Arista's code of conduct states that "employees who possess material, nonpublic information gained through their work at Arista may not trade in Arista securities or the securities of another company to which the information pertains." ...
Arista and the other company, which was not named in court documents, had a history of sharing confidential information under nondisclosure agreements. ...
topArista and the other company, which was not named in court documents, had a history of sharing confidential information under nondisclosure agreements.
topArista's code of conduct states that "employees who possess material, nonpublic information gained through their work at Arista may not trade in Arista securities or the securities of another company to which the information pertains."
topArista's code of conduct states that "employees who possess material, nonpublic information gained through their work at Arista may not trade in Arista securities or the securities of another company to which the information pertains."
topIn 2008, he co-founded Arista, a Silicon Valley computer networking company that went public and now has 4,000 employees and a stock market value of $100 billion.
topBechtolsheim didn't leave. In 2008, he co-founded Arista, a Silicon Valley computer networking company that went public and now has 4,000 employees and a stock market value of $100 billion
topArista's code of conduct states that "employees who possess material, nonpublic information gained through their work at Arista may not trade in Arista securities or the securities of another company to which the information pertains."
topArista and the other company, which was not named in court documents, had a history of sharing confidential information under nondisclosure agreements.
topIn 2008, he co-founded Arista, a Silicon Valley computer networking company that went public and now has 4,000 employees and a stock market value of $100 billion.
topBechtolsheim was chair of Arista's board when an executive from another company called in 2019, according to the S.E.C. Arista and the other company, which was not named in court documents, had a history of sharing confidential information under nondisclosure...
topIn 2008, he co-founded Arista, a Silicon Valley computer networking company that went public and now has 4,000 employees and a stock market value of $100 billion.
topBechtolsheim was chair of Arista's board when an executive from another company called in 2019, according to the S.E.C. Arista and the other company, which was not named in court documents, had a history of sharing confidential information under nondisclosure agreements.
top... chair of Arista's board when an executive from another company called in 2019, according to the S.E.C. Arista and the other company, which was not named in court documents, had a history of sharing confidential information under nondisclosure agreements.
topHe got a phone call about the imminent sale of a tech company and allegedly traded on the confidential information, according to charges filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
topArista and the other company, which was not named in court documents, had a history of sharing confidential information under nondisclosure agreements.
topHe got a phone call about the imminent sale of a tech company and allegedly traded on the confidential information, according to charges filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission
topHe got a phone call about the imminent sale of a tech company and allegedly traded on the confidential information, according to charges filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission
topHe got a phone call about the imminent sale of a tech company and allegedly traded on the confidential information, according to charges filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
topArista and the other company, which was not named in court documents, had a history of sharing confidential information under nondisclosure agreements.
topAnother recent Bay Area insider trading case shows how shadow trading works. Matthew Panuwat, an executive at the San Francisco biopharmaceutical company Medivation, was informed in August 2016 that Pfizer was acquiring his company
topAnother recent Bay Area insider trading case shows how shadow trading works. Matthew Panuwat, an executive at the San Francisco biopharmaceutical company Medivation, was informed in August 2016 that Pfizer was acquiring his company
topAnother recent Bay Area insider trading case shows how shadow trading works. Matthew Panuwat, an executive at the San Francisco biopharmaceutical company Medivation, was informed in August 2016 that Pfizer was acquiring his company
topAnother recent Bay Area insider trading case shows how shadow trading works. Matthew Panuwat, an executive at the San Francisco biopharmaceutical company Medivation, was informed in August 2016 that Pfizer was acquiring his company.
topAnother recent Bay Area insider trading case shows how shadow trading works. Matthew Panuwat, an executive at the San Francisco biopharmaceutical company Medivation, was informed in August 2016 that Pfizer was acquiring his company
top. This executive told Mr. Bechtolsheim that a smaller networking company, Acacia, was in play, according to the S.E.C. The executive's company had been thinking of acquiring Acacia, but now another firm was making a bid
topBechtolsheim that a smaller networking company, Acacia, was in play, according to the S.E.C. The executive's company had been thinking of acquiring Acacia, but now another firm was making a bid.
