Doug
Casey on Insider Trading
Interviewed
by Louis James, Editor, International
Speculator
Recently:
Doug Casey
on Ron Paul
L:
So, Doug, several people have asked us to talk about the scandal
that deposed the head of the IMF; whats your take on it?
Doug:
To all appearances, it couldnt have happened to a nicer guy,
but Ive got insider trading on my mind lets talk
about DSK next week.
L: Ah.
Raj
Rajaratnams troubles got you riled up?
Doug:
Its a disgrace. Rajaratnam is or was a productive
member of society who, even if he did break the law, may very well
have done nothing morally wrong
L: Good
grief, Doug, you want the SEC to invite us over for tea and a chat?
I know better than to expect you to ever beat around the bush, but
Doug:
The SEC is concerned with the enforcement of a set of stupid, counterproductive,
expensive, completely unnecessary, and destructive laws. It does
so by having its bureaucracy create a myriad of even more stupid,
counterproductive, expensive, completely unnecessary, and destructive
regulations.
L: But
youd say that about all government law.
Doug:
I would, actually, although I know that confuses some people because
there is an overlap between government law and what might be called
natural law. But this one is topical at the moment, and worth debunking
here and now, even though by this time next week people will have
totally forgotten that the guy has been locked away for years
along with about 2.2 million others now in American prisons
most of whom absolutely shouldnt be there.
L: Okay,
okay, but for the record there must be a few snoops who read
these things we abide by all securities and all U.S. law
at Casey Research. In fact, the ethics policy I had to sign and
that is strictly applied to all of us here at Casey Research exceeds
SEC standards, because we not only dont want to run afoul
the law, our reputation is our business and we dont want to
give anyone any reason to doubt our integrity.
This reminds
me of your old stunt, asking the Feds in your audiences to stand
up and identify themselves, because you knew who they were. Amazing
that you got a few to fall for that.
So
where
to begin?
Doug:
With a definition, as always. The SECs definition of insider
trading is constantly evolving and growing, though the definition
itself forget about its application is imprecise and
arbitrary. But, more or less, it says that any officer, director,
holder of more than 10% of a public companys stock, or anyone
they talk to about material information regarding the company, is
an insider.
Like most of
the SECs rules, the ones on insider trading are arbitrary.
Theyre similar to the tax laws, in that you often cant
know whether youre breaking them or not. Youd almost
have to live with a specialized attorney to keep from getting in
trouble. They cant be enforced in anything but a sporadic
way basically to cause fear, in the hope that fear will keep
the plebes in line. But worse, they are unnecessary and destructive.
L: One
thing at a time, then. Unnecessary?
Doug:
Yes. Theres nothing wrong with insider trading, per se. For
example, theres nothing wrong with a manager, who knows his
company will report a good quarter, buying shares in his company
in advance. This causes no one any harm. Let me repeat that: the
fact that an insider knows or thinks he knows good
news is coming and buys shares does not hurt anyone. Actually, it
spreads out the buying pressure and may help everyone buy at better
prices. Moreover, if someone needs to sell urgently on a given day,
maybe for tax reasons, or maybe because their kid needs an operation,
then the fact that someone is in there buying with gusto does him
a lot of good.
L: But
people say it isnt fair.
Doug:
Theres no such thing as fair. Fair is necessarily
an arbitrary and contentious word, usually employed by busybodies
and losers. You think its fair to the antelope when the lion
eats it? Was it fair to the dinosaurs when Mother Nature wiped them
out? Or how about this: is giving everyone an equal share of something
fair, if some worked for it harder than others? The guy who knows
something and buys has not taken anything from unwilling hands
just uninformed hands and people have to make decisions with
varying amounts of uncertainty all the time. You cant regulate
uncertainty or the uneven spread of information out of existence
any more than you can regulate the capacity to intuit the significance
of information into every human skull. Not only is it impossible
to do, its ethically wrong to try. If youre no good
at this game, dont play it. Lifes not fair. Get over
it.
L: Ive
long seen fairness as a false ideal, created by people whom I suspect
were simply jealous of those who had more than they did. Its
the have-nots, or want-mores, trying to use power over others to
compel them to share what they would not share willingly, instead
of working hard to become haves themselves, honestly.
This has caused
nothing but harm to all people especially poor people, actually
because calls for fairness often wind up with
the ends justifying the means. Assuaging the plight of poverty-stricken
people seems like a noble enough reason, perhaps enough to justify
a little bit of force, a mild redistribution, especially from those
who dont really need all they have
But this is not justice;
its brute force with a benevolent mask. And once a governing
system has been given such power, it can use it for less noble goals
and in time, it always does. So-called social justice is
just the opposite of what it claims to be. Taking from people what
they will not give willingly is theft, and by any other name, it
smells just as bad.
Justice is
hard enough to achieve, though it can be done, with effort. Fairness
is just jealousy dolled up.
