Chinese Wall investment & finance definition
The
separation that should exist between a bank’s investment banking department and
its research department. The separation is intended to protect research
analysts who issue reports about companies’ financial situations from being
influenced by investment bankers who are trying to sell merger advisory
services or capital raising services to those same companies. As the stock
market fell after record gains in 2000, and regulators began looking at
conflicts between investment banking and research, it became apparent that the
Chinese Wall had developed some gaping holes.
See Chinese Wall in Wall Street Words
An imaginary separation placed between a brokerage firm's investment banking business and its trading and retail business. A Chinese wall prevents investment bankers who frequently are privy to information that could substantially influence the price of a client's securities from leaking that information to the firm's traders and sales personnel. The exchange of such information is legally prohibited.
Learn more about Chinese Wall