5 Challenging Judgment Calls for Insider Trading Preclearance
Preclearance of trades is one of those “bread n’ butter” topics if you’re an in-house securities lawyer. It involves a number of practices that are at the heart of the “soft” stuff. Having good judgment really counts here.
Who is subject to pre-clearance? All directors and Section 16 officers. This helps you with complying with Section 16’s reporting requirements and monitoring any potential short-swing problems. It helps you to draft the proxy and monitor compliance with your stock ownership guidelines.
Then there are those employees that require pre-clearance because they regularly come into possession of material nonpublic information – employees in accounting, finance, legal.
Finally, there will be employees working on a project – working on a potential merger, about to land a major contract, things like that – for a discrete period of time that requires them to join the ‘blackout period’ club on a temporary basis.
Here are five important judgment calls you might make when clearing trades:
- Ask the right questions
- Don’t spill the beans
- Do your own diligence
- Document or not
- Try not to be jaded
For many more Vid-Guides dealing with corporate & securities law, corporate governance, E&S issues and more – particularly if you want to review any Vid-Guides referred to during this Vid-Guide – see the list of Vid-Guides spread throughout these categories:
- Corporate Governance
- Proxy Season
- Executive Pay
- ’34 Act/Other
- ’33 Act/Deals
- Sustainability/E&S
- Career Advice
- Fun Party
And since all the content on ZippyPoint.com is complimentary, please “Pay-What-You-Can” to help keep this fine platform alive & well…
Like what you're seeing?
Pay-What-You-Can
Zippy Point is a community-funded site - to keep making great content, we rely on your generosity. Please "pay-what-you-can" today.