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Stockgate - Naked Shorting Scandal: Whatever Happened to Integrity?
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» Normxxx - Whatever Happened to Integrity? Refco Faces SEC Charges in Short-Selling Probe By Matthew Goldstein | 17 May 2005 A wide-ranging investigation into stock manipulation in the private-placement market has tripped up Refco, a brokerage that last month filed plans for an initial public offering. The New York firm disclosed late Monday that the Securities and Exchange Commission is considering filing civil charges against it over short sales in shares of Sedona, a tiny Pennsylvania software company. The looming action against Refco stems from a 2003 SEC enforcement action against Rhino Advisors, a defunct investment firm that regulators charged with manipulating shares of Sedona following a $3 million private stock placement in 2001. Regulators charged that Rhino illegally shorted the stock on behalf of one of its clients, Swiss-based Amro International, which had purchased a $3 million convertible note from Sedona in a deal negotiated by Rhino. Federal prosecutors in New York subsequently charged the principals of Rhino, Thomas Badian and Andreas Badian, with conspiracy to commit securities fraud. The federal investigation of Rhino Advisors was one of the first enforcement actions involving PIPEs, short for private investment in public equity. The illegal shorting uncovered by the SEC in the Rhino case led regulators and prosecutors to launch a broad investigation into allegations of stock manipulation and insider trading by the placement agents and hedge funds in the $14-billion-a-year PIPEs market. To date, the broad-based inquiry has led to the criminal conviction of a former SG Cowen managing director on insider trading charges and potential civil charges against investment firm Friedman Billings Ramsey (FBR:NYSE - news - research) and a former First New York Securities hedge fund manager. Refco, which filed for a $575 million IPO last month, disclosed in the offering document that the SEC has been investigating its involvement with Sedona since June 2001. In October 2003, the brokerage received subpoenas from the U.S. attorney in New York. But the firm, which specializes in the futures and derivatives markets, said it "has been advised orally that it is not currently the subject of the U.S. attorney's investigation.'' The SEC investigation, according to the filing, is focusing on two former Refco brokers who handled an account and short sales for Amro International, an offshore hedge fund. A short sale is a market bet that the price of a security will fall. A trader borrows shares, and if the stock does fall, he makes a profit by purchasing replacement shares at a lower price and using them to repay his lender. In the Rhino Advisors action, the SEC charged that the investment advisory firm shorted shares of Sedona on behalf of Amro, even though the $3 million PIPE deal prevented such activity. Amro, which wasn't charged by the SEC, benefited from Rhino's action because it got a ready supply of stock to cover earlier short bets it had made. [Normxxx Here: Witness Dr. Patrick Byrne's revelation last week (of October 10) that his purchase of 25,000 shares of Overstock shares was not settled/delivered for more than 50 days from, of all folks, Morgan Stanley. Dr. Byrne is the CEO of OSTK. How can anyone believe anymore that transparency exists in the U.S. market? Opacity? For sure. ]
The content of this message is not to be construed as constituting market or investment advice. It is intended for educational purposes only. Individuals should consult with their own advisors for specific investment advice. -- posted by Normxxx
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