securities

Insider Trading Accusations Describe Network Of Hedge Fund Corruption

February 8, 2011

In the latest charges to be brought against Wall Street financiers, Federal authorities depict insider trading in dramatic detail. Two hedge fund managers — Samir Barai and Donald Longueuil — were arrested Tuesday morning on charges of insider trading, Bloomberg reports. Two others — portfolio manager Noah Freeman and analyst Jason Pflaum — pleaded guilty. The charges are the latest example of a Federal crackdown on insider trading that the Wall Street Journal detailed in November. In a pair of documents, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Bureau of Investigation describe an illegal exchange of information, which allegedly allowed hedge funds to reap $30 million in profits. According to the Federal complaints, employees at publicly traded technology companies sold secret information about those companies to workers at hedge funds, which then used that information to make big trades in the companies’ stock. The information was enormously profitable for the firms that received it, according to the court documents. Many of the allegations involve Winifred Jiau, who, the documents say, was employed by various technology companies and, at the same time, by Primary Global Research LLC, as a “private expert.” PGR would allegedly receive information from Jiau and then pass it on to clients, including Freeman and Barai. In May 2008, for instance, Jiau allegedly gave Freeman and Barai early information about the earnings of Marvell Technology Group. According to the SEC, Barai’s hedge fund subsequently reversed its short position on Marvell’s stock, and reaped close to $1 million in profits and avoided losses. In another case, Freeman earned about $9.7 million for his hedge fund, after learning secret information, the SEC says. The FBI documents add more color to the accusations. In November last year, after he read about the probe into insider trading, Barai allegedly wrote to Pflaum from his BlackBerry: – This scope is said to focus on the use of so-called expert network firms – Concern for years that some experts may be passing out confi [meaning, confidential] info about to go public cos [meaning, companies] to traders…. – [The Firm] was only one named!!!! – F*****ck The next morning he said, according to the FBI: – Didn’t sleep much either. – I dunno – I think we ok tho – I think U just go into office – Shred as much as u can He also said, according to the FBI: – Let’s not worry…. – No evidence we got exact info – So it doesn’t matter…. – Forget the past – No proof – So ur fine During a conversation between Freeman and Longueuil, which they recorded, they describe how to destroy electronic evidence, the FBI says. From the document: Freeman then remarked, “I don’t see how you get rid of this sh*t,” to which LONGUEUIL explained, “Oh, it’s easy. You take two pairs of pliers, and then you rip it open … and then, it’s just a piece of NAND. … So I just f*cking ripped it apart right there. … I had two external drives that had like wafer numbers on ‘em. F*ckin’ pulled the external drives apart. Destroyed the platter. … Put ‘em into four separate little baggies, and then at 2a.m. … 2a.m. on a Friday night, I put this stuff inside my black North Face [u/i] jacket, … and leave the apartment and I go on like a twenty block walk around the city … and try to find a, a garbage truck … and threw the sh*t in the back of like random garbage trucks, different garbage trucks.” Longueuil and Freeman have been accused of insider trading while they were employees of SAC Capital Advisors, the $12 billion hedge fund run by Steven A. Cohen. The company released a statement saying it is “outraged by the alleged actions of two former employees, which required active circumvention of our compliance policies and are egregious violations of our ethical standards.” Cohen, who is worth more than $6 billion , and who owns artist Damien Hirst’s embalmed tiger shark, “The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living,” has been sued repeatedly by his ex-wife, Patricia Cohen. In the latest version of the suit, she alleges that Cohen himself participated in insider trading. From the suit : Such privileged information was provided to Steven as part of his relationship with Mr. Newberg and as part of an effort to “take care of one another.” They sometimes referred to their group of Wharton friends as “the Wharton mafia.” READ the complaints below, from the SEC and the FBI: comp-pr2011-40 CNBC_Barai_et_al_Complaint

Read the full article →

Even After Record Growth, Hedge Funds Don’t Pose Risk, Group Says

January 31, 2011

Even as hedge fund assets grew at a record-breaking pace last quarter, no firm is so big that its failure would pose a threat to the financial system, a hedge fund trade group asserts. The comment comes after two regulators — the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission — proposed new rules that would require advisers to hedge funds to regularly disclose financial information to a government watchdog. More than two years after the near-failure of widely interconnected financial firms prompted a taxpayer bailout, many of these firms are larger than ever. But this danger doesn’t apply to hedge funds, the trade group said. “I don’t believe there is a firm that would be systemically relevant today,” Richard Baker, president of the hedge fund industry group Managed Funds Association, told the New York Times . The issue of “systemic risk,” the phenomenon of a firm’s being so large or interconnected that its failure would take down the system, was graphically displayed in the fall of 2008, when the U.S. government gave the financial industry a more than $700 billion taxpayer rescue. While hedge funds were not direct recipients of the bailout, they remain a key component of the financial system, managing trillions in assets. Baker defended the way hedge funds do business, saying transparency is already a central tenet. “Hedge funds are the last corner of financial free market enterprise,” he said, according to the NYT . Even in the wake of the financial crisis, hedge fund growth has broken records. In the fourth quarter of last year, hedge fund assets grew by a record $149 billion, Reuters reported this month. The global industry now manages more than $1.9 trillion. John Paulson , the hedge fund manager who made billions betting against the housing market, reportedly earned roughly $5 billion last year, logging not only a personal best but also a record for the industry. His firm, Paulson & Co., manages $35.9 billion in assets, according to Bloomberg News . A decade before the government bailout of the financial system, Wall Street banks pooled their resources to bail out Long-Term Capital Management, a fund on the verge of failure. If the firm had gone under, banks would have been exposed to “tremendous — and untenable — risks,” writes Roger Lowenstein in the book When Genius Failed . “Undoubtedly, there would be a frenzy, as every bank rushed to escape its now one-sided obligations.”

