Inside Information Welcome! You are encouraged to register with the site and login (for free). When you register, you support the site and your question history is saved.Since publicly traded companies opt to shield some negative information about their company from the market, negative information tends to be shared progressively less and in wider communication channels of a company's organization. The public is, therefore, has less negative information about a publicly traded company than do the company's employees of the most private circles, such as the CEO. The conclusion drawn above is based on the assumption that positive information flows freely through the communication channels of a publicly traded company employees of a publicly traded company never leak private information about that company to the market CEOs and other members of the most private circles of a publicly traded company are willing to distort the perceived truth about the company in order to defend the company's share price the public obtains negative information about a public company only from sources within that company the public wants all relevant information about a publicly traded company, positive and negative Review Answer