topBechtolsheim was accused of doing, or in a company that is not directly involved in the deal but is likely to benefit from it, must seem less risky.
topBechtolsheim was accused of doing, or in a company that is not directly involved in the deal but is likely to benefit from it, must seem less risky.
topBechtolsheim didn't leave. In 2008, he co-founded Arista, a Silicon Valley computer networking company that went public and now has 4,000 employees and a stock market value of $100 billion.
top. Mr. Levy, the "In the Plex" author, said there were plenty of legal ways to make money in Silicon Valley.
topBechtolsheim may have seized a different kind of opportunity. He got a phone call about the imminent sale of a tech company and allegedly traded on the confidential information, according to charges filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
topThe deal happened at a moment when Google's founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, weren't even sure they wanted to build a company around their homemade search technology. They were focused on getting their Stanford doctorates.
topIn 2008, he co-founded Arista, a Silicon Valley computer networking company that went public and now has 4,000 employees and a stock market value of $100 billion.. . Mr.
topAt its peak in the late 1990s'dot-com bubble, Sun had a stock market valuation of $200 billion.. . It was Mr. Bechtolsheim's funding of Google in 1998 that made him a permanent part of Silicon Valley lore
topThe deal happened at a moment when Google's founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, weren't even sure they wanted to build a company around their homemade search technology.
topAt its peak in the late 1990s'dot-com bubble, Sun had a stock market valuation of $200 billion.. . It was Mr. Bechtolsheim's funding of Google in 1998 that made him a permanent part of Silicon Valley lore
topAt its peak in the late 1990s'dot-com bubble, Sun had a stock market valuation of $200 billion.. . It was Mr. Bechtolsheim's funding of Google in 1998 that made him a permanent part of Silicon Valley lore
topBechtolsheim's funding of Google in 1998 that made him a permanent part of Silicon Valley lore. The deal happened at a moment when Google's founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, weren't even sure they wanted to build a company around their homemade search technology
topAt its peak in the late 1990s'dot-com bubble, Sun had a stock market valuation of $200 billion.. . It was Mr. Bechtolsheim's funding of Google in 1998 that made him a permanent part of Silicon Valley lore
topIt was Mr. Bechtolsheim's funding of Google in 1998 that made him a permanent part of Silicon Valley lore. The deal happened at a moment when Google's founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, weren't even sure they wanted to build a company around their homemade search technology
topBechtolsheim's funding of Google in 1998 that made him a permanent part of Silicon Valley lore. The deal happened at a moment when Google's founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, weren't even sure they wanted to build a company around their homemade search technology
topIn Silicon Valley, You Can Be Worth Billions and It's Not Enough. . Andreas Bechtolsheim, the first investor in Google, has an estimated $16 billion fortune.
topThe entrepreneur made one of the most celebrated investments in the history of Silicon Valley - the initial $100,000 that bankrolled a search engine called Google in 1998 - while on the way to work one morning
topThe investment happened like this, according to Steven Levy's 2011 history of Google, "In the Plex": Mr
topBechtolsheim's check for a month because Google did not have a bank account. When Google went public in 2004, that $100,000 investment was worth at least $1 billion.
topAndreas Bechtolsheim, the first investor in Google, has an estimated $16 billion fortune. He recently settled charges that he engaged in insider trading for a profit of $415,726.
topThe investment happened like this, according to Steven Levy's 2011 history of Google, "In the Plex": Mr. Brin emailed Mr. Bechtolsheim one evening around midnight
topAndreas Bechtolsheim, the first investor in Google, has an estimated $16 billion fortune. He recently settled charges that he engaged in insider trading for a profit of $415,726.
topThe investment happened like this, according to Steven Levy's 2011 history of Google, "In the Plex": Mr. Brin emailed Mr. Bechtolsheim one evening around midnight. Mr. Bechtolsheim immediately replied, suggesting a meeting the next morning
topBechtolsheim didn't leave. In 2008, he co-founded Arista, a Silicon Valley computer networking company that went public and now has 4,000 employees and a stock market value of $100 billion.
top. Mr. Bechtolsheim was chair of Arista's board when an executive from another company called in 2019, according to the S.E.C.
