The World Price of Insider Trading
47 Pages Posted: 22 Dec 2000
Abstract
The existence and the enforcement of insider trading laws in stock markets is a phenomenon of the 1990s. A study of the 103 countries that have stock markets reveals that insider trading laws exist in 87 of them, but enforcement - as evidenced by prosecutions - has taken place in only 38 of them. Before 1990, the respective numbers were 34 and 9. Does this matter? We find that the cost of equity in a country, after controlling for a number of other variables, does not change after the introduction of insider trading laws, but decreases significantly after the first prosecution.
Keywords: Insider trading, cost of equity, international finance
JEL Classification: G14, G15
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
By Christine Botosan and Marlene Plumlee
-
By Christine Botosan and Marlene Plumlee
-
By Paul M. Healy and Krishna Palepu
-
Information and the Cost of Capital
By Maureen O'hara and David Easley
-
Toward an Implied Cost of Capital
By William R. Gebhardt, Charles M.c. Lee, ...
-
Toward an Ex Ante Cost-of-Capital
By William R. Gebhardt, Charles M.c. Lee, ...
-
The Market Pricing of Earnings Quality
By Jennifer Francis, Ryan Lafond, ...
-
Disclosure Quality, Institutional Investors, and Stock Return Volatility