SEC charges Netflix insider trading ring
clpm4j 2021-08-18 21:48:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I'm curious which messaging app they used. I also wonder if someone tipped off the SEC or they just uncovered this in their own analysis work - it doesn't seem like making $3m off Netflix stock trades over a couple of years is particularly alarming on the surface, but idk I'm not an expert... maybe the timing of the buy orders and also looking into what other trades they were making (if any) was easy to spot.
elliekelly 2021-08-18 22:19:33 +0000 UTC [ - ]
It’s part of a broader change in the way the SEC approaches insider trading. Previously they took an “issuer based” approach where a big pop or loss in $ABC triggered a look at all the trades in the right direction prior to the announcement. Now they take a “trader based” approach where they look at person’s pattern of activity over time.
So if your spouse or sibling works in M&A and tips you off to potential deals so you can make (relatively) small investments on the inside information the scheme will be flagged and investigated much more quickly.
charlesdm 2021-08-19 08:10:55 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ucha 2021-08-19 10:57:54 +0000 UTC [ - ]
However, I'm not sure they do have that information. I would speculate that the number of people who make large option bets before earnings correctly on the same stock over multiple quarters should be zero and if it is very small, it is worth investigating. If they see that a subset of traders is 3 people with Korean names, that would immediately suggest that something is wrong...
elliekelly 2021-08-19 13:05:44 +0000 UTC [ - ]
toofy 2021-08-19 11:11:57 +0000 UTC [ - ]
But honestly, it’s much more likely that it was simply the timing of the trades and the earnings reports multiple times over a couple years raised some eyebrows.
notadog 2021-08-18 22:29:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Trias11 2021-08-18 22:54:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
And then it's a matter of connecting the dots - most often the dots between the "lucky" guy and someone within the company.
Done.
labcomputer 2021-08-19 00:33:49 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If you consistently make directionally-correct trades (no matter how big) on one particular symbol (or derivatives of it) within +/- n days of earnings, that probably raises your risk score. Probably even more if your trades are always the same day of week before earnings or same number of days before earnings.
AmericanChopper 2021-08-19 02:15:20 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I’d be surprised if the SEC wasn’t proactively monitoring this sort of thing on some level.
hatsunearu 2021-08-18 22:40:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kyleee 2021-08-18 22:54:17 +0000 UTC [ - ]
downandout 2021-08-19 04:17:47 +0000 UTC [ - ]
PragmaticPulp 2021-08-18 23:17:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
It can actually be harder to make money off of insider information than it sounds. The market doesn't always react in the precise way you might expect. As a result, inside traders usually make large sums of money one of two ways:
1) With single, huge bets placed on huge news that shocks the stock price.
2) With many, medium bets placed around regular earnings reports.
In the first case: If someone never trades options and then suddenly places a single, large, highly-leveraged trade that happens to pay out handsomely, that's an easy red flag to spot.
In the second case: If someone is pattern trading in the right general direction around most earnings releases and they happen to work for the company (can be as simple as a public LinkedIn search) then it's obviously a red flag.
The encrypted messaging app is a red herring. The SEC isn't eavesdropping on their comms. They're getting one or more of the conspirators to flip on the others in exchange for reduced sentences. One of them gladly gave up the messages as part of a bargain.
ChrisKnott 2021-08-19 05:42:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
That's possible but they also could have just seized one of their phones or whatever and recovered the chat history that way.
H8crilA 2021-08-18 22:00:38 +0000 UTC [ - ]
andylynch 2021-08-19 07:07:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
bpodgursky 2021-08-18 22:02:48 +0000 UTC [ - ]
droopyEyelids 2021-08-18 22:11:43 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The SEC could put them in a perfect "prisoner's dilemma" game and we're only talking about regular people, not hardened operators with like, a suicide capsule in their molar.
H8crilA 2021-08-18 22:15:54 +0000 UTC [ - ]
DaveExeter 2021-08-18 22:20:13 +0000 UTC [ - ]
H8crilA 2021-08-18 22:34:29 +0000 UTC [ - ]
renewiltord 2021-08-19 00:29:35 +0000 UTC [ - ]
socialist_coder 2021-08-18 22:04:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
It seems wrong that my personal info is being given out by my brokerage, in a way that lets them identify my personal trades.
haney 2021-08-18 22:07:23 +0000 UTC [ - ]
RobertoG 2021-08-18 22:11:37 +0000 UTC [ - ]
cyral 2021-08-18 22:48:54 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kenned3 2021-08-18 23:44:40 +0000 UTC [ - ]
insiders are required to report their trades (search for "sec Edgar").
it is hard to make money knowing that a trade has taken place.. you need to know BEFORE and this is clearly illegal with very serious penalties (martha stewart served jail time...).
skrtskrt 2021-08-18 22:19:15 +0000 UTC [ - ]
np- 2021-08-18 22:12:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
willdearden 2021-08-18 22:51:22 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kenned3 2021-08-18 23:29:17 +0000 UTC [ - ]
you send your order to your broker/dealer, they send it to their OMS, which sends it to Citadel, who sends it to their internalisation engine..
All of these messages, including order Identifiers to create the linkages are sent to FINRA.
So your broker sends order "123ABC" to Citadel, FINRA gets this and can trace your order back up and down the "stack" however they want.
willdearden 2021-08-19 03:41:55 +0000 UTC [ - ]
aynyc 2021-08-18 23:17:21 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kenned3 2021-08-18 23:34:59 +0000 UTC [ - ]
As an example, according to the NYSE FIX Spec, this is 54 (Side) = 8 (Cross).
This is how they are able to "internalise", by crossing retail flow vs their house account.
CATNMS https://www.catnmsplan.com/ helps with this.
aynyc 2021-08-19 00:21:45 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Also, the trades were done prior to CAT. I suspect it’s from Blue Sheets.
kenned3 2021-08-19 01:17:27 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If you combine crosses with OATS you can still get some of the data you are looking for, just not as cleanly as with CAT.
andylynch 2021-08-19 07:17:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kenned3 2021-08-18 23:06:24 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Broker/dealers send order data to the regulators daily.
It isnt 'wrong', you agreed to this when you opened your account,and the broker/dealers are REQUIRED to provide this as it is a "market rule".
EDIT : replace "trade" with "order"...
traceroute66 2021-08-18 22:23:02 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Unlikely.
More likely is that the brokerages and/or exchanges submit transactional order-book trade data to the SEC (i.e. anonymous numbers .... timestamps, quantity traded, direction).
If the SEC then spot something, its just a case of picking up the phone to the brokerage and asking to ID the client for the transaction at a given timestamp.
kenned3 2021-08-18 23:22:19 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Most exchanges require the client details to be sent to them (encrypted) so the regulators can see who is behind the orders on a real-time basis.
Canada for example is behind the times here, but has a program to address this : https://www.iiroc.ca/members/client-identifiers
If you are a corporation, you are required to provide your "Legal Entity Identifier (LEI)"
If you are a retail client, your account number is sent.
andylynch 2021-08-19 07:24:50 +0000 UTC [ - ]
not2b 2021-08-18 23:02:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
fshbbdssbbgdd 2021-08-18 22:34:57 +0000 UTC [ - ]
empraptor 2021-08-18 22:10:30 +0000 UTC [ - ]
quickthrowman 2021-08-18 22:30:14 +0000 UTC [ - ]
nojito 2021-08-18 22:11:07 +0000 UTC [ - ]
It’s just a matter of finding suspicious trades to start an investigation.
TuringNYC 2021-08-18 22:15:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
That said, the SEC does have access to the full dataset including the person/entity making the trades.
nojito 2021-08-18 23:22:09 +0000 UTC [ - ]
This is why their data analytical skills are so impressive.
vineyardmike 2021-08-18 22:22:39 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Obviously working for the company in question makes it different, but this doesn't seem crazy or unusual.
I've worked placed where it was very easy to predict the stock movements ahead of earnings call since the company's success/failure is in public eye a lot (same true for netflix?).