Read the full article →

Citigroup CEO No Longer Earning $1 Per Year

January 22, 2011

NEW YORK — Citigroup Inc. is giving its CEO a big raise. The New York-based bank is lifting Vikram Pandit’s base salary to $1.75 million from just $1 a year effective immediately, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday. The announcement comes after Citi reported its first full year of profits since Pandit took over the top job in 2007. The bank also repaid the last of its bailout money last year. Citi was one of the hardest-hit U.S. banks during the credit crisis, and received $45 billion in taxpayer aid. Pandit in 2009 pledged to take a $1 salary until the troubled bank returned to profitability. The government sold off the last of its stake in the bank in December for a profit of $12 billion. Richard Parsons, chair of Citigroup Inc.’s board, said in Friday’s filing that the board is “very pleased” with the progress that the bank has made under Pandit’s leadership. Parsons said Pandit has “worked tirelessly to put Citi back on the right track.” The raise was not a surprise. In September, when the bank doled out raises to a number of top executives, Parsons had hinted that Pandit was in store for a big payout. The base salary also does not include stocks, options and other compensation that executives typically receive as part of their pay package. Citigroup reported its fourth straight quarterly profit on Tuesday. With more customers paying their mortgages and credit card payments on time, the bank was able to reach into its reserves it no longer needed to cover loan losses. Like others in its industry, however, the bank saw revenue from trading stocks and bonds fall sharply in the quarter. Citi shares also rose 40 percent last year, making it the best-performing stock among major U.S. banks. Shares still remain far below the $50-range they traded at pre-crisis, however. Before agreeing to a $1 salary in 2009, Pandit had already received $125,000 in salary. His only other compensation that year was $3,750 in 401(k) benefits. In 2008, Pandit’s compensation package was valued at $38.2 million. But most of that pay was made up of restricted stock and stock options. Pandit still has plenty of work ahead of him. At the end of the 2010, Citi had set aside $40.7 billion or 6.3 percent of its total loans, for future losses. By comparison, its larger rival JP Morgan Chase & Co. set aside $32 billion, or 4.5 percent of its total loans, last year. That means Citi has more troubled loans than some of its peers.

Read the full article →

SEC Issues Crucial New Ruling On Mortgages, Loans

January 20, 2011

WASHINGTON — Federal regulators are requiring firms selling securities tied to mortgages, credit cards and student loans, which froze during the financial crisis, to publicly report information on the loans that back them. The Securities and Exchange Commission adopted new rules Thursday requiring firms selling the securities to make a thorough review of the loans backing them and then to report the findings of the review to the public. The markets for securities backed by bundles of mortgages, auto and student loans, and credit cards have remained weak since the crisis, largely because investors are unsure about the quality of the loans. The rules are required by the financial overhaul law enacted last summer. They will apply to offerings of asset-backed securities starting next Jan. 1. The rules are intended “to restore investor confidence” in the markets for asset-backed securities, SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro said before the 3-2 vote. The two Republican SEC commissioners, Kathleen Casey and Troy Paredes, voted against the new rules. When the housing bubble burst in 2007 and defaults on home mortgages began to soar, securities tied to high-risk subprime mortgages became toxic and investors in them, such as big Wall Street banks, lost billions. The distress spread to the markets for other types of securities as investors lost confidence in their value. Banks were unable to continue selling the securities and using the proceeds to make loans available to commercial companies and other borrowers, and the pipeline for credit froze. Last year about $110 billion in new asset-backed securities were offered for sale, according to the SEC. That’s a dramatic decline from around $750 billion at the markets’ peak in 2006.

Read the full article →

Video: Credit Suisse’s Van Nostrand Expects Treasuries to Rally

December 30, 2010

Dec. 30 (Bloomberg) — Eric Van Nostrand, U.S. interest-rate strategist at Credit Suisse Securities, Jonathan Lemco, senior analyst at Vanguard Group Inc., and John Brynjolfsson, chief investment officer at Armored Wolf LLC, talk about the outlook for U.S. Treasuries. They speak with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Jersey Says 10-Year Treasury Yield May Decrease to 3%

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Ira Jersey, director of U.S. interest-rate strategy at Credit Suisse Securities, talks about the outlook for the U.S. bond market. He speaks with Julie Hyman on Bloomberg Television’s “Fast Forward.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Hedge Funds May Skirt Direct Fed Security

December 20, 2010

WASHINGTON (By Rachelle Younglai and Dave Clarke) – The Federal Reserve does not believe any one hedge fund can topple the financial system and therefore the private pools of capital may escape direct supervision by the central bank, an industry source familiar with the Fed’s position said. The newly created Financial Stability Oversight Council, which includes the Treasury secretary and 14 U.S. supervisors, including the Fed, are in the early stages of determining which non-bank firms pose a threat to the financial system. Firms labeled as “systemically important” will be subject to rigorous oversight by the Fed but will also have access to the central bank’s emergency lending facilities. The indication that hedge funds might escape this designation is sure to send a huge sigh of relief through the $1.7 trillion industry, which has long avoided the tighter controls imposed on mutual funds, for example. In exchange for looser regulations, hedge fund firms promise to allow only wealthy and sophisticated investors like pension funds and endowments into their portfolios. The Fed’s view will carry considerable weight among the Financial Stability Oversight Council, which was created by the Dodd-Frank legislation to monitor risks to the financial system in the aftermath of the 2007-2009 credit crisis. The source said the Fed does not think any one hedge fund can be “systemically important” but believes that information about the funds’ positions could give the council insight into potential risks. The source requested anonymity while discussing talks held with the Fed. The Fed did not immediately return a call seeking comment. INDUSTRY SAYS NO Already a number of financial industry firms, ranging from insurers to mutual funds, are trying to convince regulators they are do not pose a threat. Mutual funds tend to manage much more money than hedge funds. The world’s biggest mutual fund, Pimco Total Return Fund, managed by Bill Gross, oversees $250 billion. By comparison, John Paulson’s hedge fund firm Paulson & Co, ranked among the world’s largest hedge funds, oversees about $30 billion. The Managed Funds Association, which lobbies for the hedge fund industry, argues that individual funds do not pose a systemic risk. It told regulators that the industry made risk management changes after the 1998 collapse of Long-Term Capital Management roiled financial markets and prompted a bailout by other industry players at the urging of the Clinton administration. “The resulting changes may be one of the reasons that hedge funds were not the focus of the recent global financial crisis,” the group said in a November 5 letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who chairs the Financial Stability Oversight Council. The council, which also includes the heads of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp, is seeking input on what criteria to use to decide which non-bank firms and clearinghouses should be considered “systemically important.” It is unclear when they will start designating firms. NEW RULES FOR HEDGE FUNDS ANYWAY Even if hedge funds are not labeled “systemically important,” they will still face increased supervision and forced to be more transparent because of the Dodd-Frank legislation and recent SEC actions. “They have been able to exploit inefficiencies in the marketplace, by mining information that is not readily known to others,” said Daniel Crowley, a partner at law firm K&L Gates, who represents financial services firms including hedge funds. “Their job will become harder when they have to register. Their trading strategies will become public,” he said. The SEC now has the power to regulate the trillion-dollar industry. Many of the world’s largest hedge funds have already registered with the SEC, agreeing to divulge certain details about how they run their businesses and how much money they oversee. The funds’ activities have also been curtailed with the SEC’s recently adopted short sale rule, which restricts short selling in a company’s stock if the stock falls more than 10 percent. Hedge funds, unlike mutual funds, have long relied on short selling, or betting that a stock price will fall, to make money even in down markets. Under Dodd-Frank, hedge funds, banks and others that deal in the estimated $600 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market will be forced to set aside extra funds to trade the financial instruments. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s plan to limit speculation in energy and metals will also impact certain funds’ activities. (Additional reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss in Boston; Editing by Leslie Adler) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read the full article →

