Social media posts cost DraftKings $200,000
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The companyâs PR firm posted new information in the name of the CEO on sites that hadnât first been disclosed as places where such information would be released, the SEC says.
Published Sept. 27, 2024
DraftKings signage.
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Sports betting company DraftKings agreed to settle for $200,000 charges it violated Regulation FD disclosure rules, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced September 26.Â
The regulation prohibits the selective disclosure of material information. It permits the disclosure of material information on social media, but the company must first identify the accounts that people can expect that information to come from.
DraftKings violated the rule by disclosing new information about the companyâs performance on its CEOâs personal X and LinkedIn accounts, without having first identified those accounts as sources of this kind of information, the SEC said.Â
âInformation about growth in sales as a public company can be extremely important to investors,â John Dugan, an SEC associate director for enforcement, said in announcing the settlement. âIt is essential that, when companies disseminate material, nonpublic information, they do so fairly to all investors.âÂ
The alleged violation goes back to last year, when the companyâs PR firm in July posted a statement about company performance under the name of company CEO Jason Robins.Â
The statement was posted on Robinsâ X and LinkedIn accounts and said the company continued to see âreally strong growthâ in states where it was already operating, the SEC said. Â
At the time of the posts, according to the agency, DraftKings had not yet publicly disclosed its second quarter 2023 financial results, nor had it publicly disclosed other information shared in the posts.Â
By releasing what amounted to new information in the way it did, the SEC said, the company was making material information available only to people who followed or otherwise viewed the CEOâs posts.Â
The PR firm deleted the posts shortly after they were published at the request of the company.Â
It was another week before the company publicly released the performance information when it announced its financial earnings for the second quarter of 2023.
Handling release of the information in this way, the SEC said, amounted to âselectively disclosing material, nonpublic information to investors who followed or otherwise viewed the company CEOâs social media accounts without disclosing that same information to all investors,âÂ
In announcing the settlement, the SEC referred to a report it released in 2013 in which it spells out its policy on the use of social media under its Regulation FD disclosure rules. The release announcing the report sums up the policy: âSEC says social media OK for company announcements if investors are alerted.â