The top 5 companies in terms of market cap get lots of attention and analysis. I bet most people could review that data before the earnings call and guess the movement of the stock enough to make money.
Again, i would never touch my companies stock on the market but it doesn't seem like you need insider knowledge at a lot of big companies.
H8crilA 2021-08-18 22:31:42 +0000 UTC [ - ]
vineyardmike 2021-08-18 22:43:40 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Well, as you said, not everything is a win, and sometimes you lose. Some people don't have the money to deal with options and handle a loss.
But who said i wasn't a millionaire ;)
smabie 2021-08-18 23:16:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
rurp 2021-08-18 23:58:44 +0000 UTC [ - ]
vineyardmike 2021-08-19 01:08:06 +0000 UTC [ - ]
sokoloff 2021-08-19 00:12:23 +0000 UTC [ - ]
There are entire firms trying to squeak pennies per share out of the market. To think that some backlog of data that most people could plainly interpret would lead to a pop after earnings is very difficult to believe.
vineyardmike 2021-08-19 01:07:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
People with insider trading knowledge don't seem able to accurately predict the exact price, but they know if its good/bad/great news and how wall street reacts to that .
sokoloff 2021-08-19 02:30:19 +0000 UTC [ - ]
motoxpro 2021-08-19 09:10:45 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Plyphon_ 2021-08-19 09:29:13 +0000 UTC [ - ]
fred_is_fred 2021-08-18 22:54:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If "most people" could do this, "most people" would.
vineyardmike 2021-08-18 23:37:16 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I think the issue is not that most people can't "guess" the outcome, its that they can't afford (in the short term) the money to invest. Many people take years into their career before they can significantly invest and save money. Especially true for people who can afford the risk of options trading, which is more risky than "buy and hold" investing.
The article in question mentions netflix engineers who make large 6 figure salaries. They could probably afford to make well educated bets on many other stocks and profit handsomely after several years.
> Birinyi Associates studied Apple’s post-earnings stock behavior since 2009. It found Apple stock has gapped up, or shot higher 65 percent of the time in after-hours trading, right after its earnings report, with an average pop of 4.7 percent. On the next day, whether it gapped up or down, it has traded lower 65 percent of the time for a 0.92 percent decline.
[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2018/05/01/heres-how-apples-stock-usual...
rurp 2021-08-19 00:05:19 +0000 UTC [ - ]
vineyardmike 2021-08-19 00:59:08 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Practically speaking, this isn't that easy. Most people don't have hundreds lying around to invest, especially not in risky trades.
Also, options (what is being discussed) are often a lot more than $100 - Eg. Opening Robinhood rn shows me AAPL options around 150 whhile GOOGL options are 2k+ while AMZN is 3k+. Even if someone is very confident in a stock movement (and realistically, its obviously not guaranteed), thats a lot of money for the average person, especially when they could lose it. You have to be somewhhat well-off to stomach multi-thousand dollar losses - especially at the start.
(also earnings are 1 per quarter)
rich_sasha 2021-08-19 10:03:42 +0000 UTC [ - ]
It is often the manner in which this money is made. Very concentrated bets, like buying far out-of-the-money options, that let you get enormous leverage - buy the option for pennies, exercise for $50. Combined with the absence of activity on other stocks, lack of other regular trading etc.
If you just had a "hunch", bought some shares of Netflix, maybe some other techy stocks for camouflage, and made your "measly" 10% return a few times, you'd probably never be caught. But that's not life-changing of course. To make the $3m over, say, 4 trades, you'd need to have $7.5m to play with, which is quite a lot.
codazoda 2021-08-18 22:05:39 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The only fine I see listed is for about $72k. I can't tell if the scheme was profitable or not because that was just one person. I assume the others are going to trial, so we won't know for a while.
anonu 2021-08-19 10:42:40 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Almost every case of insider trading is because of this pattern.
It makes sense. You have information that you think gives you an edge. Trading "linear" stocks is boring. You need something that will give you an asymmetric payoff to compensate you for the asymmetric info you just stole.
paxys 2021-08-19 00:40:50 +0000 UTC [ - ]
nemonemo 2021-08-19 01:12:11 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If I were a part of SEC, unless there is some regulatory hurdle, I'd use some other information (e.g., some gov documents? linkedin?), and use that to construct a giant watch list for insider trading even before trades are made.
dehrmann 2021-08-19 05:54:38 +0000 UTC [ - ]
philip1209 2021-08-19 01:25:52 +0000 UTC [ - ]
artur_makly 2021-08-18 22:01:34 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kevin_thibedeau 2021-08-18 22:24:04 +0000 UTC [ - ]
benatkin 2021-08-18 22:19:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
HanaShiratori 2021-08-19 00:42:40 +0000 UTC [ - ]
tdhz77 2021-08-18 23:19:06 +0000 UTC [ - ]
par 2021-08-19 01:55:33 +0000 UTC [ - ]
nabakin 2021-08-19 02:41:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
tdhz77 2021-08-19 04:03:46 +0000 UTC [ - ]
try { int i = 0; while(true){ someArray[i]; i++; } } catch (IndexOutOfBoundsException ex) { //done }
ggrrhh_ta 2021-08-19 07:10:30 +0000 UTC [ - ]
arc-in-space 2021-08-19 07:39:48 +0000 UTC [ - ]
(Yes, list.index exists. I know. Thank you.)
ggrrhh_ta 2021-08-19 08:06:02 +0000 UTC [ - ]
# pythonic pseudocode
def exists(x, C):
try:
C[x]
except:
# could be more specific
# IndexError, KeyError, etc...
return False
return True
swyx 2021-08-19 02:08:55 +0000 UTC [ - ]
stefan_ 2021-08-18 23:26:58 +0000 UTC [ - ]
khazhoux 2021-08-18 22:46:59 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I mean it's like, here's my "insider tip": FAANGs saw usage and revenue growth this quarter. Ok, now are you gonna make money off this secret info?
fragmede 2021-08-18 23:24:19 +0000 UTC [ - ]
john_yaya 2021-08-19 02:51:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
spyder 2021-08-19 07:26:29 +0000 UTC [ - ]
DavidPeiffer 2021-08-19 12:22:15 +0000 UTC [ - ]
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/authors/ARbTQlRLRjE/matthe...
RandallBrown 2021-08-18 22:49:48 +0000 UTC [ - ]
toddmatthews 2021-08-19 00:15:04 +0000 UTC [ - ]
martinpw 2021-08-19 06:21:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The example quote you give does happen of course but you tend to remember those cases more than the more common beats-expectations-stock-rises cases precisely because they feel more unexpected.
Slartie 2021-08-19 08:28:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Like Netflix beating revenue and earnings expectations, and even beating new subscriber number expectations, but subscriber growth in a key market slowing much more than anticipated.
If you know all these numbers, you can screen them for potential negative catalysts that might counteract the positive effects of expectation beats. If you find none, you can relatively safely assume that the stock price will probably pop after release.
RandallBrown 2021-08-19 06:15:51 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ramraj07 2021-08-19 01:47:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
yashap 2021-08-19 03:36:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
“Usage and revenue up” is already priced in, if that’s the expectation. But “usage and revenue up much more/less than expected” will have a reasonably consistent effect on stock price.
orangepanda 2021-08-19 09:54:06 +0000 UTC [ - ]
yuy910616 2021-08-19 00:13:40 +0000 UTC [ - ]
In other words, this might be a method that only worked with Netflix stock in that timeframe where sub growth and stock price is strongly correclated.
rockinghigh 2021-08-18 23:18:47 +0000 UTC [ - ]
dehrmann 2021-08-19 06:00:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
enchiridion 2021-08-18 22:55:24 +0000 UTC [ - ]
It’d be interesting to look at correlation of a rolling average with earnings call metrics.
oh_sigh 2021-08-18 23:38:52 +0000 UTC [ - ]
So if you have subscriber growth numbers - you look at where the analysts get something wrong as part of their calculation. Maybe they think there will only be 1M new subscribers, but in reality there are 10 million.
sokoloff 2021-08-19 00:20:34 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Looking into it, the only thing we could figure is that we were leaking an incrementing integer as part of our manufacturing process and the customer was apparently willing to buy small orders to get access to that ID (and thereby estimate order volumes).
