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16/03/25
17:38
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Originally posted by DimTheLights:
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Something must be coming... Leaking news of a company merger to the media can be an offense in Australia, depending on the circumstances. The key legal issues include:1. Insider Trading (Corporations Act 2001) – Under Section 1043A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), it is illegal for someone with inside information (i.e., confidential, price-sensitive, and not publicly available) to trade shares or pass the information to others who might trade. The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) actively enforces this law.2. Breach of Continuous Disclosure Obligations (ASX Listing Rules) – If a listed company becomes aware of a merger, it must promptly disclose it to the ASX under Listing Rule 3.1, unless an exception applies (e.g., negotiations are incomplete and confidential). A leak could force premature disclosure and lead to ASIC penalties.3. Breach of Confidentiality Agreements – Employees, executives, and advisors involved in mergers usually sign NDAs or confidentiality clauses. Leaking information can lead to civil lawsuits, financial penalties, or dismissal.4. Market Manipulation and False or Misleading Statements – Under Part 7.10 of the Corporations Act, intentionally leaking false or misleading information to influence share prices can be a criminal offense, leading to fines or imprisonment.ConsequencesCivil penalties: Fines up to $1.11 million per breach or three times the benefit gained.Criminal penalties: Up to 15 years in prison for insider trading or market manipulation.Company penalties: ASIC can fine companies millions of dollars for disclosure breaches.
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it’s the corporate advisers doing the leaking. There will be announcements pre open tomorrow for sure.