Sorry
That one really gets me. Back to insider trading. Buying on good
news is one thing what about on the sell side? What if someone
knows a company is going to be sued, or have a patent rejected,
or some such negative insider info?
Doug:
What of it? So, they get out before others do. Some kid gets to
the water fountain before the rest it happens. And, again,
it can spread out the selling, actually blunting the impact of the
bad news.
Look, theres
no problem with insiders buying or selling based on their knowledge.
Even if news is kept airtight until its press-released, some
people will get it before others. Only the people paying close attention
at that time will be able to act immediately. Is that fair
to everyone else? If the exchanges slapped trading halts on every
share every time a company reported news, everyone would be trying
to buy or sell the moment the halts were lifted, greatly magnifying
the swings, both up and down. This would tend to cause more harm
to all shareholders. The whole idea is simply silly.
The fact is
that there are many buyers and sellers, each with different levels
of knowledge, ability, and need, and the more important differences
in understanding and insight, for example are internal
and individual. Theres no way to truly level the playing field.
Its an impossible ideal, and therefore a destructive goal.
L: What
if an insider knows theres bad news and is telling people
otherwise, urging them to buy, like the proverbial used car salesman
who fills a knocking transmission with sawdust to quiet the sound?
Doug:
Well, thats fraud then. Its got nothing to do with being
an insider, its got to do with lying. A crook is a crook,
and he doesnt stop being a crook just because there are rules
rules just change the way he cheats people. There are ways
to deal with this even laws, if you want to use them. Im
not defending deceit, fraud, or theft. All Im saying is that
its impossible for everyone to hear of financially relevant
news at the same time, and that it would be counterproductive if
it could be made to happen.
Further, if
shareholders really want to try equalizing trading opportunities
by demanding certain policies regarding trading and the handling
of material information, they could do that. This could all be dealt
with by contract between the company and its employees. Or by allowing
exchanges to regulate this in different ways, appealing to investors
who care about different things.
Instead, we
get the SEC, which should really be called the Swindlers Encouragement
Commission, telling people its making sure everythings
fair, thus luring the lambs to the slaughter. The investment world
is full of sharks, and it always will be all the SEC does
is lower the average guys defenses, which really does encourage
swindlers. Just look at Bernie Madoff, a perfect example. The SEC
has never prevented a fraud, to my knowledge. Rather, by making
everyone think theyre protected, it makes a fraud much easier
to perpetrate. Lambs to the slaughter.
L: Dont
hold back, Doug
Doug:
[Chuckles] It gets worse: adding insult to injury, the SEC costs
business billions of dollars annually probably scores of
billions, if you take all the secondary and trickle-down costs into
account: direct fees, legal fees, printing, mailing, and other costs
of compliance. They have a direct budget cost of something over
a billion dollars per year, but thats trivial relative to
the indirect costs they impose on the economy. They ought to be
ashamed, diverting a significant fraction of GDP from productive
use into the pockets of parasites, in the name of protecting business
and investors, when they do the opposite. The SEC is like a Pied
Piper who attracts ravening hordes of rats with his flute instead
of getting rid of them and then charges people tenfold for
the service.
This is one
agency I would abolish, immediately and completely. Not a single
one of its functions should even be handed off to other agencies.
The SEC serves absolutely no useful purpose whatsoever just
the opposite. Its not a question of getting it under control,
or paring it back. It should be eliminated in toto.
L: On
some level, I think everyone in the market knows this is true. They
go along with the insider trading charade because Big Brother is
watching, but they know theyve read things others have not,
they know people others do not, they have relevant experience others
do not. To hear the bawdy tales around the trendy pubs in financial
districts, everyone thinks they know something others dont.
Nobody is trying to be fair they are trying to win.
Short sellers are perhaps the brassiest of the lot; their very positions
proclaim that they think they know something others do not. Their
counterparties to the short sells know this, and willingly enter
into contract with them, pitting their own knowledge and understanding
against that of the shorts.
Its all
about skating around the edges without crossing the lines
and for some, its all about crossing the lines without getting
caught. I think this really is a case of the emperors new
clothes, at least among investors. But if everyone knows this, why
does the myth persist?
Doug:
The public and the fat cats and absolutely the politicians
all think that a high stock market is, almost by definition,
a good thing. But a high stock market doesnt necessarily mean
an economy is doing well, or that public companies are doing well
it just means theres a perception that this is the
case. Or worse, in some cases like now, I suspect
it means nothing at all, other than that people are afraid to hold
currency, government bonds, real estate, or other assets and so-called
assets. An artificially high stock market can send dangerous, false
signals to businessmen and investors. It can cause false confidence
the kind Wile E. Coyote still has when he runs off a cliff.
But the government seems to love a high stock market
Of course short
sellers love to see an overpriced market too. And speaking of short
sellers, Id go further and say that they provide a very valuable
positive service to other market participants.
L: How
so?
Doug:
To start with, theyre always on the lookout for frauds. Theyre
really the policemen of the market, taking down inflated stock prices
of bad companies, and alerting other investors of the danger.
