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  1. #1
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Is Congress Guilty of Insider Trading?

    Is Congress Guilty of Insider Trading?

    Wednesday, 01 Dec 2010 01:00
    PM By Richard Rahn

    Stock or commodity trading on "inside information" has been illegal since the early 1960s. Yet there is one group that frequently has access to nonpublic information that can greatly affect stock prices, to the extent of making or breaking a company or even an industry, and these "insiders" are considered exempt from prosecution by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The insiders I refer to are members of Congress and their staffs.

    They have prior knowledge about which companies or industries will or will not be "bailed out," have their taxes raised or lowered, be subject to costly new regulations or exempted from such regulations, receive government contracts, etc. However, because the members of Congress and their staffs do not obtain their information from employees of the companies affected, they are not considered insiders.

    There have been a number of recent news stories about how the average member of Congress showed an increase in net wealth over the past couple of years, while the average American was losing net wealth. The obvious conclusion is that members of Congress knew things the rest of us did not and acted on this knowledge to their own advantage — no surprise.

    A new study that empirically demonstrates this, "Capitalizing on Capitol Hill: Informed Trading by Hedge Fund Managers," has just been published by the Social Science Research Network. The authors of the study, Jiekun Huang and Meng Gao, found that hedge funds connected with lobbyists, relative to non-connected ones, outperform by 1.6 percent to 2.5 percent per month in politically sensitive stocks compared to nonpolitical stocks. These results suggest that hedge-fund managers exploit private information, which can be an important source of their superior performance.

    We are in the process of finding out what actually was in the 2,000-page-plus healthcare bill and financial "reform" bill. Those bills have many winners and losers — which previously were known only to the lobbyists and the members of Congress and their staffs who put in the specific deals.

    This is why House Speaker Nancy Pelosi famously said, "We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it." It will never be known who gained financially from the inside information that was acted on as these bills were being passed, but you can bet the gain was in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

    A bill was introduced early in this current Congress (H.R. 682: Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act) which would prohibit the sale and purchase of securities or commodities' futures based on knowledge gained from a member of Congress, an employee of Congress or other federal employees. The proposed legislation is so broad and at points so vague as to be unenforceable in a consistent manner.

    This proposed act makes the same mistake that the SEC often makes in dealing with "inside information," in that there is an underlying assumption that the uncontrolled dispersal of information about the health or prospects of companies is bad and that known information can be controlled.

    The recent release of highly classified information from Pentagon sources by WikiLeaks again shows the near impossibility of controlling even the most sensitive information.

    Time and time again, the U.S. government has shown that it cannot protect sensitive information, from atomic secrets to sensitive financial data held by the Internal Revenue Service. Those who tell us that any information is safe when held by the U.S. government are both supremely arrogant and ignorant of history, including the news of recent weeks.

    The SEC has a long history of not knowing what it should have known (e.g., Enron, Bernard Madoff) and at the same time trying to stop the dispersal of information about companies that is necessary for markets to operate properly. The SEC is in the process of trying to find ways to criminalize those who (outside a firm) find better ways of doing research or modeling what they think is going on in a firm, even though they have received no direct, nonpublic information from real insiders.

    This approach eventually could kill the whole field of securities analysis. Only government employees at the SEC could dream up a scheme to try to keep everyone ignorant and call it "progress."

    Professor Henry Manne, dean emeritus of the George Mason University Law School and arguably the nation's greatest scholar on "insider trading" issues, observes that the decades of failure at the SEC show that enforcement of insider-trader laws is not feasible and often is counterproductive.

    Also, there has never been a clear definition of insider trading either from Congress or the SEC. Mr. Manne says it is time to "rethink any current policies based on a view of pricing in which we exclude the best-informed traders."

    Because insider or informed "trading clearly makes the market process work more efficiently, it aids capital allocation decisions and informs business executives through market-price feedback of the best predictions about the value of new plans."

    Outsiders are best served in making their buy and sell decisions when all of the information about a company is incorporated in its market price, even if it comes from insiders.

    As for Congress and their staffs, given that a prohibition of the use of inside information is nearly impossible, the effort should focus on more transparency. This, in part, would mean legislation being passed in small, understandable increments so that outsiders would be able to determine who benefits or loses when the legislation or regulation is proposed.

    Richard W. Rahn is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and chairman of the Institute for Global Economic Growth.

    http://www.newsmax.com/Rahn/Rahn-inside ... ode=B379-1
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  2. #2
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    every Bill that they pass that has tax payer implications is a CASH COW to Insider Traders

    Congress and the Senate are not Millionaires by luck of the draw

    A Blind Man with a Braille calculator could see this

    been saying it for years; its insider trading at its worst ... ObamaCare .. damn they are going to clean up

    Amnesty Dream Act: DAMN are they going to clean up ... 44 Billion a year of tax payer money going to leftist schools and Oligarch banks woooo hoooo ... Pickin's aint slim when you cheat walstreet investers and the American Public.. its a win/win for congress

    Dumn ASS Americans .. your stupid enough to put up with it; your stupid enough to pay the costs

    this CABAL put's the Supranos to shame
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  3. #3
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Good Ole John McCain sings Bomb Bomb Bomb ... Bomb Bomb Iran; sends your broke kids to war making 18,600 a year while HE dumps money into stocks that profit BIG TIME off of the Bills that go to the Military Industrial complex

    Wooooo Hooooo says the crowd watching the 7PM news as smart bombs hits a house that may or may not have the Taliban in it

    Woooo Hooo says John McCain and the NEO CON's on the never ending war as they're portfolio grows with froth from the tax payers dime

    Mean While.. back at the ranch... Disabled Johnny that lost both legs in the war gets sub standard treatment at the V.A.

    WHODA Frink'n Thunkit

    and they did it on your dime
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  4. #4
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Even the Dream Act is a MEGA Cash Cow to the Democrat / RINO insiders

    this all falls under the RICO Act

    but allas.. Americans are watching dancing with the stars until the REPO Man come to take the family car away

    or the Sherriff that will boot them out of their house because dad lost his job

    Food safety Bill S.510 .. you got it... a MEGA Cash Cow Infusion for the Democratic party
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