The Bank of Japan has not responded to our questions regarding why Japan's yield curve looks like Japan: http://www.econ.yale.edu/smith/econ116a/j

I analyzed all the controversial trades made by Senators in the 2020 Congressional insider trading scandal. Here are the results! : wallstreetbets

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2021-06-05 16:30:10

The Bank of Japan has not responded to our questions regarding why Japan's yield curve looks like Japan: http://www.econ.yale.edu/smith/econ116a/japan.pdf

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I analyzed all the controversial trades made by Senators in the 2020 Congressional insider trading scandal. Here are the results!OC DD (self.wallstreetbets)

Preamble: The ability of Congress Members to trade stocks has been controversial from the start. There have been multiple stories covering the 2020 congressional insider trading scandal where Congress Members allegedly used insider knowledge to trade large positions in stocks just before the coronavirus pandemic crash. But none of the articles talked about the financial implications of those trades and whether the retail investors could have front-run the market using the disclosed data.  Basically, what I wanted to know was

For my previous analysis into congressional trading, I used data from senatestockwatcher.com. But not all the transactions are captured on the website and I wanted to match exactly with the trades reported by famous journals. efdsearch.senate.gov is the United States official website where Senator, former Senator, and candidate financial disclosure reports are available. Some of the data is available as a scanned file and some in normal HTML format. I had to manually transcribe most of the data used in this analysis.

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