Probably not, but if you're gonna do it anyway, be sure to check out The Laws.1
The rules are:
- Don't do it.
- Don’t do it by buying short-dated out-of-the-money call options on merger targets.
- Don’t text or email about it.
- Don’t do it in your mother’s account.
- Don’t do it by planting bombs at a company and shorting its stock.
- Don’t do it while employed at the Securities and Exchange Commission.
- Don’t Google “how to insider trade without getting caught” before doing it.
- If you didn’t insider trade, don’t forget and accidentally confess to insider trading.
- If you are going to insider trade, do it in a company that is far away from a Securities and Exchange Commission office. Like, physically.
- If you are already under a federal ethics investigation about your ownership or promotion of a stock, don’t insider trade that stock.
- If you are making plans to share your life, and finances, with a certain special someone, and you overhear her working on a nonpublic merger deal, before you go out and buy short-dated out-of-the-money call options on the merger target, maybe tell her first?2
- If you insider trade by buying short-dated out-of-the-money call options on a merger target, and the Securities and Exchange Commission freezes your profits, don't show up in a U.S. court to ask for them back.3
Inspired by Matt Levine's Money Stuff.
Thanks to @mcdickenson for their contributions
1: The 10 Laws of Insider Trading – So Far
2: Insider Trading Is Not a Romantic Surprise
3: The Twelfth Law of Insider Trading