Mutual funds are required to impose Codes of Ethics on many of their employees. Did this requirement make a difference? After all, similar Codes proliferate in many other financial and business corporations! 4 with fairly miserable results. In fact, the temptations facing employees and managers of many business corporations that published self-imposed Codes are relatively weaker than the temptations facing employees and managers of mutual funds. Yet as compared to mutual funds, these business companies have failed to prevent insider-trading! I believe that regulated mutual funds are less prone to insider-trading than non-regulated funds and traders because their Codes of Ethics have introduced enforcement mechanisms and have influenced thei...
In this paper we investigate when public enforcement of insider trading regulations reduces the amou...
Professor John P. Anderson’s article, What’s the Harm in Issuer-Licensed Insider Trading?, argues th...
This Article proceeds as follows: Section I sets the table by dismissing the notion that economic an...
Mutual funds are required to impose Codes of Ethics on many of their employees. Did this requirement...
In the first essay we study whether and how personal off-the-job managerial indiscretions impact cor...
There is growing support for the claim that issuer-licensed insider trading (when the insider’s firm...
Insider trading encompasses the buying or selling of stocks based on non-public information about th...
The academic debate about the desirability of prohibiting insider trading is longstanding and as yet...
Insider trading is the most common form of securities fraud. Today it remains as confrontational as ...
Regulators demand the impossible when they require issuers to design and implement effective insider...
Trading by an insider on the basis of material non-public corporate information violates the securit...
The limits of markets as mechanisms for constraining socially suboptimal behavior are well documente...
The limits of markets as mechanisms for constraining socially suboptimal behavior are well documente...
The quickest way to become famous is often to become infamous, as arbitrageur Ivan Boesky has recent...
This Article makes the case for a new U.S. statutory provision that defines and prohibits insider tr...
In this paper we investigate when public enforcement of insider trading regulations reduces the amou...
Professor John P. Anderson’s article, What’s the Harm in Issuer-Licensed Insider Trading?, argues th...
This Article proceeds as follows: Section I sets the table by dismissing the notion that economic an...
Mutual funds are required to impose Codes of Ethics on many of their employees. Did this requirement...
In the first essay we study whether and how personal off-the-job managerial indiscretions impact cor...
There is growing support for the claim that issuer-licensed insider trading (when the insider’s firm...
Insider trading encompasses the buying or selling of stocks based on non-public information about th...
The academic debate about the desirability of prohibiting insider trading is longstanding and as yet...
Insider trading is the most common form of securities fraud. Today it remains as confrontational as ...
Regulators demand the impossible when they require issuers to design and implement effective insider...
Trading by an insider on the basis of material non-public corporate information violates the securit...
The limits of markets as mechanisms for constraining socially suboptimal behavior are well documente...
The limits of markets as mechanisms for constraining socially suboptimal behavior are well documente...
The quickest way to become famous is often to become infamous, as arbitrageur Ivan Boesky has recent...
This Article makes the case for a new U.S. statutory provision that defines and prohibits insider tr...
In this paper we investigate when public enforcement of insider trading regulations reduces the amou...
Professor John P. Anderson’s article, What’s the Harm in Issuer-Licensed Insider Trading?, argues th...
This Article proceeds as follows: Section I sets the table by dismissing the notion that economic an...