No insider trading with Xero case

FMA closes Xero share investigation, concludes no insider trading. Xero annnounces it’s delisting from the NZX

No insider trading with Xero case
The Financial Markets Authority (FMA) has closed its two-year investigation into trading in Xero shares, concluding there was no insider trading ahead of a capital raising announcement, BusinessDesk reported on Friday.

The regulator began investigating in September 2015 after a referral by NZX in June 2016. Despite no price sensitive information being released to the market, shares in the software developer spiked in the lead-up to the February 25 announcement that the firm had raised $147 million from North American investors.

The FMA said it had investigated three offshore institutional investors referred to it by the NZX after unusually high volumes of the shares were traded and the price rose sharply prior to the announcement.

The regulator quickly established trading by two of those hadn't been insider trading, but launched an investigation into the third, which has now been concluded with no evidence of insider trading being found, it said.

All of the trading under investigation involved contracts for difference (CFDs), which are derivative products. Three overseas financial regulators assisted the FMA in obtaining information about the trading parties, including tracing the source of the buying through intermediaries, it said.

"Among other evidence, we reviewed research and due diligence carried out by this investor, on Xero, over a period of months prior to the existence of non-public material information," the FMA said.

"The FMA is satisfied that the extent and timing of the party’s investment in Xero matched its investment strategy and did not indicate reliance on insider information. Xero, its staff and directors were not implicated in the investigation."

Xero announced last week it would delist from the NZX in favour of the Australian stock exchange. Its shares are down 2.4% to $32.61 today but have gained 91% this year.


Related stories:
FMA files criminal charges
FMA launches guidelines on cryptocurrency