Regulators really look down on insider trading. An SEC agent would rather see you picking your nose while preparing their dinner than they would like to learn that you've pulled off some insider trading.
The short-swing profit rule plays into this aggressive stance against insider trading. But, just as a lead-in, here's how insider trading works in a nutshell:
You are an executive at a company (an insider). You hear through the corporate grapevine that this quarter's earnings report is going to be stellar. In response, you buy some stock the day before the news gets released. The earnings numbers are announced the next day. The stock goes up; you sell the shares soon after, and get a tidy profit.
That series of events epitomizes insider trading. It is very illegal. So illegal that the SEC doesn't even want the whiff of potential criminality. They don't want you profiting from your own company's stock even by accident.
Hence, the short-swing profit rule. It states that if a company insider makes a profit from the quick buying and selling of the firm's stock, they have to return the cash they gained. They have to give up their profit. If a company insider buys and then sells the firm's stock (at a profit) within six months, the short-swing profit rule goes into effect. With a half-a-year timeframe, it becomes difficult to trade on any juicy insider info. The chances of insider trading becomes more remote.
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Finance: What are Insider Trading And th...11 Views
Finance a la shmoop what is insider trading and the securities fraud
Enforcement Act of 1988? all right well the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934
aka the 34 Act made it formally illegal to use inside information in trading
stocks amazingly that used to not be illegal or at least not explicitly so [People gambling]
and it wasn't enforced investing was well a clubby white man's insiders gig
and the boys took care of the boys well since people could make a lot of
money with insider information and thought they wouldn't get caught like [Boy peeing at a urinal]
well who's gonna know that I overheard the CEO of big company talking about a
merger in a Denny's washroom you know some folks pretty much ignored
the law well the 1988 law was basically Congress saying you guys were really [Congressman discussing the 1988 law]
serious about this so this new legislation added some hefty penalties
if you get caught as an inside trader people still trade on insider
information though and they still get caught and they go to jail and they lose [Jail door closes on man]
everything they have so he's got to realize some of us were just born to be
bad...
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