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by hnrandom
4638 days ago
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But in this case the consumers are the sellers. These are ordinary people with shares that lost value. Cuban had information that the ordinary people didn't since he was an insider, and unfairly used that information to get to market faster than everyone else. If everyone else knew that information they would have sold at the same time, causing Cuban's shares to be worth less when he tried to sell. Also, selling pumpkins at a high school football game? Far out analogy... |
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Trading on perceived insider information is not always illegal. There are very specific situations in which it is illegal.
Cuban is going to win because he didn't agree to hold the information in confidentiality, he didn't leak the information (which could have caused all sorts of other ramifications), and he also was not a director / employee / CEO / executive etc.
The SEC needs to get him on Rule 10b5-2, and they will not be able to.