Wall Street To Regulators: No Need To Rush

December 20, 2010

CHICAGO/WASHINGTON (By Ann Saphir and Dave Clarke) – As U.S. regulators race to write rules that will put Wall Street reform legislation into action, some industry groups are trying to apply the brakes, latching onto linguistic loopholes in the law to bolster their case. The new law, which aims to prevent a repeat of the 2007-2009 financial crisis, requires regulators to potentially write hundreds of rules, many under a tight time-frame. But in cases where the Dodd-Frank reform law leaves a bit of wiggle room on deadlines for final rules or effective dates, industry groups are urging regulators to take a deep breath and adopt a go-slow approach. The argument is being made across the financial industry in areas such as derivatives market oversight; plans for liquidating large, failing financial institutions, and a crackdown on debit card fees. “We appreciate that Dodd-Frank imposes short and strict deadlines by which each agency must adopt various rules,” says a December 6 letter from 11 industry groups to the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which are busy writing rules that will impact how the $600 trillion derivatives market is traded. “We respectfully note that the CFTC and SEC have discretion in determining when new regulatory measures will become applicable,” the letter said. The industry groups who penned the letter include the Futures Industry Association and the Investment Company Institute. In one key passage, the letter notes, Dodd-Frank requires swaps rules to take effect “not less than 60 days” after they are finalized, a phrase which suggests, according to the letter, that the gap can certainly be more. The efforts may already be getting traction. CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler last week delayed issuing a draft rule on commodity position limits designed to curb speculation. The draft rule ran into objections both from commissioners who want the agency to act quicker and those who fear moving too fast will damage the market. But Dale Rosenthal, a professor at the University of Illinois, Chicago who has studied derivatives trading, senses desperation in industry’s focus on language. “So they are resisting, but they are running out of tools, which is why they are starting to go to semantics,” Rosenthal said. “You are literally starting to fight over small words because you are not winning the larger battle.” FDIC, FED ALSO LOBBYING TARGETS Gensler’s ear is not the only one being bent — the go-slow argument is being made to several agencies. The American Bankers Association is urging the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp to take its time in crafting rules that will determine how large, failing financial firms seized by the government will be liquidated. The group notes the law does not specify a deadline for these regulations to be in place. “The nation’s financial system would be well served if the FDIC used the flexibility granted by Congress to adopt a measured and deliberate approach to the development and implementation of its authority,” the group wrote in a November 18 letter to the agency. Both Bank of America and Visa have urged the Federal Reserve to use as much time as it can to implement a rule slashing debit card fees and forcing more competition among networks used to process transactions. Some are arguing regulators just aren’t ready to move. The Chamber of Commerce is questioning why the new systemic risk council is busy writing rules on how to determine which non-banks will be subject to increased scrutiny by the Federal Reserve when the panel does not yet have all its members. The Financial Stability Oversight Council is headed by the Treasury Department and includes other major regulators. The Chamber of Commerce notes, however, that the seat reserved for an insurance expert has not been filled and that the head of the council’s research office has not been selected. “The current narrow focus of the Council may skew the discussions and decisions of the Council, potentially harming the economy with unintended consequences,” the Chamber of Commerce wrote regulators in a November 5 letter. Republicans have been highly critical of the new law and their gains in Congress may have emboldening industry to step up their calls for slower — and lighter-handed — rulemaking, some suggest. “It’s better to get this right than to get it done quickly,” John Damgard, president of the Futures Industry Association, told Reuters in an interview. “Even people on both sides of the aisle have indicated that some of these deadlines aren’t realistic, and the next Congress may very well take a good long look at the implementation issues.” (Reporting by Ann Saphir in Chicago and Dave Clarke in Washington with reporting by Jonathan Spicer in New York, Editing by Tim Dobbyn) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read the full article →

Video: Aguirre Says Probe `Positive Step’ in Leveling Market

December 16, 2010

Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) — Gary Aguirre, former attorney for the Securities and Exchange Commission, and Bloomberg’s Cory Johnson talk about today’s insider trading arrests. James Fleishman, an executive for Primary Global Research, an expert-networking firm, was arrested this morning on charges of wire fraud and conspiracy for allegedly trying to give non-public information to the firm’s clients, including hedge funds, according to a statement by U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara in Manhattan. Aguirre and Johnson talk with Lisa Murphy on Bloomberg’s “Fast Forward.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Goldman Sachs Accused Of Trading Abuses By Dem Senator

December 10, 2010

Just as the housing market was tanking in 2007, Goldman Sachs tried to shove out investors who were betting against it, to secure the best price for itself, a Senator alleged Wednesday. An email in which a Goldman trader encouraged a colleague to “kill” other pessimistic bets — as he tried to strengthen the bank’s own short position — prompted Carl Levin, chairman of the Senate permanent subcommittee on investigations, to say Goldman perpetrated “trading abuse” and used a “short squeeze strategy” the Financial Times reports. Levin has accused Goldman, essentially, of attempting to artificially drive down the price of bets it wanted to make. After housing prices started to decline in 2006, and borrowers across the nation began a wave of defaults, the securities based on their mortgages began to lose value. Meanwhile, the price of insurance on these securities, which allowed investors effectively to bet against them, was rising. When the housing market tanked, Wall Street investors who had placed bets against it profited handsomely. Investors who kept piles of these mortgage-backed securities on their books, however, lost billions. Few understood just how explosive these securities were. Goldman’s response to Levin’s allegation: “This type of language sounds awful and is very disappointing, but it does not reflect the reality of what happened.” In the spring, when the SEC pursued civil fraud charges against Goldman, flamboyant emails from Goldman trader Fabrice “Fabulous Fab” Tourre caused some embarrassment for the bank and added evidence to the accusation that Goldman willfully sold bad deals to investors. (Goldman internal emails called these deals “sh–ty”.) Goldman paid $550 million to settle the SEC lawsuit — a record sum, but peanuts for a bank that earned $13.4 billion last year. The case against Tourre is ongoing.

