On December 15th, the SEC proposed amendments to Rule 10b5-1 to enhance disclosure requirements and investor protections against transactions in company securities. Adopted by the SEC in August 2000, Rule 10b5-1 provides corporate insiders an affirmative defense to insider trading: (1) for parties that commonly have access to material nonpublic information, including corporate officers, directors, and issuers, and (2) in circumstances where (subject to certain conditions) the trade was (a) under a binding contract, (b) part of an instruction to another person to execute the trade for the instructing person’s account, or (c) part of a written plan adopted when the trader was not aware of material nonpublic information.
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