Insider Trading

Laws & Regulations High Relevance

Trading securities based on material, non-public information (MNPI). Both elements must be present: information must be material (would affect investment decisions) AND non-public (not available to the general investing public). Violations result in civil penalties (up to 3x profits), disgorgement of profits, and imprisonment up to 20 years.

Example

A corporate CFO learning of an upcoming merger and buying stock before the public announcement constitutes illegal insider trading.

Common Confusion

Not all trading by insiders is illegal. Information must be both material (would affect investment decision) AND non-public. Legal insider trading occurs when company insiders trade their own stock but report it to the SEC.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying when information qualifies as both material AND non-public
  • Recognizing tipper-tippee liability chain (both can be prosecuted)
  • Understanding that a transaction is required - simply possessing or sharing MNPI without trading is not a violation
  • Distinguishing between legal insider trading (reported) and illegal insider trading (MNPI)
  • Identifying penalties including disgorgement, treble damages, and imprisonment

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Civil penalty multiplier Up to 3x profits gained or losses avoided SEC can seek treble damages for insider trading violations
Criminal imprisonment Up to 20 years For willful violations of securities laws including insider trading

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Jennifer, a financial advisor, has a client who is the CFO of a publicly traded pharmaceutical company. The CFO mentions during a meeting that the company will likely announce disappointing clinical trial results next week, though this has not been made public. The CFO asks Jennifer to sell all their holdings in the company immediately. What should Jennifer do?

Question 2

What two characteristics must information possess for trading on it to constitute illegal insider trading?

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Question 3

An investment adviser representative illegally trades on material non-public information, purchasing shares for $50,000 and selling them after the public announcement for $80,000, realizing a $30,000 profit. The SEC brings a civil enforcement action. What is the maximum civil penalty the SEC can seek under insider trading laws?

Question 4

All of the following statements about insider trading are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

A pharmaceutical company executive learns that the FDA will approve their blockbuster drug tomorrow, information not yet public. The executive tells their spouse, who tells a friend, who then purchases call options on the company. The stock rises 40% after the announcement. Which parties potentially face insider trading liability?

1. The pharmaceutical executive (original tipper)
2. The executive's spouse (intermediate tipper)
3. The friend who purchased the options (remote tippee)
4. The broker who executed the trade

💡 Memory Aid

Insider trading = "MNP + T": Material + Non-Public + Transaction = Violation. Think of MNPI like classified information - BOTH "classified" (non-public) AND "important" (material) are required. Remember: Simply possessing or sharing MNPI is imprudent, but not a violation until someone TRADES.

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:

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