Read the full article →

Video: Sinche Says 2011 Will Be `Less Volatile’ for Currencies

December 3, 2010

Dec. 3 (Bloomberg) — Robert Sinche, global head of currency strategy at RBS Securities, discusses the outlook for the euro and currency markets in 2011. Sinche speaks with Sara Eisen on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

We Dare You To Find A Lower Rate: Wall Street Borrowed From Fed At 0.0078 Percent

December 1, 2010

NEW YORK — For the lucky few on Wall Street, the Federal Reserve sure was sweet. Nine firms — five of them foreign — were able to borrow between $5.2 billion and $6.2 billion in U.S. government securities, which effectively act like cash on Wall Street, for four-week intervals while paying one-time fees that amounted to the minuscule rate of 0.0078 percent. That is not a typo. On 33 separate transactions, the lucky nine were able to borrow billions as part of a crisis-era Fed program that lent the securities, known as Treasuries, for 28-day chunks to the now-18 firms known as primary dealers that are empowered to trade with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The program, called the Term Securities Lending Facility, ensured that the firms had cash on hand to lend, invest and trade. The market was freezing up. Effectively free money, courtesy of Uncle Sam, helped it thaw. The European firms — Credit Suisse (Switzerland), Deutsche Bank (Germany), Royal Bank of Scotland (U.K.), Barclays (U.K.), and BNP Paribas (France) — borrowed $5.2-6.2 billion in Treasuries 20 different times. The one-time fees they paid on each transaction ranged from $403,277.78 to $481,110. Deutsche led the way with seven such deals. On each transaction, the fee paid for the 28-day loan is equal to a rate of just 0.0078 percent. The first of these sweetheart deals began April 17, 2008. They ended nearly a year later on March 5. On that day, Goldman Sachs borrowed about $5.8 billion and paid just $450,000 for the privilege. Goldman was one of four American firms that also paid that rock-bottom rate. Citigroup, defunct investment bank Lehman Brothers, and Merrill Lynch, which was gobbled up by Bank of America in a government-pushed transaction, benefited from the save-Wall-Street-at-all-costs approach. Goldman and Citi got the 0.0078 percent rate on five separate occasions, tops among U.S. banks. The transactions highlight the extraordinary steps taken by the Fed — and encouraged by both the Bush and Obama administrations — to save Wall Street from its own mistakes. Households and small businesses have not been as lucky. The Fed’s crisis-era programs “provided liquidity to particular institutions whose disorderly failure could have severely stressed an already fragile financial system,” the Fed said in a statement Wednesday posted on its website. A spokesman did not respond to an e-mailed request for comment. This year, Wall Street is poised to break yet another record for employee compensation and bonuses. Thanks to near-zero percent interest rates — also set by the Fed — firms are able to continue making easy money with minimal risk. *This story was updated at 8:30 p.m. ET. An earlier version of this article misstated the rate paid by the firms, the number of transactions, the amount of the fee, which varied by transaction, and incorrectly defined the rate itself. The rate, which was a fixed fee and not a traditional interest rate, was 0.0078 percent, not 0.0077 percent. There were at least 33 such transactions, not 31. And the actual fee paid ranged from $403,000 to $481,000, rather than a fee of about $384,000 for all of the transactions. ************************* Shahien Nasiripour is the business reporter for The Huffington Post. You can send him an e-mail ; bookmark his page ; subscribe to his RSS feed ; follow him on Twitter ; friend him on Facebook ; become a fan ; and/or get e-mail alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 646-274-2455.

Read the full article →

Dan Solin: The Market Is Rigged Against You

November 24, 2010

Every day millions of shares of stocks and mutual funds are traded on the national exchanges. The system is premised on an equal playing field. Buyers and sellers are supposed to have access to the same information in order to make decisions about whether to buy or sell. Many have long suspected this premise is false. We know the “big boys” have access to super computers which provide trading information nanoseconds before it’s available to others, giving them the opportunity to use this data before it’s known to the average investor. It’s called “high frequency trading” but it’s really nothing more than legalized front running . According to an article in the Wall Street Journal , this is child’s play compared to the inside trading that pervades the markets. The article reports a three year investigation by federal authorities that could “ensnare consultants, investment bankers, hedge-fund and mutual-fund traders and analysts across the nation…” Who is on the wrong side of these trades? The average Joe who is trying to save enough for retirement. Even without this illegal activity, the securities industry practically insures most investors squander their money. The industry wants you to believe some “guru” (usually your friendly broker) has the skill to pick stocks or mutual funds that will beat market returns. A recent study by Standard and Poors demonstrates the confusion between luck and skill which is fostered by these “experts.” The study found that, over the five years ending September 2009, only 4.27% of large-cap funds, 3.98% mid-cap funds, and 9.13% small-cap funds were able to repeat their top-half or top quartile rankings. No large- or mid-cap funds, and only one small-cap fund maintained a top quartile ranking over the same period. Over longer periods, persistence of performance generally was less than you would expect from random chance. Other studies support the view that stellar performance by actively managed mutual funds can be attributed to luck and not skill. The ramifications of the insider trading scandals and these studies are profound and largely ignored by retail investors. If mutual fund managers had skill, you would expect a high correlation between past returns and future returns. This correlation does not exist. Since they don’t have skill, relying on them to produce outsized returns is gambling and not investing. While that is depressing enough, add the fact that the entity on the other side of your trade may have inside information that gives them an unfair edge. The conclusion is both inescapable but elusive for most investors: Your goal should be to capture market returns, using a globally diversified portfolio of low cost index funds, in an asset allocation appropriate for you. This means firing your market beating broker or advisor and selling all of your individual stocks, bonds and actively managed mutual funds. You can be a victim or victor in your quest for financial security. You are looking for guidance in all the wrong places if you a relying on the securities industry to help you get there. The views set forth in this blog are the opinions of the author alone and may not represent the views of any firm or entity with whom he is affiliated. The data, information, and content on this blog are for information, education, and non-commercial purposes only. Returns from index funds do not represent the performance of any investment advisory firm. The information on this blog does not involve the rendering of personalized investment advice and is limited to the dissemination of opinions on investing. No reader should construe these opinions as an offer of advisory services. Readers who require investment advice should retain the services of a competent investment professional. The information on this blog is not an offer to buy or sell, or a solicitation of any offer to buy or sell any securities or class of securities mentioned herein. Furthermore, the information on this blog should not be construed as an offer of advisory services. Please note that the author does not recommend specific securities nor is he responsible for comments made by persons posting on this blog. Here is the trailer for my new book, Timeless Investment Advice .

