- Closely watched enforcement case expands trading restrictions
- Defense lawyer tells jury SEC can’t prove intent to defraud
A lawyer for the
The civil trial that began Monday in San Francisco will answer the novel question of whether buying or selling another company’s stock based on specialized industry knowledge constitutes insider trading.
Under Chair
Securities traders and lawyers are closely watching the San Francisco case of Matthew Panuwat, the SEC’s first attempt to pursue so-called shadow trading. It also underscores how Congress has never explicitly defined insider trading, leaving courts to decide when the SEC oversteps its authority.
In his opening argument, SEC lawyer
Seven Minutes
Seven minutes after receiving an August 2016 email from Medivation’s CEO that said
Pfizer announced the $14 billion Medivation deal days later. By taking one mid-cap biopharma company off the market, the deal made Incyte a more valuable acquisition target, the SEC alleged in its suit against Panuwat.
Panuwat was a sophisticated trader who “knew exactly what he was doing,” Meyerhofer said.
“He made a high-risk, high-reward bet,” the SEC lawyer said. “Except it wasn’t risky for him because he knew what was going to happen.”
Panuwat’s attorney,
“The evidence will show that the entire SEC case is an attempt to put thoughts in Mr. Panuwat’s head that were not there when he made the trades,” DiCanio said.
Intent to Defraud
DiCanio also argued that the trades weren’t based on confidential information because the merger had been covered publicly by the press. And the SEC can’t prove that Panuwat had an intent to defraud because he didn’t know it was illegal to trade in a company that wasn’t his employer and that didn’t conduct business with his employer.
The agency is arguing that Panuwat signed a confidentiality agreement at Medivation that required him not to share or use information learned during his employment, and was subject to an insider trading policy that barred employees from profiting off material nonpublic information.
If the jury finds that Panuwat violated the insider trading policy, the verdict could have far-reaching implications since most businesses have some similar policy, said Northwestern Pritzker School of Law professor Alex Lee.
It could also prompt companies to revisit their insider trading policies that aren’t at issue in this case and close any gaps, he said. Pfizer’s policy, for example, barred trading securities of customers, suppliers or other companies with which it “has or may be considering a relationship,” meaning that a Pfizer employee likely could have traded a number of other stocks that benefited from stay-at-home orders during the pandemic based on internal knowledge about Pfizer’s Covid vaccine trials.
US District Judge
The case is Securities and Exchange Commission v. Panuwat, 21-cv-06322, US District Court, Northern District of California (San Francisco).
(Updates with elaboration of law professor’s analysis in 15th paragraph.)
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Peter Blumberg, Steve Stroth
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