Your presence on this site neither helps nor harms it. It is of no consequence.Quote from Gummivogel:
who hurt the site more? occasional politically incorrect comments, or alex of puretick?
Sorry, but give me a fucking break. If you were at an ET convention and there was a well-established trader/fund manager there and you got to talking to him and it turned out that both of you had a lifelong passion for Shelby Cobras, and as you talk he realizes that you know a whole shitload about them and the two of you hung out for the entire convention and he showed you his Cobra which he just happened to have at the show, and during the ride he takes you on, he tells you that you should load up on TIPME.OTC, you'd be all over it like a fat kid on a Smartie. So would 98% of the guys on here.Quote from forsalenyc:
i'm sure he's not the only scumbag who did inside trading. I'm sure there'll be more to come. It's been really tough for those who run hedge fund in the past year or so. when u get desperate, you cross the line. I hope this bastard spend the rest of his life behind bars.
Hey Tradernik, did you take a look at the pleading document which was attached to the NY Times article?Quote from traderNik:
... Sorry, but that was just a little too sanctimonious to escape comment.

You might or might not. Point is that most people would act on an insider tip if they knew they weren't going to get caught.Quote from heech:
Uh, why would I assume his tip was based on insider information?
Exactly. It's not the crime, it's if you get caught. In your scenario, acting on the information represents too much of a risk. In a different scenario where acting on insider information represented no risk, you would 'weigh the risks... against potential reward' and take the trade.Quote from heech:
I personally would seriously weigh the risks of going to prison against the potential profits involved in these trades, and would very likely pass.