Read the full article →

SECs ABS Proposals May Violate Law Group Says

November 21, 2010

A group of 14 market associations warned the US Securities and Exchange Commission that proposals to apply assetbacked securities regulations to municipal bonds could violate securities laws reports Bond Buyer

Read the full article →

Restrictions In Communication Could Hurt US CMBS

November 21, 2010

A rule recently introduced by the US Securities and Exchange Commission that restrict communication between special servicers of US commercial mortgagebacked securities and credit rating agencies could have the unintended consequence of creating unnecessary rating volatility warns Fitch Ratings

Read the full article →

Preeti Vissa: The Film You Must See — or, We Told You So

November 18, 2010

A few days ago I joined a group of my colleagues from The Greenlining Institute to see the new documentary, Inside Job . I don’t normally go around telling people what to do, but seriously: Step away from the computer and go see this film. We had a special motivation for seeing Inside Job , which lays out in painful detail how the subprime mortgage meltdown happened and how it tanked the economy: Greenlining’s co-founder, Robert Gnaizda, is featured prominently. In a film that will leave any sane person furious and frustrated, he’s highlighted one of precious few who saw the crisis coming and tried to sound a warning. What filmmaker Charles Ferguson does — better than just about anyone else thus far — is connect the dots in a way that makes this very complex material understandable. He shows how a deregulated environment separated lenders from the consequences of their actions, producing a massive housing bubble that was built on a foundation of wishful thinking, speculation, inflated appraisals, bogus bond ratings and outright fraud. The result was a speculative frenzy in which lenders could make a fast buck (hundreds of millions of fast bucks, actually) by making subprime loans, often misleadingly marketed to gloss over hidden time bombs like exploding interest rates, quickly bundling them into securities called collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and selling them to investors. Without any sort of meaningful oversight to ensure that increasingly complex financial instruments bore some connection to reality, financial operators simply made stuff up — from appraisals phonied up to make a loan seem viable when it really wasn’t to AAA ratings given to securities that close examination would have shown to be nearly worthless. Much of what happened was utterly mad: For example, borrowers were allowed to borrow 99.3 percent of value of their homes, meaning they had basically no investment in the house, and yet two thirds of the securities backed by these loans were rated AAA, as safe as government bonds. It was insane, but while home prices kept skyrocketing it was easy to ignore that the whole boom was built on air. Enter Greenlining’s Bob Gnaizda, one of the few who dared to say that trouble was brewing. In meetings with then Federal Reserve Board Chair Alan Greenspan and other officials, he warned of dangerous and dishonest marketing of subprime loans that was bound to lead to waves of foreclosures and trouble for the whole housing market. But regulators like Greenspan, ideologically opposed to regulation, refused to believe the market wouldn’t correct itself. And everyone in the jungle of lenders and speculators was too busy making piles of money to be interested in the long-term consequences. As we survey the ongoing wreckage — massive unemployment and millions more foreclosures coming if nothing is done — it’s tempting to say, we told you so . And we did, literally. But instead of gloating about predicting the last disaster, it may be more useful to talk about how to stop the next one, and that’s what I’ll be spending the next several weeks doing. More troubles are coming, but like the subprime crash, they’re preventable — if we chose to put aside the conventional wisdom. NEXT WEEK: What Inside Job didn’t show, and what it means.

Read the full article →

Video: Wilbanks Says Cisco Shortfall Shows Risk From U.S. Cuts: Video

November 11, 2010

Nov. 11 (Bloomberg) — Wayne Wilbanks, chief investment officer at Wilbanks, Smithy & Thomas, and Dan Haugh, president and founder of PTI Securities, talk about earnings at Cisco Systems Inc. and Walt Disney Co. and U.S. government cutbacks. Wilbanks says Cisco could be the “tip of the iceberg” for technology companies who have contracts with the U.S. government. Wilbanks and Haugh talk with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Executives Collect $2 Billion Running U.S. For-Profit Colleges: BusinessWeek

November 10, 2010

Strayer Education Inc., a chain of for-profit colleges that receives three-quarters of its revenue from U.S. taxpayers, paid Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Robert Silberman $41.9 million last year. That’s 26 times the compensation of the highest-paid president of a traditional university. Top executives at the 15 U.S. publicly traded for-profit colleges, led by Apollo Group Inc. and Education Management Corp., also received $2 billion during the last seven years from the proceeds of selling company stock, Securities and Exchange Commission filings show.

Read the full article →

UBS Employee Reportedly Leaked Info On GM IPO

November 10, 2010

DETROIT — A person briefed on the matter says Swiss bank UBS is no longer working on General Motors’ initial stock offering because a bank employee leaked information about the sale in an e-mail. GM disclosed the e-mail in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday. The filing says investors who buy GM stock could seek refunds or damages because of it. UBS and the SEC would not comment. The person would not say what the e-mail said or where it was distributed. The person did not want to be identified because the bank has not been publicly named as the source of the e-mail. GM’s owners, including the U.S. government, plan to sell about $10 billion in common stock on Nov. 18.

Read the full article →

Robert Teitelman: Sorkin on the transparency dilemma

November 9, 2010

Like a drum major, Andrew Ross Sorkin leads his marching band to DealB%k’s new page right after Itineraries in today’s New York Times. Welcome to dead-tree media. In his Tuesday M&A column, Sorkin tackles a big issue, transparency, though it’s a little hard to tell where he comes down on it. He’s for it, of course; only communists and denizens of dark markets could possibly be against transparency. But it’s confounding. Sorkin himself admits that he once thought that allowing companies to announce news off their websites was a swell idea. After all, the Internet, birthplace of DealB%k (do we all have to use that damn “%” now?), represented the closest thing to ubiquity that we have. But then Microsoft tried it out, and while the globe still spins, Sorkin got a call from the chairman and CEO of PR Newswire and Business Wire, both of which are threatened by the development, complaining of confusion and delays. Let’s sort this out. There undoubtedly was some confusion, although it’s not necessarily clear that, as Sorkin says, “the system doesn’t work nearly as well [as the old].” Any change requires adjustment. And the biggest problem, slight delays, would seem to affect mostly the high-frequency trading crowd, which has done more to bring opacity back into equity trading than any other group this side of the dark market folks. Should we worry that some high-frequency traders might have to wait? Should the standards of dissemination be set by the cutting edge of speculative trading? And most importantly, have we confused dissemination with transparency? These are difficult questions. Sorkin cites Regulation Fair Disclosure, or Reg FD, which the Securities and Exchange Commission launched in 2000 to “combat selective disclosure.” When Reg FD became effective, the howls, mostly from the media (notably The Wall Street Journal), were loud and strident. The then-mainstream business media worried that banning “selective” disclosure meant that sources would dry up; and indeed orchestrated deal placements did fizzle out. Generally, nearly everyone hated Reg FD except the lawyers: Companies didn’t know what the rules really meant, analysts felt able to cater to some clients and not others (Eliot Spitzer was lurking as well), and investors felt the policy would simply be used to justify disseminating less information. It was a hassle, but while it’s hard to tell whether Reg FD made the world better or worse, the situation has long since settled down. Still, Reg FD did represent a subtle shift, which is exacerbated by the Web-based transmission of information. First, Reg FD was not about transparency as content, but about transparency as a sort of equality of dissemination: No one should have an advantage by getting information first. Second, Reg FD was an acknowledgment by the SEC that fair-trading was important; it was an attempt to level the playing field between institutions and individuals (the fact that it appeared at the height of the dot-com bubble is important). In that sense, Reg FD was a response to abundant Internet data, which gave the appearance of leveling the informational disparity that had long defined the two groups. And of course even then, the Internet had all but destroyed the timeliness and relevance of market quotes and data in the business pages of hard-copy newspapers. In short, Reg FD attempted to set rules for markets defined not by long-term investors, but by short-term speculators. The debate over Internet disclosure took this further. Transparency is not just the equal dissemination of information; it’s immediacy of access: No one should struggle to find information. The issue now is not that newspaper stock pages are rendered obsolete, but that media websites, fed by PR Newswire and Business Wire, find themselves scrambling to pick up information from corporate websites. They’re like everyone else out there. The advantage here goes to those who can quickly and easily monitor corporate sites, which may (or may not be) Reuters, Bloomberg, The Wall Street Journal or The New York Times, but could as easily be any organization with sophisticated RSS feeds. (Meaning, of course, day traders remain at a disadvantage.) Sorkin now finds himself uncomfortably caught between the omnipresence of the Web and traditional news intermediaries, like PR Newswire and the Times itself. The issue capsulizes the mounting difficulties of transparency in an age of increasingly rapid-fire speculation — and not just for traditional news organizations. Regulators have spent so much time and effort chasing the chimera of the level playing field that they have lost any sense of improving “transparency-as-content” in an age that, through intensive technology and innovation, has made it harder and harder to understand what’s going on out there. More and more, we are struggling to regulate a thin slice of trading time that has little to do with traditional investing and everything to do with capturing the tiny perturbations of stocks, most of which have no “meaning” at all. Meanwhile, derivatives, dark markets, the interconnectivity of markets, remain enormous black boxes. Robert Teitelman is editor in chief of The Deal.

