability jumped dramatically during
the 2007-2009 global financial crisis and subsequent government bailout.
"Anytime the government picks winner and losers, there is a greater
opportunity for insider trading by connected individuals," said Daniel
Taylor, an associate professor at University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton
School and one of the authors of the report.
The report analyzed trading by corporate insiders at leading financial
institutions before and after Congress finalized its $700 billion
Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) to purchase toxic assets from
troubled lenders, the details of which were largely thrashed out by
executives and government officials in private.
The study, published online this month in the Journal of Finance, found
evidence of abnormal trading by politically connected insiders 30 days
ahead of the TARP infusions, which either boosted or hit company share
prices, depending on the situation.
The researchers examined open market purchases and sales by officers and
directors at 497 publicly traded institutions between 2005 and 2011.
They then compared the trades placed by insiders who appeared to have
identifiable connections at regulators, the Treasury and Congress, with
the trades placed by insiders who appeared to have no such connection.
During the period over which TARP funds were disbursed, the
one-month-ahead future returns between purchases and sales by insiders
with political connections was 8.89% versus 2.81% for those without,
according to the study. It also identified a pronounced increase in the
trading activity of politically connected insiders 30 days prior to the
TARP announcement.
"I hope we can avoid repeating it this time around, but I am not
optimistic," Taylor said.
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The U.S. Capitol during a morning rainstorm, after Congress agreed
to a multi-trillion dollar economic stimulus package created in
response to the economic fallout from the COVID-19 Coronavirus, on
Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., March 25, 2020. REUTERS/Tom
Brenner/File Photo
Wall Street rallied for a second straight session on Wednesday as the U.S.
Senate neared a vote on a $2 trillion package to support businesses and
households devastated by the coronavirus pandemic. The package will include a
$500 billion fund to help hard-hit industries including airlines, and at least
$100 billion for hospitals and related health systems.
Concerns are already growing that some individuals may have gained an edge amid
the chaos by getting material information on the spread of the coronavirus and
regulatory moves ahead of the rest of the world.
Most notably, the U.S. dollar pared gains moments before the Federal Reserve
announced last week that it was launching a new dollar funding facility for nine
central banks to ease a global dollar crunch, Reuters reported.
Separately, two Republican U.S. senators were criticized last week for selling
large amounts of stock before the coronavirus-induced market meltdown and after
closed-door briefings on the coronavirus outbreak.
Legally, trades that may be based on information gleaned from political
connections occupy a "gray area" since the information may be valuable, but may
not relate to a particular company or sector, or even be very specific, said
Taylor.
"I[t]s something that causes the insider to revise their beliefs about future
value, but it’s not a hard piece of information. The legal definition of insider
trading differs from the economic definition," said Taylor.
On Monday, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) warned executives
against insider trading, noting the coronavirus disruption was increasing the
number of people with access to material non-public information.
"I would not be surprised if enforcement activity picked up," said Kathleen
Ceglarski Burns, a partner in Nixon Peabody’s Litigation department. "I would
expect the government will likely look closely at financial reporting, risk
disclosures and corporate insider trading as well.”
(Reporting by Chris Prentice in Washington and Lawrence Delevingne in Boston;
Writing by Michelle Price; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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