In
SEC v. MacDonald,
Following a trial on remand, the district court ordered MacDonald to disgorge $18,-037.50, together with interest.
SEC v. MacDonald,
to compute the amount of the defendant’s ill-gotten gains by determining how much (if any) “paper” profit accrued between the acquisition date and the conclusion of what might be termed the gestation period (the gestation period being the time necessary for the market fully to absorb and act in response to the original inside information once that date has become generally accessible to investors).
The inside information of which MacDonald availed himself concerned RIT’s acquisition of a twenty-five story office building in Cincinnati, and RIT’s likely negotiation of a profitable long-term lease of space therein. MacDonald became privy to this confidential information on December 15, 1975. On December 24, 1975, RIT issued a press release publicly announcing for the first time news of the building acquisition. A short article to that effect appeared in The Providence Journal on Christmas day. During the nine-day hiatus between December 15th and December 24th, MacDonald purchased 9,600 shares of RIT stock at a price per share ranging from 4lk to 45/s, realizing a profit of over $53,000 on the subsequent sale in 1977.
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In determining what a reasonable time was after the inside information had been generally disseminated, this court directed the district court to “consider the volume and price at which RIT shares were traded following disclosure, insofar as they suggested the date by which the news had been fully digested and acted upon by investors.”
The district court concluded that it was in this time frame that MacDonald fully realized the benefits of his fraud. For it was then, according to the district court, that the investing public had digested the import of the December 24th press release. The district court thus fixed a price of $6.50 per share as the appropriate yardstick for measuring disgorgement.
The one issue we address on this appeal is whether a December 31, 1975 news article in The Wall Street Journal was an intervening, superseding cause of the RIT stock price surge in early 1976. 1 That article indicated that RIT had received an offer to purchase several of its real estate holdings. It was reported that the deal, if consummated, would result in a $1.7 million capital gain to RIT. Defendant submits that the district court erred in finding that the public had not stopped reacting to the December 24th press release at the time of publication of this Wall Street Journal article.
Under Rule 52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, “[findings of fact shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous, and due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge of the credibility of the witnesses.” The district court’s factual findings will be affirmed unless we are left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.
Holmes v. Bateson,
Inasmuch as all doubts were to be resolved against defendant on remand,
*12 Accordingly, for all the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. MacDonald also argues that the rise in the price of RIT stock was due to the general upward trend of the market for real estate investment trusts. In his earlier appeal this court addressed that contention and found that the district court had not committed clear error in rejecting it as the explanation for the rise in the price of RIT stock.
. The district court also found “that it was the Wall Street Journal article of December 31st ... which gained attention for, and brought
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credibility to, the good news [of December 24th].”
