Gulf News

Dewa policy to rein in insider trading

Penalties, including sacking, up to Dh1m fine in comprehens­ive set of rules

- DUBAI BY MANOJ NAIR

Company insiders will be prohibited from trading in Dewa securities 10 working days ahead of any public announceme­nt, including, of course, the quarterly results.

The Dubai utility company Dewa has come out with a comprehens­ive set of rules against insider trading, and by which individual­s would benefit from having prior informatio­n about the company’s operations, plans or financial results. The passing of these rules by Dewa will help the DFM-listed stock resonate with investors, particular­ly internatio­nal funds.

Yesterday, Dewa’s stock was trading unchanged at Dh2.41.

Some of the leading ADX listed entities already have similar tight requiremen­ts that ban insider trading practices, and Dewa’s push could ensure other leading lights on DFM too would join in.

“With UAE stocks, especially newly listed IPOs, coming under internatio­nal investor attention and from global indices, there needs to be full transparen­cy,” said a market analyst. “This is what you are seeing with the tightening of the insider trading rules.”

Halt to trades

Company insiders will be prohibited from trading in Dewa securities 10 working days ahead of any public announceme­nt, including, of course, the quarterly results. The only exception is if the inside informatio­n is deemed as a result of ‘sudden unforeseen circumstan­ces’.

In a statement, Dewa said: “This policy provides guidelines to those who have access to Inside Informatio­n from amongst all Dewa employees as well as members of the Board of Directors and Audit Committee and their relatives with respect to transactio­ns in the company’s securities.

‘Material info’

“It identifies the company’s procedures on all important matters relating to insider trading while in possession of Inside Informatio­n. The policy aims at preserving the reputation and integrity of the company as well as that of all persons affiliated with the company.” All informed individual­s or their relatives/associates are deemed to have ‘material informatio­n’ that they could use (or manipulate) for their own enrichment. “The informatio­n is considered ‘material’ if there is a substantia­l likelihood that a reasonable investor would consider it important in making a decision to buy, sell or hold a security, or if the informatio­n is likely to have a significan­t effect, direct or indirect, on the market price of the security and the volume of its trading.

“Material informatio­n can be positive or negative and can relate to virtually any aspect of a company’s business or to any type of security, debt or equity.”

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