INTEGRITY OF CAPITAL MARKETS

INTEGRITY OF CAPITAL MARKETS

What Is “Material” Information?
Information is “material” if its disclosure would probably have an impact on the price of a security or if reasonable investors would want to know the information before making an investment decision. In other words, information is material if it would significantly alter the total mix of information currently available about a security in
such a way that the price of the security would be affected.
The specificity of the information, the extent of its difference from public information, its nature, and its reliability are key factors in determining whether a particular piece of information fits the definition of material. For example, material information may include, but is not limited to, information on the following:
■ earnings;
■ mergers, acquisitions, tender offers, or joint ventures;
■ changes in assets or asset quality;
■ innovative products, processes, or discoveries (e.g., new product trials or research efforts);
■ new licenses, patents, registered trademarks, or regulatory approval/rejection of a product;
■ developments regarding customers or suppliers (e.g., the acquisition or loss of a contract);
■ changes in management;
■ change in auditor notification or the fact that the issuer may no longer rely on an auditor’s report or qualified opinion;
■ events regarding the issuer’s securities (e.g., defaults on senior securities, calls of securities for redemption, repurchase plans, stock splits, changes in dividends, changes to the rights of security holders, and public or private sales of additional securities);
■ bankruptcies;
■ significant legal disputes;
■ government reports of economic trends (employment, housing starts, currency information, etc.);
■ orders for large trades before they are executed; and
■ new or changing equity or debt ratings issued by a third party (e.g., sell-s ide recommendations and credit ratings).
In addition to the substance and specificity of the information, the source or relative reliability of the information also determines materiality. The less reliable a source, the less likely the information provided would be considered material. For example, factual information from a corporate insider regarding a significant new
contract for a company is likely to be material, whereas an assumption based on speculation by a competitor about the same contract is likely to be less reliable and, therefore, not material. Additionally, information about trials of a new drug, product, or service under development from qualified personnel involved in the trials is likely
to be material, whereas educated conjecture by subject experts not connected to the trials is unlikely to be material.
Also, the more ambiguous the effect of the information on price, the less material that information is considered. If it is unclear whether and to what extent the information will affect the price of a security, the information may not be considered material. The passage of time may also render information that was once important immaterial.

What Constitutes “Nonpublic” Information?
Information is “nonpublic” until it has been disseminated or is available to the marketplace in general (as opposed to a select group of investors). “Disseminated” can be defined as “made known.” For example, a company report of profits that is posted on the internet and distributed widely through a press release or accompanied by a filing
has been effectively disseminated to the marketplace. Members and candidates must have a reasonable expectation that people have received the information before it can be considered public. It is not necessary, however, to wait for the slowest method of delivery. Once the information is disseminated to the market, it is public information
that is no longer covered by this standard.
Members and candidates must be particularly aware of information that is selectively disclosed by corporations to a small group of investors, analysts, or other market participants. Information that is made available to analysts remains nonpublic until it is made available to investors in general. Corporations that disclose information on
a limited basis create the potential for insider- trading violations.
Issues of selective disclosure often arise when a corporate insider provides material information to analysts in a briefing or conference call before that information is released to the public. Analysts must be aware that a disclosure made to a room full of analysts does not necessarily make the disclosed information “public.” Analysts should
also be alert to the possibility that they are selectively receiving material nonpublic information when a company provides them with guidance or interpretation of such publicly available information as financial statements or regulatory filings.
A member or candidate may use insider information provided legitimately by the source company for the specific purpose of conducting due diligence according to the business agreement between the parties for such activities as mergers, loan underwriting, credit ratings, and offering engagements. In such instances, the investment
professional would not be considered in violation of Standard II(A) by using the material information. However, the use of insider information provided by the source company for other purposes, especially to trade or entice others to trade the securities of the firm, conflicts with this standard.

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