topJoy said in a 1999 oral history with Mr. Bechtolsheim.. . Mr. Bechtolsheim didn't leave. In 2008, he co-founded Arista, a Silicon Valley computer networking company that went public and now has 4,000 employees and a stock market value of $100 billion
top"Someone who is regarded as an influential funder and is very well connected gets nearly unlimited opportunities to make very desirable early investments," he said.. . Mr. Bechtolsheim is no longer chair of Arista's board but has the title of "chief architect." Arista issued a statement saying it...
top"Someone who is regarded as an influential funder and is very well connected gets nearly unlimited opportunities to make very desirable early investments," he said.. . Mr. Bechtolsheim is no longer chair of Arista's board but has the title of "chief architect." Arista issued a statement saying it "will respond appropriately to the situation,"...
top"Someone who is regarded as an influential funder and is very well connected gets nearly unlimited opportunities to make very desirable early investments," he said.
top"Someone who is regarded as an influential funder and is very well connected gets nearly unlimited opportunities to make very desirable early investments," he said.. . Mr. Bechtolsheim is no longer chair of Arista's board but has the title of "chief architect." Arista issued a statement saying it "will respond appropriately...
topBechtolsheim.. . Mr. Bechtolsheim didn't leave. In 2008, he co-founded Arista, a Silicon Valley computer networking company that went public and now has 4,000 employees and a stock market value of $100 billion
topPanuwat's verdict, saying that "there was nothing novel" about the case: "This was insider trading, pure and simple." A lawyer for Mr. Panuwat didn't return a request for comment.
topPanuwat's verdict, saying that "there was nothing novel" about the case: "This was insider trading, pure and simple." A lawyer for Mr. Panuwat didn't return a request for comment.
topAndreas Bechtolsheim, the first investor in Google, has an estimated $16 billion fortune. He recently settled charges that he engaged in insider trading for a profit of $415,726
topAndreas Bechtolsheim, the first investor in Google, has an estimated $16 billion fortune. He recently settled charges that he engaged in insider trading for a profit of $415,726
topBechtolsheim, 68, settled the insider trading charges without admitting wrongdoing. He agreed to pay a fine of more than $900,000 and will not serve as an officer or director of a public company for five years.
topBuying options in your own company right before a merger is announced is a red flag for regulators, and relatively easy for them to discover. Trading in another's account, as Mr. Bechtolsheim was accused of doing, or in a company that is not directly involved in the deal but is likely to benefit...
topPanuwat's verdict, saying that "there was nothing novel" about the case: "This was insider trading, pure and simple." A lawyer for Mr. Panuwat didn't return a request for comment.. . The agency also considers Mr.
topBuying options in your own company right before a merger is announced is a red flag for regulators, and relatively easy for them to discover. Trading in another's account, as Mr
topPanuwat's verdict, saying that "there was nothing novel" about the case: "This was insider trading, pure and simple." A lawyer for Mr. Panuwat didn't return a request for comment.. . The agency also considers Mr.
topBuying options in your own company right before a merger is announced is a red flag for regulators, and relatively easy for them to discover. Trading in another's account, as Mr
topThe deal happened at a moment when Google's founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, weren't even sure they wanted to build a company around their homemade search technology.
topThe dot-com boom was a disorienting period for longtime Valley leaders whose interest in money was muted. Mr. Bechtolsheim's Sun colleague Mr. Joy left Silicon Valley.. . "There's so much money around, it's clouding a lot of people's ethics," Mr
topMcNealy, Vinod Khosla and Bill Joy, started Sun Microsystems as an outgrowth of a Stanford project. When Sun initially raised money, Mr. Bechtolsheim put his entire life savings - about $100,000 - into the company
topMcNealy, Vinod Khosla and Bill Joy, started Sun Microsystems as an outgrowth of a Stanford project. When Sun initially raised money, Mr. Bechtolsheim put his entire life savings - about $100,000 - into the company.
topMcNealy, Vinod Khosla and Bill Joy, started Sun Microsystems as an outgrowth of a Stanford project. When Sun initially raised money, Mr. Bechtolsheim put his entire life savings - about $100,000 - into the company
topAt its peak in the late 1990s'dot-com bubble, Sun had a stock market valuation of $200 billion.. . It was Mr. Bechtolsheim's funding of Google in 1998 that made him a permanent part of Silicon Valley lore.
