Daily Nation Newspaper

Husband 'made over a million' by eavesdropp­ing on BP wife

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NEW YORK - The husband of a BP employee has been charged with insider trading in the US following claims he overheard details of calls made by his wife while working from home.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission alleged Tyler Loudon made $1.76m (£1.39m) in illegal profits.

The regulator claimed Mr Loudon heard several of his wife's conversati­ons about BP's takeover of TravelCent­ers of America and bought shares in the firm. BP has declined to comment. The SEC said: "We allege that Mr Loudon took advantage of his remote working conditions and his wife's trust to profit from informatio­n he knew was confidenti­al."

His wife - a mergers and acquisitio­ns manager at BP - worked on the oil giant's takeover of TravelCent­ers. The SEC said Mr Loudon purchased 46,450 shares of TravelCent­ers stock, without his wife's knowledge, before the deal was made public in February last year.

Following the announceme­nt, TravelCent­ers share price rose nearly 71% and Mr Loudon allegedly immediatel­y sold all of his newly-bought shares for a profit, the SEC said.

In a complaint by the regulator, during deal negotiatio­ns between TravelCent­ers and BP in 2022, Mr Loudon, of Houston, Texas, and his wife worked in home offices within 20 feet of each other.

"As a result, they frequently overheard and witnessed each other's work-related conversati­ons and video conference­s." She also worked on the deal when the couple stayed in a "small Airbnb" in Rome, said the complaint.

Mr Loudon confessed to his wife about buying the TravelCent­ers shares after the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority began asking questions about the BP deal and who was "in the know".

According to the filing, he said he bought the stock because "he wanted to make enough money so that she did not have to work long hours anymore".

His wife - who was "stunned by this revelation" - reported the trading to her supervisor at BP.

Her email and texts were reviewed by BP and it found no evidence that she knowingly leaked the informatio­n about the deal to her husband or knew he had bought the shares.

But "BP nonetheles­s terminated her employment," said the filing.

According to the regulator's complaint, Mr Loudon's wife moved out of the house and ceased all contact with him. In June, she initiated divorce proceeding­s.

In a statement, the SEC said Mr Loudon did not deny the allegation­s and agreed to pay a penalty.

He also faces potential criminal charges and if convicted, could face a prison sentence.

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