The term insider trading refers to the stock transactions of the officers, directors, and large shareholders of a firm. Many investors believe that corporate insiders, informed about their firms' prospects, buy and sell their own firm's stock at favorable times, reaping significant profits. Given the extra costs and risks of an active trading strategy, the key question for stock market investors is whether the publicly available insider-trading information can help them to outperform a simple passive index fund. Basing his insights on an exhaustive data set that captures information on all reported insider trading in all publicly held firms over the past twenty-one years-over one million transactions!-H. Nejat Seyhun shows how investors can use insider information to their advantage. He documents the magnitude and duration of the stock price movements following insider trading, determinants of insiders' profits, and the risks associated with imitating insider trading. He looks at the likely performance of individual firms and of the overall stock market, and compares the value of what one can learn from insider trading with commonly used measures of value such as price-earnings ratio, book-to-market ratio, and dividend yield.
Would that more financial books were written this way. Gets straight to the point, backs up conclusions with the data (and not the other way around), and examines various combinations of factors along with insider trading. Compelling.
Useful Information, but repetitive writing
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
This is a very good and thorough book. Seyhun addresses many different ways in which you can gain information from insider trading. He is incredibly thorough. That brings me to the major problem with the book--Seyhun is quite repetitive. The different chapters deal with different aspects of insider trading (for example, the size of the trades, who is making the trades, how many insiders are trading). Each chapter has the same structure. Much of the prose seems to be re-used across chapters as well. This is best dealt with by skimming over some of the repetitive parts while paying close attention to the graphs and tables. A second thing about the book is that Seyhun uses tests of his hypotheses that non-statisticians can understand. This improves readability but makes the book longer (and more frustrating for statisticians).
Insightful!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
Are you ready to learn from the somewhat mythical, sometimes notorious and often misunderstood inside traders? H. Nejat Seyhun has compressed a gargantuan amount of information - 21 year's worth of reported insider trades, more than one million transactions - into a manual that debunks and reconfigures the wild world of insider trading. Since inside traders are bound by strict laws, their prowess comes from proximity to the action. As a farmer can predict the next big storm by watching his cattle, sophisticated traders can predict the next market windfall by watching the insiders. This isn't a late-night page-turner; after all, Seyhun is a noted academic expert. Yet flashier verbal energy might have sacrificed the book's most valuable quality: precision. This book (the opposite of the Investing for Illiterates-type) takes its readers and itself seriously - If you are serious about your portfolio, we [...] recommend that you put yourself through Seyhun's course. Dedicated investors, policy makers and scholars need this on their reference shelves.
Great information!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
This book will teach you everything you need to know about insider trading.This is the best book available on insider trading.This book is worth alot more then it's cost.
Making The Most Of Signals From Insiders
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
I discovered this book after reading an interview in Outstanding Investor Digest of the managing partners from Tweedy Browne, who apparently received it enthusiastically. Now I find myself as enthusiastic as they seem to be about the book.The expression "Insider Trading" tends to conjure images of Ivan Boesky, and others like him, using inside information for profit before the investing public has an opportunity to access that same information. This book is not about that. It is about the utilization of officially disclosed (via SEC filings) information regarding stock purchases and sales by the higher echelon of a firm's corporate managers. As such, it is an impressively researched examination of insider trading and how the individual investor might best make use of it.Nejat Seyhun uses data spanning several decades (sometimes more) to demonstrate the utility of insider trading information as it might best be exploited by value investors, momentum investors or arbitrageurs. He offers some surprising conclusions concerning buy and selling within firms, conclusions which are nuanced by the size of the firm in question.The book is a scholarly treatment of a kind of information which is likely to be misinterpreted by the individual investor. Although the book really is a carefully researched statistical exercise, it is readily accessible to investors of any pursuasion or level of expertise. Few books, investment or otherwise, seem to cater to both scholarly and popular audiences so well.The book's only flaw is it does not pay particular attention to resources for insider trading information. As he mentions, the Wall Street Journal is also worthwhile.
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