topAndreas Bechtolsheim doesn't like to waste time. The entrepreneur made one of the most celebrated investments in the history of Silicon Valley - the initial $100,000 that bankrolled a search engine called Google in 1998 - while on the way to work one morning
topHe got a phone call about the imminent sale of a tech company and allegedly traded on the confidential information, according to charges filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
topArista and the other company, which was not named in court documents, had a history of sharing confidential information under nondisclosure agreements.. . This executive told Mr. Bechtolsheim that a smaller networking company, Acacia, was in play, according to the S.E.C
topAnother recent Bay Area insider trading case shows how shadow trading works. Matthew Panuwat, an executive at the San Francisco biopharmaceutical company Medivation, was informed in August 2016 that Pfizer was acquiring his company.
topAndreas Bechtolsheim, the first investor in Google, has an estimated $16 billion fortune. He recently settled charges that he engaged in insider trading for a profit of $415,726.. . Andreas Bechtolsheim doesn't like to waste time. The entrepreneur made one of the most celebrated investments in the history of Silicon Valley - the initial $100,000 that bankrolled...
topBut researchers who analyze trading data say corporate executives broadly profit from confidential information. These executives try to avoid traditional insider trading restrictions by buying shares in economically linked firms, a phenomenon called "shadow trading."
top"The people doing it have a sense of entitlement or maybe just think, 'I'm invincible.'". . Another recent Bay Area insider trading case shows how shadow trading works. Matthew Panuwat, an executive at the San Francisco biopharmaceutical company Medivation, was informed in August 2016 that Pfizer was acquiring his company
topPerhaps this was subterfuge, or perhaps it was a gift. The investor and his lawyer didn't respond to emails for comment.. . Insider trading is typically "a crime of passion," said Michael D
topAndreas Bechtolsheim, the first investor in Google, has an estimated $16 billion fortune. He recently settled charges that he engaged in insider trading for a profit of $415,726.
topPerhaps this was subterfuge, or perhaps it was a gift. The investor and his lawyer didn't respond to emails for comment.. . Insider trading is typically "a crime of passion," said Michael D
topAndreas Bechtolsheim, the first investor in Google, has an estimated $16 billion fortune. He recently settled charges that he engaged in insider trading for a profit of $415,726.
topThe entrepreneur made one of the most celebrated investments in the history of Silicon Valley - the initial $100,000 that bankrolled a search engine called Google in 1998 - while on the way to work one morning.
topAndreas Bechtolsheim doesn't like to waste time. The entrepreneur made one of the most celebrated investments in the history of Silicon Valley - the initial $100,000 that bankrolled a search engine called Google in 1998 - while on the way to work one morning
topBut researchers who analyze trading data say corporate executives broadly profit from confidential information. These executives try to avoid traditional insider trading restrictions by buying shares in economically linked firms, a phenomenon called "shadow trading.".
top"There appears to be significant profits being made from shadow trading," said Mihir N. Mehta, an assistant professor of accounting at the University of Michigan and an author of a 2021 study in The Accounting Review that found "robust evidence" of the behavior
topMehta, an assistant professor of accounting at the University of Michigan and an author of a 2021 study in The Accounting Review that found "robust evidence" of the behavior.
topAnother recent Bay Area insider trading case shows how shadow trading works. Matthew Panuwat, an executive at the San Francisco biopharmaceutical company Medivation, was informed in August 2016 that Pfizer was acquiring his company
topAnother recent Bay Area insider trading case shows how shadow trading works. Matthew Panuwat, an executive at the San Francisco biopharmaceutical company Medivation, was informed in August 2016 that Pfizer was acquiring his...
top. Another recent Bay Area insider trading case shows how shadow trading works. Matthew Panuwat, an executive at the San Francisco biopharmaceutical company Medivation, was informed in August 2016 that Pfizer was acquiring his company
topBechtolsheim was accused of doing, or in a company that is not directly involved in the deal but is likely to benefit from it, must seem less risky.. . Insider trading prosecutions are relatively infrequent, so it is difficult to determine just what really goes on in the home offices, executive suites and office parks