We changed the process to not leak incrementing IDs and the orders stopped after a short time.
moneywoes 2021-08-19 05:20:49 +0000 UTC [ - ]
sokoloff 2021-08-19 09:48:30 +0000 UTC [ - ]
There was part of me that thought about fixing the situation by first adding an extra ~25% bump to the mid-quarter and ~35% to next start of quarter (by incrementing the ID column with a patch). We obviously didn’t, but it was fun to contemplate.
I actually admired the lateral thinking if it was a hedge fund doing research.
_RPL5_ 2021-08-19 00:44:02 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If I work at a company, I am bound to know things that are not public knowledge. This means that any trade I make is technically insider trading.
Example: I am an engineer, working on a new unannounced product which I think will do well. I buy shares of my company in advance of the release of that product. A few years later, after the product has shipped and delivered the expected gains, I sell my stock.
Will I go to jail for insider trading?
izgzhen 2021-08-19 00:54:30 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ehsankia 2021-08-19 05:58:20 +0000 UTC [ - ]
MAGZine 2021-08-19 03:14:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
You can't trade on specific information, but you can definitely trade on sentiment, which is what the rest of the market trades on.
ec109685 2021-08-19 01:14:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
However, at most companies, there’s a segment of data that is kept more confidential, and those people with access have more guardrails on their trading. Netflix is an exception in that most of their workforce is “insider” and thus financial data such as what was shared within this indictment is more freely available.
Hamuko 2021-08-19 06:49:08 +0000 UTC [ - ]
My biggest giveaway from the company training was to just avoid the company stock. Life is much easier that way.
DavidPeiffer 2021-08-19 12:15:11 +0000 UTC [ - ]
That has always been my approach, but I also have never worked for a company that routinely gives stock to employees. Having a tilt in your investment portfolio towards your employer is a big risk concentrator (company goes downhill, you might get laid off at the same time), not to mention the potential issues with insider trading or the appearance of insider trading.
whoisjuan 2021-08-18 22:11:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Lol, I don't think there's a lot of sophistication in this. They want to make it sound like some sort of powerful magic box they have that can find anyone doing something dubious when in reality this is probably a very simple interesection between two datasets:
The one that contains all the people who yielded profits over X amount when trading the stock of a Y company during a timeframe, and another dataset that contains all the current and former employees of that Y company.
That's the thing about insider trading. People who do it are just complete idiots. They think that they can leverage some assymetry of information when in reality there's no such thing. If you trade the stock of your current or former employer (especially before earnings calls) and yield unrealistic gains you're going to get flagged and someone is going to manually review your shit.
ChuckMcM 2021-08-18 23:42:51 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I happened to have a set of standing instructions for a number of technology companies which consisted of buying stock when it dropped more than 5% below the 90 moving average, and selling stock when it exceeded more than 5% the 90 day moving average.
For a lot of tech companies this was basically a money pump since they rose and fell quite cyclically. Then I went to work at one of the companies on my list (NetApp) and one quarter EMC announced they were going to miss their earnings and all storage companies dropped. Two weeks later NetApp announced their earnings which were better than expected.
When I got my brokerage statement for the month I had a nice gain because they had bought NetApp on the dip, and then when the earnings were announced the stock went up so they sold the shares that had been bought. About three weeks after that I got a call from the SEC. I referred them to my broker which showed both the standing order, and that they had been in place for a couple of years before that event, and the SEC went away. However I did take NetApp out of the mix because, well it is always unnerving when your phone tells you the SEC is calling. :-).
notyourwork 2021-08-19 00:07:32 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ChuckMcM 2021-08-19 00:29:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
She worked for the company handling Sun's employee purchase plan and stock option plans. I've stuck with her as she he moved from company to company (generally by acquisition). Establishing a standing order was simply a matter of calling her up and telling her what I wanted to do. I'm not sure how it was implemented on her side though.
throwaway2037 2021-08-19 01:41:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ChuckMcM 2021-08-19 03:45:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
dmoy 2021-08-19 04:45:02 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Have you considered using IBKR to do the same sort of automated order execution, but without the AUM fees?
ChuckMcM 2021-08-19 05:26:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Everyone is different of course, I'm not a min/maxer trying to eek every cent out of my investments. My goals are/were around not having to work if I don't feel like it. I do understand people who use their net worth as some sort of 'score' they feel they need to 'win.' That is not who I am.
[1] I basically consider a zero fee robo-investment strategy in specific ETFs as the 'null hypothesis' here. If the team out performs that, it is okay, if they don't we need to talk.
disiplus 2021-08-19 08:22:40 +0000 UTC [ - ]
throwaway2037 2021-08-19 01:30:17 +0000 UTC [ - ]
My old man always taught me: People love to brag about their wins (in the stock market), but rarely share their losses. The best traders know: You learn the most from your losses.
If this strategy is so good, why don't you run a prop trading firm doing exactly this? And do you run the same strategy for oil, natural gas, soybeans, and pork belly futures?
caslon 2021-08-19 01:38:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
"If your strategy in trading microelectronics stock (largely hype-based and that you have an intuitive understanding of) is so good even though you didn't actually claim it as being all that, why don't you run the same strategy in trading pork (no one has ever gotten hyped about pork)?"
devin 2021-08-19 02:01:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
unclebucknasty 2021-08-19 02:36:13 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I dunno. Too many variables to dismiss as horrible out of hand. For one, it depends on the actual companies involved.
Also depends on exactly how he executed it. If the stocks followed the typical average of 10% YoY gains as the rest of the market, then there's a way to execute this strategy wherein he wouldn't lose by definition. For instance, he might set a mark on the sell side to ensure he's not selling at a loss vs. his last buy.
Now, he might get stuck holding the stock for some time (especially after a big downturn) and that might incur him some opportunity cost. But, that wouldn't mean a net loss if he was willing to wait. And, that'd be no different a risk than, say, a typical buy and hold strategy.
nl 2021-08-19 03:53:18 +0000 UTC [ - ]
"Buying tech stocks" is probably the lucky bit. If the stocks are cyclic but there is a upward trend it probably works pretty well.
throwaway2037 2021-08-19 09:55:29 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Every time I post about how I'm bad as something or made a mistake, then learned a lesson, it is followed by a bunch of humble braggers telling stories-of-convenience about how they avoided such an "obvious" mistake.
Finally, let me share yet another of my lifetime fails: During 2008/2009, I was convinced everyone was wrong about risk management at huge investment banks -- subprime mortgages and synthetic CDO^2! I was thought they were infallible, filled with financial maths geniuses would could navigate any financial storm. I was dead wrong. I was shocked when Goldman's legendary Global Alpha fund CLOSED after massive losses. Could. not. believe. it. It's still a bit shocking to write, because their record of outperforming the S&P 500 using partner money was the stuff of legend. And, yes, I lost so much money against Bear, Stearns & Co. and Lehman Brothers. Ouch!
caslon 2021-08-19 10:48:16 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ChuckMcM 2021-08-19 03:44:38 +0000 UTC [ - ]
You are correct, to an extent.
It breaks when the stocks in question continue to go down. I happen to be a really conservative investor (I tend buy and hold, never got into the whole day trading thing during the dot com rush). Given that each 'up' blip was essentially a 10% gain on my investment (approximately) the cash gain would be banked[1] when it sold and there was a 20% stop loss[2] sale as well. But with a very cyclical stocks the returns were pretty steady.
I added the stop loss after I found myself holding stock that just became more and more worthless after the dot com crash. (when you buy on the dip and the dip keeps right on going :-). It is also the reason I had Agilent stock for a while in that I was holding HP stock when they spun off Agilent, the HP sold when it continued to tank and there were no instructions on the Agilent. So between 1990 and 2005 when I had this in place I think the annual rate of return on that part of my portfolio was about 8%? The crash wiped out a lot of gains that took a while to undo (I think if I had sold off what I was holding in 2001 it would have been like 2% annualized gain over the 10 years.
