Insider trading goes beyond the bounds of the companies at the center of nonpublic information, the U.S. SEC reminded biopharma industry insiders Aug. 17 when it charged Matthew Panuwat, former head of business development at Medivation Inc., with insider trading ahead of the California company’s Aug. 22, 2016, announcement that it was being acquired by Pfizer Inc. in a $14 billion deal.
To resolve a U.S. SEC insider trading charge related to Pfizer Inc.’s $11.4 billion acquisition of Array Biopharma Inc. in 2019, Brian Rubin consented Oct. 17 to a judgment ordering him to disgorge $90,458, plus prejudgment interest of $16,914, and to pay a civil penalty to be determined by the court.
A British billionaire who’s the founder and principal owner of the Tavistock Group, an international private investment fund with a portfolio that includes biotech companies, was arrested July 26 on multiple criminal charges of U.S. securities fraud, along with two private pilots whom allegedly received insider tips from him in lieu of a formal retirement plan.
The U.S. SEC is settling insider trading charges against Nirdosh Jagota, former vice president of global regulatory affairs at Merck & Co. Inc., stemming from Merck’s $1.85 billion acquisition of Pandion Therapeutics Inc. in 2021.
Two separate insider trading tips involving a biopharma acquisition and trial results for Pfizer Inc.’s COVID-19 antiviral, Paxlovid, allegedly netted millions of dollars in “ill-gotten” trading profits, according to U.S. SEC complaints announced June 29.
A California man agreed to settle insider trading charges related to Tokyo-based Astellas Pharma Inc.’s buyout offer of San Francisco-based Audentes Therapeutics Inc. in December 2019 for $3 billion. Mahmoud Abdelkader’s wife worked for Audentes and allegedly determined from “facts he learned from his wife, that there was a high likelihood of Audentes being acquired,” the SEC’s complaint said.
A California man agreed to settle insider trading charges related to Tokyo-based Astellas Pharma Inc.’s buyout offer of San Francisco-based Audentes Therapeutics Inc. in December 2019 for $3 billion.
The SEC and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York charged a former pharmaceutical executive and his cousin Feb. 23 with the insider trading of Eastman Kodak Co. stock prior to a COVID-19 partnership with the U.S. government to support the launch of Kodak Pharmaceuticals.
A Jan. 27 settlement the U.S. SEC reached with a former vice president at a biotech company serves as a reminder that insider trading rules applies to suppliers as well as the companies involved in an M&A.
Responding to concerns about corporate insider trading, especially among life sciences companies, the U.S. SEC unanimously adopted final rules Dec. 14 establishing a 90-day cooling-off period before trades can be made under 10b5-1 plans that provide a safe harbor to insider trading.