Insider Trading
Insider Trading
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.
A corporate CFO learning of an upcoming merger and buying stock before the public announcement constitutes illegal insider trading.
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.
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?
B is correct. Jennifer must refuse to execute the trade because the CFO possesses material non-public information (MNPI) about the disappointing clinical trial results. Trading on this information would be illegal insider trading. As a fiduciary, Jennifer has a duty to prevent her client from engaging in illegal conduct, even at the client's request.
A is incorrect because executing the trade would make both the CFO and potentially Jennifer liable for insider trading (the CFO as the insider, Jennifer potentially as an aider and abettor). C is incorrect and would compound the violation by "tipping" other clients with MNPI, creating additional tipper-tippee liability. D is incorrect because simply delaying doesn't solve the problem. The CFO still cannot trade on MNPI, and Jennifer cannot facilitate such trading.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding of fiduciary duties and regulatory compliance in real-world scenarios. Investment advisers must recognize MNPI situations and refuse to participate in illegal trading, even when clients request it. This protects both the client and the adviser from civil and criminal liability.
What two characteristics must information possess for trading on it to constitute illegal insider trading?
C is correct. Illegal insider trading requires trading on information that is both material (meaning it would influence a reasonable investor's decision to buy or sell) and non-public (not available to the general investing public). Both elements must be present.
A is incorrect because while the information being accurate may be relevant, "material and accurate" doesn't capture the legal test. information must be non-public, not just accurate. B is incorrect because "verified" is not a legal requirement; unverified rumors can still be MNPI if they are material and non-public. D is incorrect because "confidential" and "profitable" are not the precise legal terms; not all confidential information is material, and profitability is an outcome, not a defining characteristic.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests the precise legal definition of insider trading. Understanding that BOTH materiality AND non-public status are required is essential for identifying violations and advising clients on compliance. Even one element alone (material but public, or non-public but immaterial) does not constitute insider trading.
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Access Free BetaAn 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?
C is correct. The SEC can seek civil penalties of up to three times (3x) the profit gained from insider trading. Calculate: $30,000 profit × 3 = $90,000 maximum civil penalty. This is in addition to disgorgement of the original $30,000 profit, meaning the violator could pay $120,000 total ($30,000 disgorgement + $90,000 penalty).
A ($30,000) represents only the actual profit gained, not the civil penalty multiplier. B ($60,000) incorrectly uses 2x instead of 3x the profit. D ($240,000) incorrectly applies the 3x multiplier to the total sale proceeds ($80,000 × 3) rather than to the profit gained ($30,000 × 3).
The Series 65 exam tests understanding of the severe financial penalties for insider trading violations. The treble damages provision (3x profits) serves as a powerful deterrent and can result in penalties far exceeding the illegal gains. Investment advisers must understand these consequences to properly advise clients and maintain compliance.
All of the following statements about insider trading are accurate EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). Not all trading by corporate insiders is illegal. Corporate insiders (officers, directors, 10% shareholders) can legally trade their own company's stock as long as they do NOT possess material non-public information. Legal insider trades must be reported to the SEC on Forms 3, 4, and 5, but the trading itself is permitted. The statement incorrectly suggests all insider trading is illegal.
A is accurate: Both tippers and tippees face liability under the tipper-tippee theory of insider trading. The tipper for breaching fiduciary duty and the tippee for knowingly trading on MNPI. B is accurate: Insiders in possession of MNPI must abstain from trading. They cannot trade on material non-public information. D is accurate: Insider trading penalties are severe and multi-layered, including disgorgement (giving back profits), civil penalties (up to 3x profits), and imprisonment (up to 20 years).
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to distinguish between legal and illegal insider trading. Understanding that corporate insiders CAN trade legally (with proper reporting and without MNPI) is crucial for compliance and client education. Many candidates incorrectly believe all insider trading is prohibited, when in fact it's trading on MNPI that's illegal.
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
C is correct. Parties 1, 2, and 3 all face potential insider trading liability.
Statement 1 is TRUE: The pharmaceutical executive is the original tipper who breached their fiduciary duty by disclosing material non-public information (the pending FDA approval) to their spouse.
Statement 2 is TRUE: The executive's spouse is liable both as a tippee (receiving MNPI from the executive) and as an intermediate tipper (passing MNPI to the friend). Courts have consistently held that family members who receive tips face the same liability as the original insider.
Statement 3 is TRUE: The friend is a remote tippee who traded on MNPI. Even though the friend is two steps removed from the original insider, they can still be liable if they knew or should have known the information was material, non-public, and improperly obtained.
Statement 4 is FALSE: The broker who executed the trade faces no liability absent evidence they knew about the MNPI. Brokers executing customer orders in the normal course of business are not liable for their clients' insider trading unless they are knowing participants in the scheme.
The Series 65 exam tests understanding of the tipper-tippee liability chain and how insider trading liability extends beyond the original insider. The chain of liability can extend through multiple tippers and tippees as long as each party knew or should have known the information was MNPI. This is critical for compliance, as even remote participants can face prosecution.
💡 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:
More in Prohibited Practices
Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: