
New theory on why SEC workers are such winning stock traders
In a new report that echoes past findings, Associate Professor of Accountancy Roger White and his co-author observed that commission employees regularly pick better times to sell shares than everyone else in the market.
In a report titled, “Stock Trades of SEC Employees,” White and his co-author, Professor of Accounting and Auditing at Columbia Business School Shivaram Rajgopal, found Securities and Exchange Commission employees' returns compare to those from insider trading.
In this article by The Washington Post with Bloomberg on Oct. 31, 2017:
“Given that the SEC is tasked by Congress with enforcing insider trading regulations against corporate officers and other market participants, our findings indicating abnormal risk adjusted profits on trades by SEC employees are noteworthy,” Shivaram Rajgopal, professor of accounting and auditing at Columbia Business School, and Roger White, assistant professor in the School of Accountancy at Arizona State University, write.
Latest news
- ‘Big league’ or big illusion? Study calls time on splashy stock market anomalies
In his latest research, an ASU professor invents a stock market anomaly to expose the shaky…
- Why wealthy Americans work
An ASU economist’s research shows the affluent work not for more stuff, but for better stuff —…
- Accounting professional Min Zhang joins master's program to level up skills
Min Zhang (MACC '25) had been working in accounting in her home country of China for five years…