Read the full article →

Fed Officials Raises Doubts Over New $600B Program

November 8, 2010

WASHINGTON — A Federal Reserve official with close ties to Chairman Ben Bernanke expressed doubts Monday about whether the Fed’s new $600 billion bond-purchase program would succeed in boosting the economy. Kevin Warsh, a Fed governor, also warned of “significant risks” associated with the program, including the potential for triggering excessive inflation later on. The Fed’s program, announced last week, is intended to push interest rates on loans even lower than they are now. The Fed hopes cheaper loans will spur Americans to borrow and spend more. A stronger economy could, in turn, prompt companies to hire more and invigorate the economy. But Warsh said he doubted the program will have “significant” or “durable benefits” for the economy. He made the comments in a speech to the annual meeting of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association in New York. Despite his reservations, Warsh was among 10 Fed officials who voted for the $600 billion program. The sole dissent came from Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kanas City. Warsh’s comments point to the uneasiness about the risks the central bank is taking with the new program – even among some Fed officials who supported it. Warsh, a Bernanke lieutenant, has never dissented from a Fed vote. Warsh warned that the Fed might have to reconsider its program if the dollar continues to fall or if commodity prices continue to rise, raising inflation across the economy. The Fed last week said it will monitor the effect of the bond-buying program on the economy. It left the door open to scaling back the purchases if the economy grows more than expected or if high inflation becomes too much of a threat. On the other hand, the Fed indicated it would boost its purchases if economic conditions weakened. “The Federal Reserve is not a repair shop for broken fiscal, trade or regulatory policies,” Warsh said. “Given what ails us, additional monetary policy measures are, at best, poor substitutes for more powerful pro-growth policies.” Warsh suggested that Congress reform the tax code to provide more incentives for businesses to step up investment. He indicated that such an approach is a more effective way to strengthen the economy. Taking a different stance, James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, argued in a speech Monday in New York that the “benefits outweigh the risks.” He also voted for the $600 billion program last week. Bullard said he worries that the weak economy might lead to deflation – a destructive drop in the prices of goods and services, wages and in the values of homes and stocks. The Fed’s bond-buying program should help prevent any deflationary forces from taking hold, he said. Bullard did acknowledge that the program risks spurring too-high inflation. With the Fed’s efforts to stimulate growth, its balance sheet now stands at $2.3 trillion. That’s nearly triple its amount before the recession. Adding the new bond holdings will push it to nearly $3 trillion. Hoenig and Warsh say they worry that the vast sums the Fed is pumping into the economy could unleash inflation. Bernanke, though, has argued that such fears are overblown. He says he’s confident the Fed can soak up all the money once the economy is on firmer footing – before inflation gets out of control. During the 2008 financial crisis, Warsh worked with Bernanke to craft programs to get credit – the economy’s oxygen – to flow again. Banks had essentially stopped lending to each other and to their customers, helping plunge the economy deeper into recession. Richard Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, who took part in the Fed’s discussions last week but isn’t a voting member, called the $600 billion program “wrong medicine” for what ails the economy. Fisher, who made his comments in a speech in San Antonio, said he worries that the Fed looks as though it’s printing money to pay for the federal government’s debt. And he frets that the plan could lead to new bubbles in the prices of commodities, stocks and other assets. “Financial speculation and excess … is beginning to raise its hoary head,” he said.

Read the full article →

Video: SEC’s Schapiro Says Global Effort Needed for Regulation: Video

November 8, 2010

Nov. 8 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Securities and Exchange Commissioner Mary Schapiro talks with Bloomberg’s Lisa Murphy about financial market regulation and global coordination on new rules. Schapiro speaks from the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association conference in New York. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Silvia Says Jobs Data Shows Forward Momentum in Economy

November 5, 2010

Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) — John Silvia, chief economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC, talks about the October U.S. employment report released today and the outlook for the economy. Payrolls climbed 151,000, exceeding all estimates in a Bloomberg News survey of economists and following a revised 41,000 drop the prior month that was smaller than initially estimated, Labor Department figures showed. The jobless rate held at 9.6 percent. Silvia speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

SEC Investigating Deal Between JPMorgan And Hedge Fund Magnetar

November 1, 2010

The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating whether JPMorgan Chase allowed a hedge fund to improperly select assets for a $1.1 billion deal backed by subprime mortgages, according to people familiar with the probe.

Read the full article →

SEC Whistleblower Fund Totals $450 Million

October 30, 2010

WASHINGTON — The Securities and Exchange Commission says it has set aside about $450 million for payments to outside whistleblowers whose information results in successful cases and penalties collected from companies or individuals. The SEC set up the program in accordance with the financial overhaul law enacted in July. It follows intense public criticism of the agency for the breakdown that allowed Bernard Madoff’s multibillion-dollar fraud to go undetected for 16 years, despite numerous red flags raised by whistleblowers. A report issued Friday by the SEC shows it has put $451.9 million into a new fund to pay whistleblowers, which must have a minimum $300 million.

