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Tipper

A Tipper is an individual who possesses material, non-public information about a publicly-traded company and discloses, or “tips,” this information to another person (the tippee) who may then use it to trade the company's securities. The act of tipping is a central component of insider trading, one of the most serious offenses in the financial world. The tipper doesn't have to trade on the information themselves to be liable; simply passing it along can be an illegal act. This individual typically has a relationship of trust and confidence with the source of the information, such as being a company executive, an employee, or a professional adviser like a lawyer or accountant. The key distinction is that they are breaching a duty by sharing this confidential knowledge for some form of personal gain, which doesn't have to be monetary. For ordinary investors, hearing about a “hot tip” should be a massive red flag, signaling not an opportunity, but a potential legal and ethical minefield that is fundamentally at odds with sound, research-based investing.

The line between a casual conversation and a criminal act is defined by a few key legal principles. For a tipper to be held liable, regulators like the U.S. SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission) or European authorities like ESMA (European Securities and Markets Authority) typically need to prove two things:

Who Can Be a Tipper?

It's a common misconception that tippers are only pinstripe-suited CEOs. In reality, anyone with access to confidential information can become a tipper. The net is cast wide and includes:

A Value Investor's Perspective

For a value investor, the concept of a “tip” is not just legally toxic—it's philosophically bankrupt. The entire pursuit of value investing is built on a foundation of independent thought, rigorous analysis, and a commitment to understanding the fundamentals of a business. Relying on a tip is the exact opposite.

Ultimately, the best tip a value investor can get is this: Do your own homework. The path to sustainable wealth is paved with diligent research and patience, not with dangerous and unethical shortcuts.