META trades by the US politicians Percentage 67%2 sells 33%1 buy Amount 75%sells 25%buys Upgrade Today In the last 12 months January 2025 SenatorActionAmountDateOwnerType SenatorType100 - 200Jan 2024FinboldSenate SenatorType100 - 200Jan 2024FinboldSenate ...
TSLA trades by the US politicians Percentage 0%0 sells 100%1 buy Amount 75%sells 25%buys Upgrade Today In the last 12 months January 2025 SenatorActionAmountDateOwnerType SenatorType100 - 200Jan 2024FinboldSenate SenatorType100 - 200Jan 2024FinboldSenate ...
Our results indicate that trades by politicians who are politically connected to the brokerage house where the trade is executed are more profitable. Our estimates suggest that these connected trades earn an incremental 0.3% over a five-day window relative to the politician's average profitability. ...
This is an audio transcript of theUnhedgedpodcast episode: ‘What the London Stock Exchange really trades’ [MUSIC PLAYING] Katie Martin So in the UK, politicians, bankers, all kinds of people are all fretting about one thing, which is the long, slow, painful death of stock market listings ...
said they never trade with nonpublic information. Some said their trades are made through financial advisers and often without their knowledge. Others said that trading stocks shouldn’t be banned because doing so would cut off a financial source that some politicians use ...
The page initially shows all insider trading recorded for the symbol, with the option to filter by a specific transaction date range, transaction type, or dollar amount of the transaction. Yoy may also toggle the page to include trades made by Politicians. Note: This page is updated twice dai...
Inside Scoop is a regular Barron’s feature covering stock transactions by corporate executives and board members—so-called insiders—as well as large shareholders, politicians, and other prominent figures. Due to their insider status, these investors are required to disclose stock trades with ...
Inside Scoop is a regular Barron’s feature covering stock transactions by corporate executives and board members—so-called insiders—as well as large shareholders, politicians, and other prominent figures. Due to their insider status, these investors are required to disclose stock trades with the ...
There is also evidence in the literature to suggest that the STOCK Act was able to deter politicians from trading based on non-public information. However, the question of whether politicians made informed trades at the market level (using non-public macroeconomic information, not just firm-...
Overall, our study contributes to the literature by presenting evidence that politicians traded on non-public macroeconomic information prior to the passage of the STOCK Act, and the STOCK Act curbed the use of non-public macroeconomic information in politicians’ stock trades. The rest of the ...