Read the full article →

Yvette Kantrow: Making it

October 29, 2010

A commentator looking to take down a Wall Street macher could do worse than setting his sights on Steven Rattner. The former New York Times reporter, investment banker, private equity investor, Obama car czar and general big-man-around-town has reportedly been in settlement talks with the Securities and Exchange Commission over his role in a pay-to-play scandal involving New York state’s pension fund. Rattner’s buyout firm, Quadrangle Group LLC, not only allegedly paid kickbacks to secure investments from the fund, but Rattner himself allegedly helped distribute a movie named “Chooch” produced by the brother of a pension fund official. That’s right, “Chooch.” As in blockhead. All of that should be fodder enough to nail Rattner, who was busy promoting “Overhaul,” his book on the auto bailout, when news of the settlement talks broke. But while stones were certainly thrown, they were provoked less by Rattner’s entanglement in a very real pay-for-pay scandal than by the amorphous fact that he lives in what big-cheese Time magazine columnist Joe Klein dubbed “Private Equity World.” That world, in case you’re wondering, is “a particularly shady and opaque precinct of Wall Street where gazillions have been made through leveraged buyouts that have caused nothing but pain in the middle-class neighborhoods of America.” Klein provides no examples, of course. That private equity is a near-criminal enterprise is an idea much of the media accepts on faith. Indeed, Klein rolls out Rattner and “Private Equity World” as one of the reasons voters are “rebelling against expertise this year.” (Don’t ask.) He explains that too many recent presidents have populated Treasury with people like Rattner — “financiers who gained fame by making deals rather than by making products” — and “disastrous chicanery” has ensued. Hank Paulson and Bob Rubin are his two big examples, but he throws in Tim Geithner too, noting, that “he never was a Wall Street dealmaker, but he comes from that world.” How so, Klein never explains. But he praises George W. Bush’s hiring of Paul O’Neill as his Treasury secretary because O’Neill “came from the world of manufacturing.” (He was Alcoa’s CEO.) Geithner’s sin is that he never made anything or worked for a company that has. The message: Making is good; dealmaking, bad. It’s not surprising that during a recession the media would romanticize manufacturing, with its imagery of ordinary people earning a livable wage as they produce something useful at the local plant. But the notion that Wall Street somehow has a monopoly on “disastrous chicanery” is laughable, as big corporate scandals from a few years ago — Tyco, Adelphia, Enron, WorldCom — make clear. The media’s memory, however, is short. Indeed, the same sort of reverence for manufacturing CEOs in which Klein indulges runs through a takedown of Rattner by yet another big-cheese columnist, The New Yorker’s Malcolm Gladwell. In his review of “Overhaul,” Gladwell is incensed that Rattner had the temerity to fire Rick Wagoner, CEO of General Motors. From where Gladwell sees it, Wagoner saved GM, not Rattner and his paper-pushing cohorts. While Wagoner reached a historic agreement with the United Auto Workers and improved GM’s cars, Rattner’s Team Auto “engaged in an act of financial engineering: It used the power of the bankruptcy process to rid GM of some of the liabilities that had been holding it back.” How hard is that? “At the end of the day, cleaning up a balance sheet is cleaning up a balance sheet.” Gladwell insists Rattner offed Wagoner because private equity types “see themselves as smarter than the managers of the companies they are buying.” To that end, Rattner wanted to think of himself as more than just “a mere financial engineer.” He wanted GM to be seen as “his” (emphasis Gladwell’s). But Gladwell ignores two salient facts: Despite Wagoner’s accomplishments, there was a political imperative to oust the private plane-flying CEO of a company seeking a giant government bailout. And Wagoner, who was ultimately fired by the White House as much as by Rattner, was on record as fiercely opposing a bankruptcy filing. In the end, bankruptcy saved GM. Maybe it was just financial engineering, but it worked. So why skewer Rattner for that? Getting involved in “Chooch” was a far dumber idea. Yvette Kantrow is executive editor of The Deal magazine.

Read the full article →

Tim Ryan: Regulators Must Get Rules of the Road Right

October 27, 2010

After President Obama signed financial regulatory reform in law, most Americans probably believe financial reform is complete — that the work is done. In reality, the reform process is just getting started. Over a dozen federal regulators must now begin a lengthy rulemaking and implementation process, requiring over 250 new rules to be studied and written. This is an unprecedented undertaking the results of which will impact nearly every American. Americans rely on financial services to help meet their needs: for retirement, education, homeownership and indeed every aspect of their lives. The over $145 trillion in financial assets held in the U.S. will be impacted by these rules, nearly a quarter of which are held in the personal sector. An estimated 34 percent of Americans’ total assets are in financial assets, most of which are in retirement accounts, mutual funds, stocks and bonds. The financial services industry raised nearly $1.6 trillion in equity and debt capital for businesses last year and a further $475 billion for state and local governments and projects. Nearly six percent of U.S. gross domestic product is generated by the financial services industry, which employs 7.6 million people nationwide. As the former Director of both the Office of Thrift Supervision and the Resolution Trust Corporation during the savings and loan crisis and its subsequent clean up, I know firsthand how important the next 18 to 24 months will be to American businesses and families. While no financial reform legislation in recent history compares in terms of scope and complexity, important lessons can be learned from the past. Successful rulemaking is not an isolated process. It is transparent and bipartisan. To craft the best rules possible, regulators should take into account different perspectives from financial industry experts including those from market participants, the legal community, academia, think tanks and consumer advocacy and industry groups. In the end, after reviewing these comments, regulators must reconcile these varied viewpoints to reach a common goal: to agree on a pragmatic set of rules that regulate the financial service industry, prevent future crises and create a strong economy that fosters healthy competition, job creation and growth in our communities. Federal regulatory agencies and their staffs will be faced with the daunting task of sifting through hundreds if not thousands of comment letters from a wide array of stakeholders and deciding which ones are the most important and substantive to consider. Their critical role goes beyond interpreting each part of the legislation and analyzing the technical merits of each comment, but also understanding how the financial rules will impact American businesses, individual investors and families. Will the new rules ensure that the costs of credit remain accessible for businesses and individuals to meet their financing needs? What is the impact of the final rules on companies’ competitiveness when they are tapping the global capital markets? Will the rule raise the price of basic goods and services? Too much is at stake for our financial system and America’s fragile economy not to ensure these final regulations are written the right way. Over the next two years, regulators will be reviewing and writing rules that range from increasing oversight of complex financial instruments such as derivatives to enhancing protections for individual investors and consumers. Then, they will need to enforce the new regulations. The rulemaking process is long and can be complex, but it is also the most open and democratic way of ensuring that the voices of key stakeholders are heard. We in the financial series industry, along with other stakeholders, remain committed to being a thoughtful contributor to this open process. We need to get these regulations right. And, we should never forget the painful crisis and economic recession that made financial reform necessary. Tim Ryan is president and CEO of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), a leading securities industry trade group representing securities firms, banks, and asset management companies in the U.S. and Hong Kong.

