The practice of shadow trading which involves trading securities between two companies that share economic ties after acquiring material nonpublic information about one specific company has become a critical problem for current securities regulations. The 2024 jury verdict in SEC v. Panuwat validated the US Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) theory that such trading constitutes insider trading under the misappropriation doctrine which created essential challenges for existing securities fraud frameworks through its examination of doctrinal limits and economic foundations and regulatory integrity. This paper provides a comprehensive doctrinal, economic, and comparative analysis of shadow trading. The study begins with a detailed examination of Panuwat's actual events and judicial decisions which demonstrate how the verdict expands liability to encompass market-moving information beyond information specific to issuers. The study positions shadow trading inside the theoretical frameworks which include misappropriation theory and classical theory. The paper critically assesses the economic evidence which supports shadow trading by using empirical data that shows shadow trading transactions reached an estimated total of 2.75 billion dollars from 2009 to 2021. A comparative analysis examines how the European Union, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia, and the United Kingdom address-or fail to address-shadow trading, revealing a striking contrast between broad ex ante prohibitions and ex post enforcement gaps. The paper investigates practical effects which corporate insider trading policies and capital market integrity and the Ninth Circuit appeal process will have on shadow trading. The study shows that shadow trading functions as a necessary adaptation which legally applies to modern interconnected finance systems instead of creating a doctrinal revolution.
Nishu Mishra (Fri,) studied this question.