Note, I have never been, nor aspired to be, an "elite" trader. It was in 1990 when I had about $1500 in my brokerage account that was just sitting there in cash and I wanted to something more interesting with it than put it into a bank CD. Hence my foray into "algorithmic" trading :-).
[1] That cash was taken out of the pool, it wouldn't be re-invested on the next dip.
[2] Stop loss -- a 'good til cancelled order to sell a stock at the market price if it's price falls below a set value.
throwaway2037 2021-08-19 09:46:36 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Twenty years ago, I used to closely read articles like ... <<<Miller's Legg Mason Fund Beats S&P 500 for 15th Year in a Row>>> Before I understood more about "finding alpha", I assumed you could find an active manager as a retail investor that could beat S&P 500. With age & experience, I no longer believe it true. Legg Mason beat the S&P 500 for a long, long time... but if you look closely, they only beat by a little bit. Then one year they got crushed and gave back all their winnings and trailed S&P 500. Plus you paid active management fees for 20 years. In the end, investors didn't beat S&P 500 over the long term.
It was crushing for me when I put all the pieces together. For so long, I believed I could outsmart the market as a retail trader by finding the right active manager. After that, I never looked back -- 100% ultra low cost passive index trackers against WIDE, well-established indexes, so I'm not "stock picking" by another name.
IncRnd 2021-08-19 01:41:58 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Some commodities have exactly the right kind of volatility and timing for these sort of trades.
nemo44x 2021-08-19 01:46:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
It’s a classic “picking up nickles in front of a steam roller” strategy. But it could work for a really long time. Until it doesn’t.
throwaway2037 2021-08-19 09:57:44 +0000 UTC [ - ]
This! I see so many "options trading strategies" for retail traders that are exactly this.
hoten 2021-08-19 00:21:33 +0000 UTC [ - ]
hermitdev 2021-08-19 01:25:18 +0000 UTC [ - ]
yieldgap 2021-08-19 02:04:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
loeg 2021-08-19 03:11:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
vxNsr 2021-08-19 02:18:35 +0000 UTC [ - ]
elliekelly 2021-08-19 02:33:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
vmception 2021-08-19 00:36:31 +0000 UTC [ - ]
They should have removed all orders the day they became an employee.
I know high frequency trading firms that are heavily inconvenienced by insider knowledge. They have to shut down so many things. Securities Insider trading is really tricky in the US as it isn't a specific law specifically about insider trading, only a bunch of court cases by the securities regulators that they sometimes won.
throwaway2037 2021-08-19 01:38:32 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Normally, HFT firms don't care about insider trading. They are trading "noise" -- finding signals from past and present trading activity to make small bets that are 51% likely to be successful. They manage risk very carefully. This is not a secret. Cliff Asness from AQR Capital has given multiple long-form interviews on this topic. You can Google to find podcasts and printed articles.
On the other hand, long-short hedge funds, such as Steven Cohen's legendary Point72, love insider information! It is the backbone of their business model. The best ones employ an onion-like defense strategy to launder inside information as legitimate analyst reports. Only the outermost layer is directly transacting in insider information. As the information moves closer to the center -- real traders -- it is carefully masked to hide its origin. The SEC was never able to catch Steven Cohen, but they caught many, many people around him and eventually forced his original fund to close.
sydthrowaway 2021-08-19 03:23:23 +0000 UTC [ - ]
throwaway2037 2021-08-19 09:32:40 +0000 UTC [ - ]
That said, RenTech was under intense scrutiny by SEC and IRS for their incredibly aggressive tax strategy. I did not follow it to the end.
sydthrowaway 2021-08-19 09:53:47 +0000 UTC [ - ]
throwaway2037 2021-08-19 10:23:43 +0000 UTC [ - ]
First: Yes, Medallion fund is the primary fund of RenTech.
Second: To me, stat-arb can be HFT or non-HFT. They were/are doing HFT stat-arb in Medallion fund. AQR, Virtu, and Citadel are probably doing both HFT and non-HFT stat-arb. Twenty years ago stat-arb was called "pairs trading". Today, it is much more complex: basket vs basket.
vmception 2021-08-19 03:31:55 +0000 UTC [ - ]
throwaway2037 2021-08-19 09:39:37 +0000 UTC [ - ]
vmception 2021-08-19 14:43:22 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If a firm - that also has an agnostic active trading strategy - gets any inside info they have to cut the active trading strategy for liability reasons. That’s a conclusion some firms have made, not whether the SEC will actually bother them in a quantum reality or whether they can successfully defend it.
sumedh 2021-08-19 01:44:18 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Did you have any legal obligation to do that. What would have happened if you choose to remain silent?
ChuckMcM 2021-08-19 03:57:14 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I think the SEC could have probably made a case that it was possible for me to know that NetApp's results were going to be better than the street expected (I didn't know that but I did know we weren't hurting like EMC was). And the money involved was small. I expect it was the timing more than the amount that triggered their call.
I was surprised I didn't hear from NetApp's general counsel at the time (I'm sure they were notified).
So if I said nothing? That would probably trigger a closer inspection. Sure its my right to not speak to them, but doing so would have probably made them more suspicious. And frankly, I have seen so many times when people trying to be "tricky" got into more trouble than if they had just been open with what was what that I have rarely felt tempted to push back on that sort of thing.
kadoban 2021-08-19 03:50:20 +0000 UTC [ - ]
hermitdev 2021-08-19 01:21:08 +0000 UTC [ - ]
vxNsr 2021-08-19 02:16:31 +0000 UTC [ - ]
prostoalex 2021-08-19 00:24:48 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kelnos 2021-08-19 00:40:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
fnord77 2021-08-19 03:38:20 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ChuckMcM 2021-08-19 04:00:08 +0000 UTC [ - ]
cortesoft 2021-08-18 22:16:27 +0000 UTC [ - ]
This is selection bias. The people who get CAUGHT doing it are complete idiots.
skrtskrt 2021-08-18 22:22:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
and/or greedy.
Even if you're "smart" about it, you can only hit so many lottery tickets before you come under suspicion.
I'd bet the best way to get away with insider trading is to do it once, make under $1 million, then walk the hell away and never speak of it.
Retric 2021-08-18 22:32:04 +0000 UTC [ - ]
radicaldreamer 2021-08-18 22:36:17 +0000 UTC [ - ]
geoduck14 2021-08-18 23:32:52 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Also, she was convicted for LYING about insider trading.
300bps 2021-08-18 23:46:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
She lied repeatedly to investigators saying among other things that it was a pre-arranged trade. The person that tipped her off admitted everything though.
She went to jail for lying to investigators, obstructing justice, etc. And still had to pay a $195,000 civil fine for the insider trading!!
Source: https://biography.yourdictionary.com/articles/why-did-martha...
nearbuy 2021-08-19 07:51:34 +0000 UTC [ - ]
nearbuy 2021-08-19 15:03:18 +0000 UTC [ - ]
jabedude 2021-08-18 23:05:37 +0000 UTC [ - ]
mason55 2021-08-18 23:21:44 +0000 UTC [ - ]
1-more 2021-08-19 01:06:12 +0000 UTC [ - ]
18 U.S. Code § 1001 - Statements or entries generally
IncRnd 2021-08-19 01:56:21 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The lie is a felony but only when connected to a federal matter. [2] [3] [4]
[1] This used to mean (many moons ago) something of very high quality. However, as our government became ever more like what is _now_ our government, the idiom took on the opposite meaning: good enough to say it's done, so we can move on from it. It's also used to say when something is correct for the discussion but not in the broader sense. Source? My neighbor the FBI agent told me, and I've heard it in action many times since then.
[2] https://www.pagepate.com/experience/criminal-defense/federal...