Read the full article →

Video: MUFJ’s Brown Sees G-20 as ‘Diplomatic Defeat’ for U.S.

October 25, 2010

Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) — Brendan Brown, chief economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities International Plc, talks about the Group of 20 meeting in Seoul and the outlook for Asian currencies and the dollar. He speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

Read the full article →

Video: UBS Securities’ Golub Is `Very Bullish’ on U.S. Earnings: Video

October 21, 2010

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) — Jonathan Golub, chief U.S. market strategist at UBS Securities LLC, talks about U.S. corporate earnings. Golub also discusses Federal Reserve monetary policy and the U.S. dollar. He talks with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Duignan Sees `Plenty of Upside’ for Caterpillar’s Stock: Video

October 21, 2010

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) — Ann Duignan, an analyst at JPMorgan Securities in New York, talks about Caterpillar Inc. third-quarter profit, which rose to $792 million, or $1.22 a share, from $404 million, or 64 cents, a year earlier. The world’s largest maker of construction and mining equipment raised its full-year forecast, saying profit for 2010 will be $3.80 to $4 a share. Duignan speaks with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “Inside Track.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Ryan Sees U.S. Foreclosure Moratorium as `Catastrophic’

October 21, 2010

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) — Tim Ryan, president of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, talks about a possible mortgage foreclosure moratorium in the U.S. and its effect on banks. He speaks with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

Read the full article →

State Of Oregon Joins Class-Action Suit Against Apollo Group

October 19, 2010

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)–The state of Oregon has joined a securities fraud class-action lawsuit against Apollo Group Inc. (APOL) and several of its executives, alleging the for-profit college operator misled investors about its revenue between 2007 and 2010. The Oregon Public Employees Retirement Fund lost $10 million as Apollo’s stock price dropped in the wake of the company’s disclosure of a Securities and Exchange Commission inquiry and heightened scrutiny of the entire for-profit college sector, according to a statement released by Oregon Attorney General John Kroger and Treasurer Ted Wheeler.

Read the full article →

Phil Trupp: Hail Mary, Full of Hubris!

October 12, 2010

If you’re curious about how Wall Street works its fixed game of “heads I win, tails you lose,” Mary Schapiro can fill you in. A peek at the rules of the game are spelled out in a 100-page internal report documenting Ms. Schapiro’s tenure as head of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), the industry’s self-regulatory group she headed before President Obama appointed her in 2009 to the top spot at the Securities and Exchange Commission. The report is so damning even stockbrokers are crying foul. Despite the loss of $567 million from the FINRA portfolio in 2008, Ms. Schapiro walked away from the non-profit industry association in 2009 with nearly $9 million. Nice payout for someone who missed the $65 billion Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme, R. Alan Stanford’s $7 billion alleged Ponzi racket, and was involved in alleged insider trading of $600 million worth of auction-rate securities before that market froze in February 2008. Ms. Shapiro also failed to anticipate the collapse of Bear Sterns and Lehman Brothers, among other calamities. In Ms. Sharpiro’s FINRA it was, “Meltdown? We don’t see any meltdown!” These are only the most obvious failures for which Ms. Schapiro is being held responsible. There are more than a few lingering questions in the FINRA board of director’s report, which was issued under pressure late last week. Legal action is pending to root out the full menu of missteps and missed cues. According to one of the financial industry’s leading publications, Investment News , Ms. Schapiro’s take-away pay day has outraged FINRA’s broker members, among them John Busacca, owner of the Broker Dealer Exchange LLC, and a founder of the Securities Industry Professional Association, which represents brokerages and registered representatives. “Nine million dollars? For a non-profit? That defies logic,” Mr. Busacca complained. A number of highly placed industry officials have joined the chorus. Dan Roberts, of Roberts & Ryan Investments, Inc., calls Ms. Schapiro’s take-away “obscene.” Larry Doyle, president and CEO of Greenwich Investment Management, was among the first to question Ms. Schapiro’s management style. A year ago, Doyle’s online blog, “Sense on Cents,” called attention to the FINRA’s quiet sell-off of auction-rate securities before that market failed in February 2008. Doyle’s investigation brought early pressure to bear on Ms. Shapiro’s apparently opaque trading practices. Be aware that Ms. Schapiro isn’t the only FINRA employee to make out like a bandit. During the meltdown of 2008, executive salaries and bonuses totaled $35 million, according to the report. FINRA’s board took seven months to complete its findings, and then only at the vocal insistence of Amerivet Securities, Inc., a FINRA member. The company is calling for legal action and claw backs aimed at Ms. Schapiro, board members and other top officers. According to FINRA’s November 2009 tax filing, Ms. Schapiro took home $3.26 million in 2008. She apparently received $937,961 in salary, bonus and “incentive” payouts of $1.75 million. There was additional compensation, which one member-broker bitterly called “walking around money” worth $565,995. A portion of Ms. Schapiro’s total of $9 million came from retirement benefits amounting to $800,000 a year earned during her 13-year term. It wasn’t easy forcing FINRA to perform the internal audit — harder still to make it public. Secrecy is apparently high on Ms. Schapiro’s list of virtues. She recently attempted to gain an exemption from Freedom of Information Act inquiries at the SEC. Blow-back from Congress and the public quashed this ill-advised attempt to hide SEC decisions from public view. “We had to make a lot of noise to crack the opaque curtain,” said one industry official who chose to remain anonymous because of her sensitive position within the brokerage industry. “We had to speculate how much Mary was drawing down. Some of us figured she was in the stratosphere. Turns out she wasn’t, but $9 million is a great deal of money for someone her position as head of a non-profit.” The report has not quieted Amerivet. There is a pending suit demanding the release of internal FINRA documents focusing on investment decisions as far back as 2003. “Why President Obama placed Mary Schapiro at the head of SEC is a mystery,” said one industry member. “People wonder why Wall Street is down on the president. Well, for starters, you don’t have to look any further than this disturbing report.” Will Ms. Schapiro survive the growing scandal and keep her seat as head of the SEC? So far, the White House has remained silent.

Read the full article →

Video: Blanchflower Sees Risk of `Job Loss’ Economic Recovery: Video

October 11, 2010

Oct. 11 (Bloomberg) — David Blanchflower, an economics professor at Dartmouth College, and Robert Sinche, global head of foreign exchange strategy at the RBS Securities Inc. unit of Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, discuss the prospects of an international currency war and the outlook for a global economic recovery. They speak with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s `Surveillance Midday.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Sinche Says No Currency War Yet, Just `Disagreement’: Video

October 11, 2010

Oct. 11 (Bloomberg) — Robert Sinche, global head of foreign exchange strategy at the RBS Securities unit of Royal Bank of Scotland Group discusses the prospects of a global currency war and the outlook for China to increase the value of the yuan. Sinche speaks with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s `Midday Surveillance.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →