Material information about a company which is known by the company's board of directors, management, and/or employees but not by the public. The SEC forbids trading based on such information. see also Chinese Wall, insider, tip.
Material information that has not been disseminated to, or is not readily available to, the general public.
Information, not readily available to the public, that if it were known would affect the buying and selling decisions of investors.
Material information about a company that has not been disclosed in a periodic report, press release, or other public communication.
true confidential information; "after the trial he gave us the real details"
Relevant information about a company that has not yet been made public. It is illegal for holders of this information to make trades based on it.
Any knowledge about a company, its products, or securities not generally available to the public gained from a source inside the company. It is illegal for anyone to makes a securities trade based on what they believe to be inside information.
Non-public information pertaining to the business affairs of a corporation that could affect the company's share price should the information be made public.
Material information pertaining to a corporation's affairs that have not yet been made public. Executing securities trades while in possession of such information is unlawful.
Non-public knowledge about a company possessed by its officers, major owners, or other individuals with privileged access to information.
Inside information is information that is not public and is known only to those working inside or closely connected to a company.
Non-public or privileged information about a company, including the state of its business, operations, plans and management.
material information that has not been disclosed to the general public. It is illegal to act on this type of information.
Information of a precise nature that has not been made public, relating directly or indirectly to issuers of financial instruments. If it were made public, this information would be likely to have a significant effect on the prices of those financial instruments or on the price of related financial derivative instruments. It is also information that a reasonable investor would be likely to use as part of the basis for their investment decisions. The case is different for commodity derivatives. Inside information is what users of the markets where such derivatives are traded would expect to receive in accordance with accepted market practices on those markets. See Article MAD - Directive 2003/6/EC Art 1(1), Directive 2003/124/EC Art 1 and Directive 2004/72/EC Art 4
Material corporate information that has not yet been made public in a widely used medium. Use of this information would influence the purchase or sale of a company's security. An example of inside information is a company who has a large quarterly loss and this fact has not yet been made public. If this information was used to trade the security, under SEC rules, it may be deemed as illegal. See: Insider; Securities and Exchange Commission
Material information about a publicly traded company that has not been released to the public. It is significant information such as earnings reports and merger agreements that can affect the company's stock price. It is illegal to trade on inside information even if you are not a company insider. See insider, insider trading.
Information relating to a security which is not publicly known and which would affect the price of the security if it was made public.
Inside information is information of a precise nature which has not been made public, relating, directly or indirectly, to one or more issuers of financial instruments or to one or more financial instruments and which, if it were made public, would be likely to have a significant effect on the prices of those financial instruments or on the price of related derivative financial instruments.
Inside information is material corporate information that could negatively or positively affect a firm's stock price, but has not yet been disclosed to the public. For example, certain senior officers of a firm would know in advance if the company is about to be taken over by another company. Under SEC rules, these officers are classified as insiders and thus they are prohibited from trading on their knowledge of material non-public information. See: Insiders, Insider Trading
Inside Information is the seventh album by American rock band Foreigner, released in 1987.