[3] https://www.justice.gov/archives/jm/criminal-resource-manual...
[4] https://www.mololamken.com/knowledge-Is-It-a-Crime-To-Lie-to...
bsder 2021-08-19 02:33:29 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The SEC and the IRS are police.
Obligatory repost: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-7o9xYp7eE&t=612s
paulpauper 2021-08-18 23:09:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
dkrich 2021-08-18 23:59:21 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Pretty much anyone could spot insider trading patterns. I’d be willing to bet these guys were making bets only on Netflix in the form of short-dated options most of which typically expire worthless. If someone were to repeatedly aggressively buy low probability short-dated options around an event like earnings and win consistently you would be able to infer that they are trading on insider knowledge.
Of course recognizing the pattern is only half the battle. They also have to figure out how they are accessing the inside info, hence tracing the traders back to Netflix employees and conversations they had regarding paybacks, etc.
paulpauper 2021-08-18 23:07:11 +0000 UTC [ - ]
skrtskrt 2021-08-18 22:42:49 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Even if you lost money the one time you did it, I'd probably still recommend doing it approximately once.
paulpauper 2021-08-18 23:08:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ok123456 2021-08-18 23:30:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kelnos 2021-08-19 00:44:02 +0000 UTC [ - ]
rasz 2021-08-18 22:43:30 +0000 UTC [ - ]
stevespang 2021-08-19 00:36:02 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I knew a guy in Houston 20 some odd years ago who got tagged for commercial bribery. He hustled/befriended the employee of his much larger competitor to buy crates of his junk cylinder heads he bought at 10 cents on the dollar - - - for 90 cents on the dollar. A total of like $700,000.
The prosecutor told him if he copped out he would reduce the charges to some misdemeanor, no jail, and no fine. It was a no brainer, he kept all the ill gotten gains.
Crime pays.
Kluny 2021-08-18 22:52:34 +0000 UTC [ - ]
That's not rational, of course, but humans aren't rational.
Johnny555 2021-08-19 00:15:32 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Besides, unless you're already wealthy it's harder to hide the theft of huge sums of money.
xvector 2021-08-18 22:56:24 +0000 UTC [ - ]
skrtskrt 2021-08-18 23:00:37 +0000 UTC [ - ]
sumedh 2021-08-19 01:21:49 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If you are very rich they dont throw you in jail.
thinkloop 2021-08-19 04:44:08 +0000 UTC [ - ]
tshaddox 2021-08-18 23:29:26 +0000 UTC [ - ]
spaetzleesser 2021-08-19 00:27:07 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I used to know a Wall Street guy sometime around 2005. The way he presented it was that there is a ton of variations of insider trading going on. People talk to each other and insiders are always ahead of the general investors.
I tend to believe that. As creative , greedy, competitive and smart these people are I can’t imagine them not taking advantage of every opportunity they see. Also, in most other industries the regulators mostly go after the smaller guys because the big guys are too hard and expensive to prosecute.
bostonsre 2021-08-18 22:48:36 +0000 UTC [ - ]
throwawaytemp27 2021-08-18 23:29:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
To elaborate - use someone who gets their hands dirty gathering info then communicates their certainty in code and in person.
sngz 2021-08-19 01:13:31 +0000 UTC [ - ]
hermitdev 2021-08-19 01:33:33 +0000 UTC [ - ]
[0] "STOCK Act - Wikipedia" https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/STOCK_Act
jjk166 2021-08-18 23:23:18 +0000 UTC [ - ]
There are a lot more sophisticated methods of insider trading. Just for starters, get someone else who has no apparent insider status to make the trades for you. It doesn't take a genius to come up with strategies like burying your insider trades in a much larger number of regular trades to make the profits less conspicuous, or getting fake blog posts written that essentially say to do exactly what the inside trader is planning to do thus creating a plausible explanation besides insider knowledge for an agents strategy.
It's like money laundering: the methods you see on TV are the simple versions that are easy for an audience to understand, they're not what people who have actually taken the time to come up with a strategy do.
yellow_lead 2021-08-18 23:35:58 +0000 UTC [ - ]
vgatherps 2021-08-19 03:59:37 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Just being on FTX probably makes it much harder for the SEC to find the gains, though.
trident5000 2021-08-19 00:10:08 +0000 UTC [ - ]
paulpauper 2021-08-18 23:28:30 +0000 UTC [ - ]
they already do that. sometimes the info is passed through many ppl and still get caught.
whoaisme 2021-08-18 23:42:49 +0000 UTC [ - ]
traceroute66 2021-08-18 22:38:07 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Exactly this. Especially in the 21st century world of big data, ML algorithms and all that jazz.
The closer you are to the action, the higher the chances of getting caught.
If you work for a finance firm, its pretty much guaranteed you'll be caught. Firms are hot on it and they take all sorts of layered measures to prevent it and stamp it out. If you work for a finance firm, in most cases its actually harder to obtain the insider information in the first place than it is to act on it as a PA trade. One of the most well funded and well-staffed departments in any finance firm is the compliance department and they have the power to kill your career instantly (you'll get escorted from the office the moment they suspect anything, forced to stay at home on gardening leave whilst they investigate and then once that's over - and assuming it doesn't go legal - you'll find nobody in finance will employ someone who was sacked for compliance reasons).
If you work for a listed company, then like these guys eventually found out, you'll be caught. A bit of data mining at the SEC will soon weed out transactions made by people who likely knew what was going on before the public did.
All this hard work on compliance makes the stockmarket one of the most even playing fields there is for investors, because the work of the SEC and other regulators around the world is there to ensure John Doe has the same chances as Warren Buffet to make money on the stockmarket. (Yes, the world of HFT is a bit different with their technological edge, but that's another story).
throwaway0a5e 2021-08-18 23:31:57 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Compliance is a cost center. The Redditesque fantasy of compliance departments overflowing with resources because the company loves law for the sake of law or thinks that going above and beyond makes you less likely to get screwed than just doing what your lawyers tell you the laws says you need to do are just that, fantasy.
Compliance departments get tasked with making the company comply, nothing more, nothing less. And they're mostly given the resources to do that, nothing more nothing less.
traceroute66 2021-08-18 23:43:09 +0000 UTC [ - ]
For a start "company loves law for the sake of law". The company is operating in (a) a highly regulated environment (b) likely wishes to avoid the fines and adverse publicity associated with non-compliance. Its nothing to do with "loving the law".
But each to their own interpretation I guess.
komali2 2021-08-19 03:07:23 +0000 UTC [ - ]
throwaway0a5e 2021-08-19 12:50:14 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I don't disagree in principal but...
I called the behavior Redditesque for a reason. Comments portraying regulatory agencies as all-seeing gods ready to smite anyone who dares not display their faith enthusiastically enough let alone materially violate the rules are wildly popular there. Cynical realpolitik takes (e.g. "MHSA will show up and fine you for everything they can while doing nothing to materially improve safety") on regulatory enforcement are very much unaccepted over there. Millennials and gen Z, exactly the people you'd expect to be the most cynical are also over-represented there compared to the general population. So clearly there's some other mechanism at play.
paulpauper 2021-08-18 23:20:21 +0000 UTC [ - ]
When Warren Buffet bought financial stocks in 2008-2009 the deals were done in such a way he could not lose money easily, or at least had a much lower chance than any ordinary investor.
traceroute66 2021-08-18 23:25:16 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Isn't one of his great sayings "be greedy when others are fearful" ?
IIRC the market didn't have much lower to go in 2008-2009 so if he bought at (or close enough) to "the bottom" then he wasn't really taking on much risk anyway.
