Comments
sneakyfattwatbadger t1_itutg46 wrote
came to say the same thing. All public companies have employees that buy/sell their stock all the time, it is part of the business.
JasJ002 t1_itvie51 wrote
This is also far more indicative of a company/culture that prefers to pay their employees in stock options, which is prolific in the tech industry.
[deleted] t1_itvo0cy wrote
the least moral of the bunch, the techies
VShadow1 t1_itz7o55 wrote
This graphs shows when employees sell stock. Not the criminal action.
kilgore393 t1_itzf8vp wrote
they'll never have the courage to admit it but they gave CEOs the power they needed to completely take over so they could make more money than their peers, then when times got tough they abandoned everyone and moved out of the city. reddit is tech heavy because most coders don't actually do work, they install mouse jigglers so they have a lot of time to browse, so you'll never be able to say it without massive backlash, but they really ruined life for the rest of us, specifically millennial coders. the only way they'll be able to respond to this post is with downvotes or childlike stuck up behavior. unfortunately, everybody is now rooting for their jobs to be automated or outsourced because of their pompous attitudes.
Edit: a word
[deleted] t1_iuev95s wrote
hilarious really, except also very sad
4 techies disagree with me, i wonder who they think is worse
(alt economy)
[deleted] t1_iuevg88 wrote
it is the gray area; law is ambiguous in certain situations, perhaps intentionally
humlor123 t1_iugb03k wrote
Well you can speculate all you want but these are just insider trades which definitely doesn't suggest anything illegal
Round-Bodybuilder187 OP t1_itulwqc wrote
Data Source: https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/jacklacey/insider-trades-for-1000-companies
Tools: Tableau, Excel, Figma