Investigations
The Securities Trading Commission (STC) recently examined the acquisitions of several firms listed in the public stock market in 2000. The investigators wanted to examine the extent to which four different variables -- market capitalization, management's growth expectations (as measured by earnings growth), firm size, and investor sentiment -- affected suspicious insider trading activity. They hypothesized that all four variables would show a strong positive correlation to suspicious insider trading activity. However, after examining the acquisitions listed, they were surprised to find that none of the variables showed a strong positive correlation with suspicious insider trading activity, and in fact market capitalization and investor sentiment both showed a strong negative correlation.
The investigators also discovered that nearly all of these acquisitions seemed to have a slight jump in stock price in the days prior to acquisition, suggesting suspicious insider trading activity was prevalent. Such insider trading activity, if true, constitutes unfairness because it allows insiders to make a quick guaranteed profit that public investors have no access to. Investigators noted that new enforcement will be needed to assure a more fair and honest stock market.
Acquisitions
The table lists companies that were acquired in year 2000 together with the average share price in the last 30 days excluding the last 3 days before acquisition announcement ("Steady State" price), the pre-announcement opening share price, the post-announcement closing share price, and premium paid for the acquisition relative to the steady state price. Prices are in US dollars.
The discussion of the STC's investigation refers to "market capitalization" primarily to
help explain why investor sentiment toward some acquisitions is sometimes very low
caution that some variables should not be considered accurate predictors of suspicious insider trading activity
point to one of the attributes firms often use to generate investor interest in their acquisition
demonstrate that some attributes of a firm are often negatively correlated with the firm's acquisition
introduce one of the variables whose relationship to suspicious insider trading activity surprised researchers