Did it myself last year when COVID started and the market plummeted. Went on a shopping spree with some spare cash I had, lots of decent shares being effectively sold at a discount, all you had to do was "be greedy when others were fearful" ... pick something up at a 20%+ discount and then just sit and wait (and be prepared to wait a few months to a year). And with COVID it was pretty clear that as long as it wasn't an airline or hospitality stock, the odds would be in your favour.
carnitine 2021-08-18 23:55:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
renewiltord 2021-08-19 00:27:42 +0000 UTC [ - ]
There is some mythology here that is out of tune with the reality of using your power to get favorable deals.
whoaisme 2021-08-18 23:37:45 +0000 UTC [ - ]
fhood 2021-08-18 23:12:15 +0000 UTC [ - ]
traceroute66 2021-08-18 23:17:58 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Most places I know of would not only have the sort of induction training you imply, but regular refreshers for anyone involved in regulated or at-risk activities.
fhood 2021-08-18 23:58:54 +0000 UTC [ - ]
nostrademons 2021-08-18 23:36:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
w4llstr33t 2021-08-18 23:27:47 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Also, what about dark pools?
Contrary to my username, which I just get a kick out of, I don't actually work on wall street or anything, but I've always felt the stock market was rigged for the elite. I think it is very likely that they have info before normal retail investors have any idea.
carnitine 2021-08-18 23:56:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
w4llstr33t 2021-08-19 00:11:43 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Flash Boys: A Wall Street Revolt by Michael Lewis painted HFT in a pretty bad way. I have read criticisms of the book, but it's hard to separate out bias from the criticism.
There's also all the heat on Robinhood about selling order flow, which I'm surprised was even news to regular investors. It's great they eliminated fees for normal trades, and I also understand most major brokerages sell order flow as well (and still charged for trades for a long time). I read that Fidelity is the only major player that doesn't sell order flow.
Do you have some sources that someone could learn more about this, ones that don't have a vested interest in painting it in a positive way?
Also, I'm still wondering, considering dark pools [1], and the inside information that would come along with that, since those trades wouldn't hit public markets, how the stock markets can be considered a fair place to trade?
[1] https://www.investopedia.com/articles/markets/050614/introdu...
pgwhalen 2021-08-19 01:36:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I suppose it depends on how you define ridiculous, but HFTs actually make a surprisingly small amount of money these days. Probably single digit billions across the entire industry (https://quant.stackexchange.com/questions/34856/how-much-pro...), though 2020 was an exceptional year for many firms.
> Shouldn't the exchanges have offered the best price, and provided liquidity, in the first place?
Either your wording is a little funny, or this question indicates great ignorance about how trading works. Exchanges do not provide liquidity, market makers do. In 2021, "HFT" ~= "market maker".
w4llstr33t 2021-08-19 01:50:12 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I'm a software engineer, interested in crypto, and not that involved in traditional markets (except for holding an S&P 500 index fund).
I do think the exchanges in traditional finance shouldn't have required HFTs in the first place (i.e. it's an antiquated technology). I also think hedge funds and the ultra rich have privileged info, that retail investors don't have.
Anyway, I appreciate the clarification. I like learning about all this.
pgwhalen 2021-08-19 02:21:31 +0000 UTC [ - ]
As you learn more about crypto and traditional finance, it'll be fun to compare the two. Your confusion about the role of an exchange in traditional finance might be because you see the crypto world, where a single entity often performs the roles that many entities perform in traditional finance (exchange, clearing firm, broker, etc.).
> I do think the exchanges in traditional finance shouldn't have required HFTs in the first place (i.e. it's an antiquated technology)
I'm not quite sure what this means, but it's important to understand that HFTs exist in the crypto space as well. Capital markets don't function particularly well without marker makers, and absent some rule explicitly preventing high speed trading, marker makers will tend towards being the fastest traders in any market.
w4llstr33t 2021-08-19 02:40:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Yes, I agree!
In terms of what I called antiquated technology, I think there are a lot of layers on traditional finance, and a lot has changed since its beginnings. I think crypto will go through a similar evolution, in terms of tech, regulation, etc. I think we're in the very early stages for crypto and it has a chance to be an even better system.
I do know that HFTs exist in crypto, and it still is the wild west in some ways, but in the end I like that innovation is happening and that there are alternatives to existing systems.
That said, I appreciate all the responses and I'll take some time to learn more about traditional markets.
vgatherps 2021-08-19 04:54:13 +0000 UTC [ - ]
There’s just not
a. Enough random interested parties willing to buy/sell various coins so that you have low-spread and liquid markets
b. Non-hft players who keep crypto markets in line with each other
This isn’t super surprising. Managing posted liquidity is a difficult task that sort of requires being halfway to a market maker, and naturally most non-market makers just want to buy and sell right away instead of posting orders and waiting/hoping.
The result of this is that most liquidity is provided by HFTs, since they’re the only party that can and even wants to have a bunch of bids/offers out for you to trade against.
IncRnd 2021-08-19 02:07:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Just like cutting inches off mainframe cables, manufacturers of ASICs purpose-build computer chips for crypto. GPU operators tune their cards and even download new code to get every last bit of processing capability from their devices. Crypto in these ways is just like HFT.
Dylan16807 2021-08-19 02:46:58 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Transferring data and calculating the core of a new block takes a fraction of a second, and then it takes an average of several minutes to find the right random numbers to finish the block.
A latency advantage in HFT lets you take most of the profits. A latency advantage in cryptocurrency mining gives you a fraction of a percent better profits.
A calculations-per-second advantage helps in mining, but it's strictly proportional.
IncRnd 2021-08-19 03:28:25 +0000 UTC [ - ]
No.
> Transferring data and calculating the core of a new block takes a fraction of a second, and then it takes an average of several minutes to find the right random numbers to finish the block.
A PoW, say Bitcoin, is configured in the consensus algorithm to avoid duplicate spending. The fastest, correct miner for a block that communicates the quickest to the network will get the block.
Dylan16807 2021-08-19 03:37:39 +0000 UTC [ - ]
There's near-zero overlap between the numbers tested by different miners. So a latency advantage does not make you win. Everyone is picking lottery numbers in parallel. If three miners have the exact same hash rate, and one of them has a 2 second head start, then the one with the head start is only going to win 33.4% of the time.
IncRnd 2021-08-19 06:28:57 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Dylan16807 2021-08-19 09:57:21 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If I'm misinterpreting you, feel free to clarify, but to me it looks like you're saying that latency matters (more than a fraction of a percent) with cryptocurrency, and it does not matter.
And moreso, "the fastest decision-making computer with the shortest time to the network makes the block." is not true. Even if you mean "lucky" by "fastest", since the computer that finds a block doesn't have to be fast, 99+% of the time blocks are found far enough apart that time to network is irrelevant.
w4llstr33t 2021-08-19 02:14:15 +0000 UTC [ - ]
eu90h 2021-08-19 00:58:30 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I highly recommend this book though if your into this topic
traceroute66 2021-08-18 23:50:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Apologies if my post implied insider knowledge on the part of HFTs. That's not the case.
The point I was making is their model is ONLY viable if they have the best mathematical brains, the best computing power, the best connectivity. If anything in that fragile chain is broken then their model is unviable.
In the end, they trade on what is best described as noise. They look for patterns in the noise. And so they need "the best" noise, as soon as instantly as they can get it, and the computing power to process it as close to instantly as possible.
I called it "another story" because its a truly nuts way of making money. ;-)
There is an old saying. "Time in a trade is better than timing a trade". HFTs are basically trying to do the latter all day, every day.
In my view, John Doe the buy & hold investor actually has the advantage that they can wait for weeks, months or years.
Tortoise & Hare and all that ....
Galanwe 2021-08-19 01:28:49 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Being able to send an order with a smaller latency does not magically get you a "better price".
99.9999% of the market participants couldn't care less if their orders arrived 1ms or 1m after they send it. Hell, most hedge funds trade on a _daily_ basis, with multiple days of expected returns predictions, and are more concerned with the transaction cost than the latency, thus opting for a very slow "market close price" execution algo.
Those interested with very low latency are not hedge funds but market makers, and the kind of microstructure signals they exploit is not only orthogonal to what a retail investor would do, but often brings in just bips per trade, meaning the leverage required to make it worth it is anyway out of the retail league.
> I think it is very likely that they have info before normal retail investors have any idea.
What is a normal retail investor? Obviously hedge funds are going to be faster to react to e.g. earnings events than you. That doesn't mean this information is not public. It's just that HF pay data providers, invest in automatic data processing and decision making, etc.
But normal retail investors don't trade on events, they trade for the long term. For the simple reason that they don't want to hit refresh every second on the web page publishing earnings calls of each stock they want to buy.
> what about dark pools?
Yes, what about them? The name triggers the imagination of people but there's really nothing fancy about it. The objective of dark pools is to allow the exchange of shares without too much of a movement in the orderbook. This is actually good for both users of dark pool (they get lower slippage) and users of the public market (it prevents artificial big swings in price due to large buyouts, which would be announced anyway). The liquidity at time T in the order book is not tailored to absorb any ridiculous amount that a large investor could be willing to exchange.
> Shouldn't the exchanges have offered the best price, and provided liquidity, in the first place?
What does that even mean? The exchanges don't offer price by themselves, they just reflect what participants are willing to pay or receive. They are just middlemen facilitating the exchange of goods by publishing the order book of who's willing to buy/sell and at which price.
The exchanges also cannot magically provide liquidity out of thin air. Liquidity means there is someone real on the other end of your trade that is willing to buy or sell to you. Exchanges cannot create that artificially.
What exchanges do, though, is offer rebates to providers of liquidity (including the market makers that you seem to despise) in exchange for the liquidity they provide. This is not a random decision by the exchange, it's because providing liquidity to the market is beneficial for everyone. As an investor, it means I won't have to worry that I will not be able to sell my shares whenever I want to. It also means that the spread will be tighter, thus lowering my slippage. And subsequently, it also means arbitrage is most likely in place, so I'm not being scammed just because I didn't check the price on 5 different platforms.
amznthrwaway 2021-08-18 23:40:34 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Dark pools aren’t pernicious either, it’s just another place you can buy or sell things, and then immediately have the trade reported with the rest of the sales data. Not materially different from the dozens of other places to buy and sell.
hellbannedguy 2021-08-19 00:34:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Maybe in this pumped up bull market certain individuals have restrained from Insider Trading, but it's alive and well.
In college, I was a errand boy at a finance business in SF. The amount of insider tips I heard was staggering. I would be a rich man today if I had a bit of money back then. (The owner of the business did get close to going to jail, but it was over something else. I believe it was tax evasion. It didn't help he was Ed Meese's Financial Planner at the time.
I live in Marin County. A wealthy enclave that espouses liberal values, but are ruthless when it comes to their money. They share info at Wholefoods, or the charity dinner they get tipsy at. Hell, if I had money, I'd be tempted.
They trade a lot of information.
For years, the SEC was very small, and it's not much bigger today.
Hell, the only real money my dad made in the 90's was from an insider tip over thanksgiving dinner from a father in-law. (My dad passed, and the SOL is long gone.)
sakopov 2021-08-18 22:49:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
US Senators would likely disagree with your assessment. [1]
sumedh 2021-08-19 01:23:08 +0000 UTC [ - ]
No not really. Billionaires do it as well and they dont go to jail.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Cohen_(businessman)#SEC_...
wil421 2021-08-18 22:43:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Agreed that the people getting caught are dumb. Especially making trades about your ex employer when you’ve already started an insider trading ring.
andrewcamel 2021-08-18 23:20:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
dilyevsky 2021-08-18 22:40:04 +0000 UTC [ - ]
whoisjuan 2021-08-18 23:00:06 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Not saying that SEC doesn't have sophisticated tools but I think in most cases they don't need that. Their power lies in their regulatory ability to collect personal information of who trades, when and how much.
rurp 2021-08-18 23:36:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
wiredfool 2021-08-19 12:13:45 +0000 UTC [ - ]
jjk166 2021-08-18 23:39:23 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The SEC can collect all the information it wants, but people committing securities fraud may not provide accurate information.
hobbyjogger 2021-08-19 02:03:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I work at a law firm that does public M&A deals and we occasionally get inquiries from the SEC about, e.g., people that went to my high school (but a different class year) who bought stock in a company my firm did work for in the months leading up to the deal. Obviously neither me or the other person ever worked at either company (or even had any connection to them), but they still identify us as a potential risk because I could have potentially obtained insider info through the firm and then passed it on.
inter_netuser 2021-08-18 23:52:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Trades are back-fitted into some model for plausible deniability, and they also purchase political and legal cover, often at the highest levels. I wouldn't surprised some are just a front for an APT that needs more cash for their black budgets.
They generate a lot of asymmetry, billions upon billions.
Here's some patsies that got caught: https://www.theverge.com/2018/8/22/17716622/sec-business-wir...
pryce 2021-08-18 22:51:09 +0000 UTC [ - ]
A simple proposal they would quickly grasp is to have insider trading but spread out over two or more companies, let's call them ACME and Weyland-Yutani. They would have the Weyland-Yutani employees make profit off insider info passed from ACME employees, and have ACME employees make profits off insider info passed from employees of Weyland-Yutani. I imagine they would also want to prevent the groups involved from becoming too large.
darksaints 2021-08-18 23:36:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Gtex555 2021-08-19 04:20:38 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Exuma 2021-08-18 23:00:38 +0000 UTC [ - ]
jays 2021-08-18 23:27:54 +0000 UTC [ - ]
adrianmonk 2021-08-19 01:46:50 +0000 UTC [ - ]
It might not just be bragging. Arguably it's in society's interest because some people might believe it and be convinced not to try insider trading.
jkuria 2021-08-18 23:22:24 +0000 UTC [ - ]
paulpauper 2021-08-18 23:12:46 +0000 UTC [ - ]
or maybe they underestimate the determination of feds
the govt is very good at tracking this stuff.
jliptzin 2021-08-19 01:52:06 +0000 UTC [ - ]
amelius 2021-08-18 22:48:13 +0000 UTC [ - ]
nojito 2021-08-19 00:04:25 +0000 UTC [ - ]
SEC vs Welhouse shows how sophisticated people get and yet get caught via data analytics
dvtheswe 2021-08-19 00:11:46 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ransom1538 2021-08-19 03:35:06 +0000 UTC [ - ]
That is what friends are for.
hogFeast 2021-08-19 00:00:23 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Also, the way they do this is by examining trading patterns. The SEC is 100x better at this than most other countries. Insider trading prosecutions are very rare outside the US (not just because it is hard to catch, it is very hard to win insider trading cases at trial). It requires a fairly sophisticated approach to uncover suspicious trades (every day, billions of trades, millions of securities, you have no idea who works where, you have no idea who their family is, you have no idea who their friends are...not easy).
iratewizard 2021-08-18 23:45:22 +0000 UTC [ - ]
hintymad 2021-08-18 23:55:18 +0000 UTC [ - ]
jonas21 2021-08-19 00:23:33 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Second, nearly all of the profits were allegedly made by Joon Jun and Junwoo Chon, who did not work at Netflix. $3M over 3 years was probably a lot of money for them, as it would be for most people.
elevenoh 2021-08-19 07:53:16 +0000 UTC [ - ]
3M RIO under their name. How bout under others' names
paxys 2021-08-18 23:32:54 +0000 UTC [ - ]
elevenoh 2021-08-19 08:00:11 +0000 UTC [ - ]
They give insider info to corps & non-related individuals to act on.
Good luck tracing that.
cardosof 2021-08-18 22:45:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
not2b 2021-08-18 23:06:35 +0000 UTC [ - ]
jessaustin 2021-08-18 23:43:07 +0000 UTC [ - ]
vmception 2021-08-19 00:51:26 +0000 UTC [ - ]
US insider trading laws confuse the courts, waste all the appeals courts times, and unnecessarily burden everyone
The securities regulator just dangles a Sword of Damocles over everyone’s head without having a single “Insider Trading Act” to rely upon, just their own opinion leveraging their blanket fraud statute, curbstomped by the courts until its cranium is molded into narrowly tailored brain matter, with exceptions oozing out the ears into gutter
dotcommand 2021-08-19 02:56:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Hunt the minnows while at the SEC. Get hired by the whales after leaving the SEC.
