An Empirical Analysis of Legal Insider Trading in India
Date
2018
Authors
Anil Kumar, M.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
The motive of this research is to examine the insider trading behavior in the Indian
stock market and to determine the profitability and information content of insider
trading. It also aims to investigate the relationship between insider trading and stock
market crashes. The empirical study is based on disclosures made under SEBI
(Prohibition of Insider Trading) Regulations, 1992 to Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE),
which comprises the insider transactions of all the listed companies of BSE from
April 2007 to March 2015. The study uses the four-factor asset pricing model that
adjusts for size, book to market and momentum factors and event study methodology.
The empirical results confirm that insiders seem to have a preference for large market
capitalization companies, companies with low BE/ME ratio, high momentum, and
low P/E ratio. The analysis of abnormal returns to insider trading strategies shows that
insider purchase portfolios earn positive abnormal return and sale portfolios earn
negative abnormal return. However, outsider group does not earn significant abnormal
return during the same period. The results also show that insider purchase as well as
sale portfolios earn positive abnormal return in the pre-event window, whereas
purchase portfolio earns positive abnormal return and sale portfolio earns negative
abnormal return in the post-event window. Insider purchase and sales over a year‟s
time play a major role in causing stock market jump and crash respectively. Insiders
trading activity diminishes substantially just ahead of the crash or rally, whereas
outsiders trading activity increases just ahead of crash of rally. The findings of the
present study substantially exceed the previously documented degree of predictability
of insider trading.
Description
Keywords
School of Management, Insider trading, Fama and French, Carhart four-factor model, Information Asymmetry, Information Content, Event Study, Abnormal Return, Crash, Rally, Emerging Markets, India