Insider trading amongst high tier lawmakers: a comparative study looking at the United States and the European Union
Autor
Egozov, Richard David
Co-author
Riga Graduate School of Law
Advisor
Priede, Jānis
Datum
2022Metadata
Zur LanganzeigeZusammenfassung
Insider trading law when compared between the United States and the European Union largely
differs from the classical insider trading concepts all up to the lawmaker insider trading
concepts. Overall when evaluating the European Union and United States' approaches regarding
dealing with insider trading two main conclusions can be drafted. The European Union deals
with normal insider trading in a much better way than the United States with its most recent
regulation basically removing the opportunity for insider information to existing by forcing
publicly traded companies to share any significant information with the general public. The
United States does not have such a requirement which leads by nature to more potential insider
trading within the United States financial market. Nevertheless, the United States manages to
deal with lawmaker insider trading on a much more effective basis than the European Union
since it requires lawmakers to disclose their buying and selling of financial instruments. Overall
guarantees for more transparency which allows the United States to track abnormalities in
trades performed by lawmakers whilst it is non-existent in the European Union. Nevertheless
despite the transparency requirements reports still emerge about lawmakers abusing their
special status which leads to a potential solution of barring government employees from trading
on the stock market altogether.