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Inside information (Inside information (Article 7 UK MAR))

Inside information is information of a precise nature, not made public, relating to one or more issuers or financial instruments, which if made public would be likely to have a significant effect on the price of those instruments. It is defined in Article 7 of the UK Market Abuse Regulation.

Inside information is the cornerstone concept of the insider dealing prohibition. Its meaning is fixed by Article 7 of the UK Market Abuse Regulation (UK MAR), and only information meeting that definition can give rise to the offences of insider dealing or unlawful disclosure under Articles 8, 10 and 14. Getting the definition right is therefore essential to any wall-crossing, disclosure or trading control.

The four-part test

Article 7 requires four elements to be present. The information must be precise, meaning it indicates circumstances or an event that exists or may reasonably be expected to come into existence, and is specific enough to allow a conclusion about the likely price effect (Article 7(2)). It must not have been made public. It must relate, directly or indirectly, to one or more issuers or financial instruments. And it must be price-sensitive: if made public it would be likely to have a significant effect on price, judged by whether a reasonable investor would be likely to use it as part of their investment decisions (Article 7(4)).

Why it matters

Acting on inside information, recommending that others do so, or unlawfully disclosing it are all prohibited and can attract unlimited FCA penalties and criminal prosecution. Issuers must also disclose inside information to the market as soon as possible under Article 17, unless a valid delay applies, and maintain insider lists under Article 18. Misjudging whether information is “inside” can therefore breach both the abuse and the disclosure limbs of MAR.

Who it applies to

Issuers, their advisers, directors and employees, and anyone who comes into possession of inside information through their work or otherwise.

MAR, market manipulation and STOR.

Frequently asked questions

What is inside information under UK MAR?
Under Article 7 of the UK Market Abuse Regulation, inside information is information that is precise, has not been made public, relates directly or indirectly to one or more issuers or financial instruments, and which, if made public, would be likely to have a significant effect on the price of those instruments or related derivatives. The four limbs must all be satisfied.
What does 'price-sensitive' mean in the test for inside information?
Information has a significant effect on price, and is therefore price-sensitive, if it is information a reasonable investor would be likely to use as part of the basis of their investment decisions, the standard set out in Article 7(4) of the UK Market Abuse Regulation. This is the 'reasonable investor' test, not a requirement to prove the actual market reaction.

Reviewed by Margaret Hassett

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