Plus, when
they short a stock, no matter how the trade goes, they have to actually
buy it back at some point, to be able to deliver on the contract.
If they are right about a company being grossly overvalued, their
selling provides a warning by driving down the price. Further, they
are there to provide a bid after theyve been proven right.
By then, almost no one else is buying, and the shorts offer some
liquidity, a bid, to the fools and amateurs who didnt do their
homework. And if they are wrong, being forced to cover their short
position can push the stock higher, to the benefit of the incorrectly
judged company.
L: So,
its the Wild West?
Doug:
First, the Wild West wasnt nearly as wild as Hollywood has
made it out to be. It had an unregulated economy that worked quite
well most of the time better than ours does now, Id
say, given the huge wealth it created for so many people who had
the grit to go out there and take nature on. But thats a conversation
for another day. Second, security is a fiction
it doesnt exist once you leave your mothers womb.
What Im
saying now, to use your metaphor, is that at least out in the Wild
West, people knew that they had to be on their guard and take extra
care. In the so-called Civilized East, that was just as true
but the need was masked by the veneer of civilization, and people
were conned in droves.
And thats
still true today; every investor who enters the market needs to
understand that on the other side of every single trade he makes,
is another human being. As in all walks of life, not all human beings
are equally honest, or smart, or friendly. Remembering this would
encourage investors to do more homework.
L: So,
back to Raj Rajaratnam. He didnt do anything wrong?
Doug:
I dont know I dont have all the facts of the
case at my disposal. If he did something unethical, shame on him.
From what I know, it would appear the possible real wrongdoers were
the executives of the companies who relayed information to him
if their deal with the company required them to keep it confidential.
Of course, if that was the case, then Raj may have been guilty of
receiving stolen goods. But that is not what hes been convicted
of. Hes only been convicted of breaking SEC rules.
But I do know
one thing: Raj was a very smart and productive guy thats
how he became a billionaire. Now, instead of creating value and
wealth in society, hes going to be locked up in a cage for
years, and transformed into a burden on society.
In any event,
if he committed a tort, it should be the subject of a civil suit.
Its not something that should automatically be the subject
of a criminal prosecution. If a crime is involved, let an action
be brought by the party who was stolen from not by a government
agency, acting on its own.
L: Well,
if people want to help him, Rajaratnams brother is leading
a letter-writing
campaign. But the SEC isnt going away any time soon, so
this is all academic. Are there any real-world investment implications
you want to point out?
Doug:
Sure. Remember that government regulation is just another distortion
in the marketplace, like taxes, trade barriers, inflation, and so
forth. All such distortions have consequences, and one of them is
to create opportunities for speculators. I havent done it,
I confess, but I think someone who studied the SECs predatory
behavior could make a substantial fortune predicting outcomes. Its
full of young hotshot attorneys looking to make their bones by attacking
guys like Raj. Then they can join a law firm, and charge $1000 an
hour to defend clients against the next crop of hotshot young SEC
attorneys, who will do the same thing. Its a very corrupt
system.
L: Youve
said things like that several times. It occurs to me to ask what
speculators would do in a true free-market economy, where there
are no such distortions?
Doug:
Wed all have to find another line of work. In a free-market
economy there would be very few speculators, because there would
be very few distortions in the way the world works.
L: I
think Id become a venture capitalist. Its the next best
thing plenty of volatility and speculative upside
but
it is riskier, because youre betting on specific innovations,
not trends that have to play out sooner or later.
Doug:
Perhaps Id invest in nanotech research, to hasten the day
when they can rejuvenate my body and I can play polo properly again.
But for now, I really want to urge people who agree with us about
the SEC to think long and hard about the issues. They should be
crystal clear in their minds, so they can raise their voices in
opposition when others around them mindlessly parrot the party line
on insider trading. Hope may be scant of changing the system, but
thats no reason to hesitate to debunk erroneous conventional
wisdom. It should be debunked because its the right thing
to do, and because falsehoods and lies are everyones enemy.
The current corrupt system will go the way of the dodo eventually,
on its own. But the more people there are reminding everyone that
one just cant escape the caveat emptor dictum,
the sooner and the easier the transition will be.
But most of
all the most practical advice I can give investors now
is not to be taken in themselves by the SEC con. There are more
sharks than ever in the water, and nothing the SEC does reduces
that number. Always, always keep your guard up, and do your homework.
Start with researching the people in any given play. Thats
what we do at Casey Research: People is the first of our eight
Ps of resource speculation.
L: Great
words to the wise. Thanks, Doug.
Doug:
My pleasure, as always. Until next week.
L: Next
week.
Spotting an
emerging trend and capitalizing on it is every investors dream.
But its hard for a single person to do all that research.
Let The
Casey Report guide you to powerful opportunities
a three-month trial is risk-free. Details
here.
May
27, 2011
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Casey’s
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2011 Casey
and Associates
The
Best of Doug Casey
|