JP Morgan's Insider Trading How-To On Wikileaks
An anonymous reader writes "In an internal JP Morgan document published recently, Wikileaks exposes JPM's efforts to circumvent insider trading regulations, enabling their wealthy clients to profit even when others are losing. The document reads like a how-to and explains how to take advantage of SEC Rule 10b5-1, which has long been considered ripe for abuse. Now this abuse is publicly documented and will be hard to ignore."
It should be stressed that this leak is not, in fact, revealling illegal activity. I even doubt that Wikileaks made it public; I mean, they must have some kind of advertisment or at least a publicly available description of this service, no?
If it was already public, then it's interesting for the process of defining the role of Wikileaks: here, it's role would be to raise awareness rather than reveal, which means acting like a news site.
Personaly, I think that Wikileak should not stride from it's original goal: when you're run anonymously, you must keep close to your original description; it's the only kind of accountability you offer.
Don't take my posts literally; it's just code to control my botnet.
If you bothered read the linked article you would find that:
1. JP Morgan established a whole service specifically designed to abuse this rule.
2. Service was offered to people who would profit from such abuse without any announcement to the public or regulators.
3. The article shows a specific example of service being offered to a particular person, Barry Diller, and subsequent drop in stock value that the person was supposed to be shielded from (I assume, it is not known if the service was actually used in that situation).
Now you, and two morons that were so eager to praise you in responses, can take your sorry attempt of rebuttal, and tattoo it on your foreheads in 12pt Helvetica font.
Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
The specific document was NOT public. The act that it describes is legal, the steps used to take that action are for the most part public knowledge (although, only a very slim portion of the society knew them), but the document that was posted was a private document to be viewed by only specific employees of JP Morgan, and select clients.
Just because it's legal, that does not mean that it is not a leak. Hell, they could get a document showing that some Senator is gay, being gay is not a crime, but releasing a private document with that information in it would still be a leak.
-Rick
"Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs