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Directors' dealings

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122

3. Two premises and a fallacy

Two premises....

  1. The people running a company know more about its performance and prospects than anyone else.

    They know:

    • when there has been a technological breakthrough
    • when an important contract has been won or lost
    • when major liabilities have arisen
  2. In buying and selling shares they are motivated by their desire to increase their own wealth and not by altruism or a desire to succour the market.

... and a fallacy
  1. It follows that when you spot a director buying shares or selling shares, you should follow suit

It's a fallacy because although it works some of the time, it's simplistic. If you followed that rule all the time, you'd be clean bowled as often as you scored a six.

Seasoned observers have learned that the signals are more subtle, and that you have to apply a more sophisticated analysis to directors' dealings to get the best results.

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