The Insider Trading Anomaly Endures 50 Years After It Was First Identified by Lorie and Niederhoffer
The Insider Trading Anomaly Endures 50 Years After It Was First Identified by Lorie and Niederhoffer
The Insider Trading Anomaly Endures 50 Years After It Was First Identified by Lorie and Niederhoffer
James Lorie was a stock market researcher at the University of Chicago. Victor Niederhoffer was a
professor and trader who would work with George Soros and gain fame as a speculator. At the time,
expert opinion was polarized as to the usefulness of insider trading data. On the one hand, academic
studies had found there was “virtually no evidence of profitable exploitation by insiders of their
special knowledge and no value to outsiders in data on trading by insiders.” But many market
watchers believed that “insiders often make extraordinary profits and that knowledge of their trading
is valuable.”
Back in the day, insider trading reporting was slow and imprecise.
In 1968, as now, corporate insiders were defined as any officer, director or 10% holder of the shares
of a publicly traded company. However, studying historical insider trading was challenging, as the
data was often imprecise. The SEC published in print a monthly summary of trades compiled from
month-end reports by insiders. A trading insider had to file with an exchange within ten days of the
end of the month. (In 2003, the SEC began requiring online submission of Form 4s within 2 business
days of an insider trade.)
The often incomplete data made interpretation of insider trading data difficult. For instance during
1951-1962, the SEC’s summary only gave the month rather than the actual date of individual
transactions. The summary for the 1930’s came in three sections and was over 70 pages long. Many
transactions were reported two or more years after the actual transaction. Previous researchers were
forced to limit the size and scope of studies because of these difficulties.
“Data based on this procedure indicate a strong relationship between insider trading and price
movements. Furthermore there appears to be an opportunity for investors to profit from knowledge
of trading by insiders. Thus, when the number of buyers exceeded the number of sellers by at least
two, the probability was about 0.60 that the stock would outperform the Dow Jones Industrials
during the six months after the sixth trading day following the end of of the month in which the
trading took place.”
“This study indicates that proper and prompt analysis of data on insider trading can be profitable,
although almost all previously published studies have reached the contrary conclusion.”
Insiders may attempt to disguise the content of their trades by filing after
market hours.
In 2015, these researchers analyzed Insider Trading Patterns and found that
…corporate insiders trade over longer periods of time when they may have a longer lived
informational advantage…we find that isolated stock sales and purchases, and extended sale and
purchase sequences (those spread over multiple consecutive months), predict sizable abnormal
returns on average…
With so much data available to investors, one might think that stock markets are more efficient than
ever. Yet the insider trading anomaly endures 50 years after it was first identified by Lorie and
Neiderhoffer.
You can follow the latest insider trades and develop strategies to profit from insider activity at
WhaleWisdom.com.