英文摘要 |
Regarding insider trading in the securities market, Taiwan and China have both encountered disputes in their civil damage compensation system. These experiences include the criteria for determining the cause-effect relationship between insider trading and the loss of the investors and the methods for calculating the amount of damage thereto. To profit from insider trading, it is necessary to make use of the property value of the information itself. The efficiency of the market in responding to new information is one of the factors that determine whether an investor would suffer from a loss or whether an insider would profit directly from insider trading. Based on the Efficient-Market Hypothesis (EMH), this study starts with an exploration on the efficiency of the securities markets in Taiwan and China, and a review on the prevailing regulations and practices on insider trading. The purpose is to decide whether it is necessary to build up a quantitative mechanism to measure the damage caused by insider trading and the corresponding civil liabilities. A refined analysis has been made, in the meantime, on the actual impact of insider trading on investors. Based on the facts of the cases studied, the analysis is made, respectively, from the perspectives of traders (external investors or internal shareholders) and the nature of important information (positive or negative information). |