This article, by Professor Yesha Yadav of Vanderbilt Law School, examines modern information flows by which securities are bought and sold and argues that the instantaneous processing of market information by high-frequency trading institutionalizes a group of “structural insiders” who can take advantage of information earlier than those on the outside. Yadav analogizes the advantages enjoyed by these structural insiders to those found in the context of corporate insider trading and asks why each is subject to different treatment under the law
Despite the longstanding insider trading debate, there is little empirical research on insider tradi...
Insider trading has been a challenge for government regulators, corporate compliance officers, and m...
This Article analyzes the elements of Section 16(b) of the 1934 Securities Exchange Act, as well as ...
This Article argues that the emergence of algorithmic trading raises a new challenge for the law and...
Several recent high-profile insider trading losses have not stopped the federal government from aggr...
In this Article, Professor Wolfson advances the concept that insider trading law under Securities an...
This article focuses on the nature and position of corporate insiders. The discussion leads to a sug...
Whether and how the federal securities laws should restrict insider trading is one of the most hotly...
The prohibition against insider trading is becoming increasingly anachronistic in markets where deri...
The following essay is based on testimony the author delivered to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committe...
Data summarized in the opening of this article document shows that in- side trading is a growth indu...
Data summarized in the opening of this article document that inside trading is a growth industry. An...
This article, by Professor Peter J. Henning of the Wayne State University Law School, analyzes the h...
Data summarized in the opening of this article document that inside trading is a growth industry. An...
Whether and how the federal securities laws should restrict insider trading is one of the most hotly...
Despite the longstanding insider trading debate, there is little empirical research on insider tradi...
Insider trading has been a challenge for government regulators, corporate compliance officers, and m...
This Article analyzes the elements of Section 16(b) of the 1934 Securities Exchange Act, as well as ...
This Article argues that the emergence of algorithmic trading raises a new challenge for the law and...
Several recent high-profile insider trading losses have not stopped the federal government from aggr...
In this Article, Professor Wolfson advances the concept that insider trading law under Securities an...
This article focuses on the nature and position of corporate insiders. The discussion leads to a sug...
Whether and how the federal securities laws should restrict insider trading is one of the most hotly...
The prohibition against insider trading is becoming increasingly anachronistic in markets where deri...
The following essay is based on testimony the author delivered to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committe...
Data summarized in the opening of this article document shows that in- side trading is a growth indu...
Data summarized in the opening of this article document that inside trading is a growth industry. An...
This article, by Professor Peter J. Henning of the Wayne State University Law School, analyzes the h...
Data summarized in the opening of this article document that inside trading is a growth industry. An...
Whether and how the federal securities laws should restrict insider trading is one of the most hotly...
Despite the longstanding insider trading debate, there is little empirical research on insider tradi...
Insider trading has been a challenge for government regulators, corporate compliance officers, and m...
This Article analyzes the elements of Section 16(b) of the 1934 Securities Exchange Act, as well as ...