In securities markets, insider trading is a crime. In commodities, insider trading is almost completely legal. This divergent treatment has long been accepted as appropriate, given perceived differences between the markets. For example, it has been thought that futures traders are sophisticated enough to neither need nor want protections from informed traders, and that the assets traded—corn or copper, for example—do not lend themselves to insider trading anyway.
This Article disagrees, showing that purported differences between these two markets do not withstand serious scrutiny, and that insider trading is harmful in the same ways in both markets and should be governed by the same restrictions. Understanding securities and commodities markets to be peer financial markets permits, for the first time, a serious dialogue between scholars of both fields, and this Article takes the first steps toward applying theories from the securities literature to commodities markets and holding those theories up for verification or falsification against new data from commodities markets.
Click on a link below to access the full text of this article. These are third-party content providers and may require a separate subscription for access.