GOYABEAN
.950 JDJ

Reports: 4 US senators sold stocks before coronavirus market crash
The name getting the most attention is Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina, whose committee was getting daily briefs on the threat of the new virus.

They wrote laws to protect themselves from insider trading violations.
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Ex-Rep. Chris Collins Pleads Guilty to Insider Trading Charges (Published 2019)
The four-term Republican, who resigned from the House on Monday, shared inside information about a company with his son.www.nytimes.com
And who did he tell? Sort of like a virus.That's different he told his son.
would we expect anything different coming from Washington
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Reports: 4 US senators sold stocks before coronavirus market crash
The name getting the most attention is Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina, whose committee was getting daily briefs on the threat of the new virus.www.wnep.com
Didn't see the news, but lemmme guess, they are all republican's. Had they been the other side of the aisle this would only be heard on the most radical conservative news shows. As it is, it does enhance the chance for the Rep's to lose the senate. God help us.
Robin
3 R
1D
I agree with your take on it.
Didn't see the news, but lemmme guess, they are all republican's. Had they been the other side of the aisle this would only be heard on the most radical conservative news shows. As it is, it does enhance the chance for the Rep's to lose the senate. God help us.
Robin
would we expect anything different coming from Washington
![]()
Reports: 4 US senators sold stocks before coronavirus market crash
The name getting the most attention is Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina, whose committee was getting daily briefs on the threat of the new virus.www.wnep.com
And they had it on tape ...That's different he told his son.
Here's the thing...I don't think "insider trading" should be a crime.
Unpopular opinion, sure. But if I had a ton of money in stocks, and I found out that they were going to crash in a few days, you, by law, are forcing me to lose my money and go down with the ship? Fuck you.
"Insider trading" laws scream "everybody gets a trophy."
"But he knew something we didn't, and that isn't FAAAAAAIR! :'("
"It's ok baby, we'll punish those bad money savers."
How's that work with "I stocked up on guns and ammo before the zombie outbreak and now my friend wants some. I told him to piss up a rope."
"But that's not FAIIIIIIR! Sharing is caring!"
"You're right honey, we'll punish those evil hoarders."
Ok, now it's sounding even MORE like a "that's not fair" participation trophy.Absolutely disagree 100%. Insider trading goes WAAAY beyond knowing what's going to happen due to a crash.
When a company is looking to do a leveraged buyout of another company, get notification of a pending FDA approval for a drug, sign a massive contract, lose a massive contract, merge with another company, fire a CEO, increase dividends, split the stock, etc., having inside knowledge of any of these or a myriad of other various influencing factors should unequivocally preclude an insider or anyone they tell of the pending occurrence from being able to trade that stock. With this inside information large blocks of stock can be bought and sold before the gen pop gets word of it. Those large blocks traded can and do swing share price prior to the market getting notification of the information. This puts every 'little guy' out there at a distinct disadvantage. Those on the inside can benefit with massive profits. Insider trading creates millionaires overnight.
There's a reason the SEC requires corporate officers to file Form 4 (disclosure of any purchase or sale of their corporate stock). The amount of money that would be made on insider trading is staggering if left unchecked.
Who forced you to invest with said companies?
What are my insider trading guidelines again? I have forgotten.See, that's the thing. Every single company that is listed and traded publicly, 100% of them, falls into the category of 'said company'. So if you want to play the market fairly you can't, under your insider trading guidelines.