Insider Trading:
Nestle India recently said it received a warning from the country’s markets regulator for a breach of insider trading regulations “by a designated person of the company”.
- Insider trading, also known as insider dealing, is the malpractice of selling or buying a company’s securities by the insiders of a company.
- The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) defines an ‘insider’ as someone who has access to price-sensitive information about a particular company’s shares or securities.
- An insider can be anyone who has been associated with the company in some way during the six months preceding the insider trade.
- That person could be an employee, a director, relative, banker or a legal counsel to the company, or even an official of the stock exchanges, trustees or employees of an asset management company (AMC) that worked with the company.
- Insiders, who have access to confidential and exclusive information about the issuer of a particular security or stock, benefit from buying or selling undisclosed securities before they fluctuate in price.
- Insider trading is one of the most serious malpractices that exists in the market.
- In India, insider trades are regulated by the SEBI under the Insider Trading Regulations, 2015.
- To prevent such acts of insider trading and to promote fair trading in the market for the interest of common investors, SEBI has prohibited the firms from purchasing their own shares from the secondary market.
- SEBI can impose fines and prohibit individuals or entities from trading in the capital market if found in violation of rules.