TechBro8615 2021-08-19 02:02:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
mdoms 2021-08-19 02:20:20 +0000 UTC [ - ]
TechBro8615 2021-08-19 02:33:34 +0000 UTC [ - ]
AmericanChopper 2021-08-19 02:07:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
yalok 2021-08-19 08:11:17 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Fascinating tool!
I remember a video we had to watch at my previous employer, explaining what insider trading is and discouraging it. Part of it had a testimony from a real guy from that company, who was caught on insider trading, was convicted with a jail time, and was very remorseful on the video, explaining how he ended up going that slippery path, and how awful the consequences are. Maybe he even got some time reduced by doing that video, don't know.
But it definitely left a lasting impression...
hooloovoo_zoo 2021-08-18 22:23:06 +0000 UTC [ - ]
criloz2 2021-08-18 22:31:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kazinator 2021-08-19 00:38:18 +0000 UTC [ - ]
wjd2030 2021-08-18 22:30:19 +0000 UTC [ - ]
saos 2021-08-19 10:28:18 +0000 UTC [ - ]
blobbers 2021-08-19 04:42:07 +0000 UTC [ - ]
elevenoh 2021-08-19 07:50:25 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Bankers & insiders have all the valuable info/data streams.
jd115 2021-08-19 07:57:57 +0000 UTC [ - ]
syspec 2021-08-19 01:49:44 +0000 UTC [ - ]
spoonjim 2021-08-18 22:25:44 +0000 UTC [ - ]
elliekelly 2021-08-18 22:40:17 +0000 UTC [ - ]
pcbro141 2021-08-18 22:49:59 +0000 UTC [ - ]
https://news.wttw.com/2021/08/17/chicago-pharmacist-arrested...
sjg007 2021-08-19 02:55:38 +0000 UTC [ - ]
a-dub 2021-08-18 22:38:45 +0000 UTC [ - ]
smabie 2021-08-18 23:24:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
throwaway0a5e 2021-08-18 23:43:13 +0000 UTC [ - ]
sumedh 2021-08-19 01:33:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If you are in the billionaire club, you will pay a fine but the Fed wont put you in jail.
a-dub 2021-08-19 00:07:13 +0000 UTC [ - ]
jessaustin 2021-08-18 23:44:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Shadonototro 2021-08-18 23:28:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
solumos 2021-08-18 23:54:14 +0000 UTC [ - ]
andredz 2021-08-19 01:17:46 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Pretty fun.
calcsam 2021-08-19 00:21:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2015-01-23/capita...
Incidentally, the article is hilarious.
farmerstan 2021-08-19 06:57:08 +0000 UTC [ - ]
vmception 2021-08-19 00:41:47 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The engineers could have just bought Netflix shares via the Employee Stock Purchase plan and made as much or even more, by now
Smooth brain
TeeMassive 2021-08-18 23:42:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
stevespang 2021-08-19 00:32:20 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I call B.S.
Somebody snitched them off - - the old fashioned way, then the SEC may have stepped in with analytical tools.
kaminar 2021-08-18 23:29:51 +0000 UTC [ - ]
slt2021 2021-08-18 23:04:25 +0000 UTC [ - ]
inetknght 2021-08-18 23:16:36 +0000 UTC [ - ]
vmception 2021-08-19 00:49:07 +0000 UTC [ - ]
And this has nothing to do with her being a Representative or her husband making the trades.
Its not illegal to just know non-public information. Insider trading requires a lot of things such as trading and having a contractual obligation with the company not to say anything (employees, board, executive) or trading and getting the information from someone with the aforementioned duty. Just knowing what a federal agency is going to do isn't one of them.
seriousquestion 2021-08-18 22:30:37 +0000 UTC [ - ]
not2b 2021-08-18 23:14:33 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Just the same, Congresspeople should be restricted from dealing in individual stocks and making trades that are going to look expensive. They have to put their money somewhere, but they could be restricted to index funds.
Or they could have trading windows, like corporate execs do, limiting their ability to profit on insider knowledge.
xpressvideoz 2021-08-19 01:06:25 +0000 UTC [ - ]
They are all Korean names. I was surprised to see Korean names in a SEC complaint.
sumedh 2021-08-19 01:29:52 +0000 UTC [ - ]
oars 2021-08-18 23:26:08 +0000 UTC [ - ]
m101 2021-08-18 23:00:54 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Doesn't insider trading just move expected profits from the wide and distributed network of people betting on information gathered through personal networks, and towards the concentrated group who can code the fastest trading algorithms?
I would like someone to suggest reasons why we should favour the coders over the people with friends.
I guess a more fundamental difference (in defence of insider trading regulations) could be an insider trade may be able to be put on in larger size, whilst market movements around news events may move the market with lower volumes.
smabie 2021-08-18 23:23:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
In my opinion it should be a civil matter.
a-dub 2021-08-19 00:04:17 +0000 UTC [ - ]
intellectual property is about actual things and how they're made, and unlike mnpi it has intrinsic value outside of speculating on securities prices.
tradable material nonpublic information isn't useful as most intellectual property is, but intellectual property, or knowledge of its development, can be tradable material nonpublic information.
netflix isn't harmed when their employees leak business performance numbers and their associates trade on them, the people who took the other side of those trades are the ones who are harmed. if it happens a lot, the whole market is harmed, if it happens a lot in one company, then that one company is harmed.
it ain't rocket science.
cwkoss 2021-08-19 00:48:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I've heard this argument before and I'm not sure I buy it.
Isn't 'efficient price discovery' the primary selling point of markets? Does the artificial suppression of information until "everyone" (but in practice mostly just HFTs these days) has equal chance to react to it meaningfully hurt retail investors, or is it mostly just taking profits from other people trying to game earnings announcements for profit?
m101 2021-08-19 04:23:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
a-dub 2021-08-19 02:53:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ad8e 2021-08-19 02:06:16 +0000 UTC [ - ]
yashap 2021-08-19 03:30:31 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Many public companies already have something like this internally, it’s just really locked down. Open it up and most insider trading goes away.
toast0 2021-08-19 05:31:48 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles aren't always entirely straightforward to apply; you can't just look at the bank balance every day, and internal dashboards don't have the same rigor that reported data must have.
laurent92 2021-08-19 07:17:22 +0000 UTC [ - ]
yellow_lead 2021-08-19 06:23:39 +0000 UTC [ - ]
TeMPOraL 2021-08-19 07:27:15 +0000 UTC [ - ]
filoleg 2021-08-19 08:30:06 +0000 UTC [ - ]
spdionis 2021-08-19 08:29:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
jjallen 2021-08-19 07:31:01 +0000 UTC [ - ]
judge2020 2021-08-19 04:50:51 +0000 UTC [ - ]
bwilliams18 2021-08-19 05:41:34 +0000 UTC [ - ]
andruby 2021-08-19 05:37:26 +0000 UTC [ - ]
But now all the algorithms crash or bubble the stock price and a lot of people loose money.
I’d love to see such (near-)realtime metrics though
skybrian 2021-08-19 05:39:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
rossmohax 2021-08-19 08:10:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
SEC could make a list of required realtime reporting metrics by industry and mandate this information to be published with delay no more than X days.
option 2021-08-19 09:06:20 +0000 UTC [ - ]
tw04 2021-08-19 02:21:47 +0000 UTC [ - ]
As far as I can tell the company isn’t legally or financially liable so I don’t see a downside?
daniel_iversen 2021-08-19 06:49:11 +0000 UTC [ - ]
yibg 2021-08-19 04:03:04 +0000 UTC [ - ]
p2t2p 2021-08-19 05:39:14 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ralusek 2021-08-19 07:26:33 +0000 UTC [ - ]
dheera 2021-08-19 07:39:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
And why should we care what some old farts at Wall Street think? They can run their company however they see fit.