There is growing support for the claim that issuer-licensed insider trading (when the insider’s firm approves the trade in advance and has disclosed that it permits such trading pursuant to published guidelines) is economically efficient and morally harmless. But for the last thirty-five years, many scholars and the U.S. Supreme Court have relied on Professor William Wang’s “Law of Conservation of Securities” to rebut claims that insider trading can be victimless. This law is purported to show that every act of insider trading, even those licensed by the issuer, causes an identifiable harm to someone. This article argues that the Law of Conservation of Securities is not helpful to answering the moral question of whether insider trading is a...
The following essay is based on testimony the author delivered to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committe...
This article, by Professor Peter J. Henning of the Wayne State University Law School, analyzes the h...
With regard to issuer purchases, some of the traditional policy rationales against insider trading d...
There is growing support for the claim that issuer-licensed insider trading (when the insider’s firm...
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...
The Supreme Court doctrine defining insider trading and a competing theory called the misappropriati...
This Article makes the case for a new U.S. statutory provision that defines and prohibits insider tr...
This article identifies the moral wrongness of insider trading. It examines the leading arguments fo...
When Henry Manne wrote his famous article, In Defense of Insider Trading, following his classic book...
Insider trading is the most common form of securities fraud. Today it remains as confrontational as ...
Few issues have sparked as much debate and disagreement among Law and Economics scholars as the proh...
Securities trading has generated some of the most sensational scandals in the popular business press...
Although insider trading is illegal, a stubborn minority still defends it as an efficient means of c...
This paper addresses the concern the authors have surrounding the legislation that governs Congressi...
The following essay is based on testimony the author delivered to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committe...
This article, by Professor Peter J. Henning of the Wayne State University Law School, analyzes the h...
With regard to issuer purchases, some of the traditional policy rationales against insider trading d...
There is growing support for the claim that issuer-licensed insider trading (when the insider’s firm...
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...
The Supreme Court doctrine defining insider trading and a competing theory called the misappropriati...
This Article makes the case for a new U.S. statutory provision that defines and prohibits insider tr...
This article identifies the moral wrongness of insider trading. It examines the leading arguments fo...
When Henry Manne wrote his famous article, In Defense of Insider Trading, following his classic book...
Insider trading is the most common form of securities fraud. Today it remains as confrontational as ...
Few issues have sparked as much debate and disagreement among Law and Economics scholars as the proh...
Securities trading has generated some of the most sensational scandals in the popular business press...
Although insider trading is illegal, a stubborn minority still defends it as an efficient means of c...
This paper addresses the concern the authors have surrounding the legislation that governs Congressi...
The following essay is based on testimony the author delivered to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committe...
This article, by Professor Peter J. Henning of the Wayne State University Law School, analyzes the h...
With regard to issuer purchases, some of the traditional policy rationales against insider trading d...