There was one major error in the Pershing Square post - which is I suggested that an analyst at PS was charged. No such event happened.
The analyst was not charged. It was the room mate as tipper and a friend as tipee.
Whatever. Bill Ackman's presentation was as far as I know sourced entirely from public information. It is in my opinion wrong - but that is beside the point.
All the room mate knew is that Bill Ackman was going to publicize public information and his analysis of it.
It is a stretch of insider trading rules to deem as insider trading the future publication of already public information.
It is a stretch that I would rather have seen challenged in court. My view remains: SEC over-reach.
John
You are likely correct....but I think the SEC is looking at it from the point of view by asking the question of whether the "man on the street" had access to the same information. Since the "man" didn't, and the information was highly likely to create an easy windfall (which it did) the SEC don't like it.
ReplyDeleteSimilar laws have come into effect with the big bond trading houses not being able to use sell-side bank recommendations as inputs to quantitative models because they get access to it before the "public" does. They have caved and have stopped using the survey info as input to their models.
those guys are small fish. those scumbags at the SEC know they won't have the resources to fight back. they are just doing this to show that 'we are working'. just like they did with the Maverick
ReplyDeleteWhy is this different from, say, an intern on Jim Cramer's tv show who trades based on knowledge of what Cramer is going to say tomorrow?
ReplyDeleteThis is not small fish by the way. It sends a pretty loud message to young financiers about how easily the SEC can link unusual trading activity to a source of misappropriated information.
-Amos
quite agree with commenter 2;
ReplyDeletethis is just to show that they are doing something; regulators and SEC are cosy with the big guys (for whom the amounts in question would be a rounding error) ; they will do nothing to rock that boat which may be their next employer
From a CFA perspective, I think it would at least violate the code of ethics. I have no clue if the analyst was a charter holder, but the fact that this case would violate CFA policy might give some clue as to why the SEC is all bent out of shape.
ReplyDeleteYou're correct in saying that Pershing was simply publicizing public information. And if Pershing was a no name shop, I don't think the SEC would be involved. However, since Pershing is a household name, and the analyst certainly knew his report would be material if not nonpublic, he had a duty to not trade on it. The same would happen if a major analyst at a bulge-bracket firm downgraded a stock to Sell. There could be no new information whatsoever, but it will be material to the stock and the rating change will be nonpublic. Trading ahead of the event would then be a violation of code.
Should the SEC be involved? I'm not sure, the lawyers can battle that one out. But to say that Pershing's analyst didn't know exactly what he was doing is a stretch...
If you think this is SEC over-reach, you should get familiar with the FCA's definition of "market abuse" in the UK. They have gone way beyond what was previously understood by insider trading.
ReplyDelete