Federated settles late-trading chargesMore in the full article, including details of two recent setbacks for Eliot Spitzer's office.
By Danielle Kost
Bloomberg News
November 29, 2005
Federated Investors, a U.S. money manager, said Monday that it had agreed to pay $100 million to settle regulatory allegations that it allowed traders to buy and sell mutual funds in ways that hurt long-term investors.
Federated will pay $35 million in restitution, $45 million in penalties and cut fees by $20 million over the next five years under agreements with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the New York State attorney general, Eliot Spitzer, Spitzer said in a statement. Federated did not admit to or deny regulators' findings as part of the settlement, the securities regulator said.
The Pittsburgh company is the 14th investment company to resolve claims of improper trading in the $8.1 trillion fund industry. The announcement comes after two setbacks for Spitzer's office, including a decision last week to drop charges against a former Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce executive who was indicted in connection with alleged improper fund trading...
Labels: Eliot Spitzer, New York AG
U.K. Enron Bankers Say New Evidence Prevents Their ExtraditionRead the full article here.
By Megan Murphy
November 28, 2005
Bloomberg
Three British bankers fighting extradition to the U.S. on Enron Corp.-related fraud charges accused the U.S. government of failing to disclose evidence that ``fundamentally undermines'' its case against them.
David Bermingham, Giles Darby and Gary Mulgrew, former executives at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc unit Greenwich NatWest, today told the High Court in London that the judge that authorized their extradition didn't know that Greenwich NatWest has acknowledged it didn't lose any money in the alleged fraud, which involved the sale of an Enron off-the-books partnership...
A U.S. federal court in Houston indicted the three men on seven counts of wire fraud in 2002. Prosecutors claim they misled Greenwich NatWest over the sale value of its stake in ``Swap Sub,'' an off-balance-sheet entity used to hedge Enron's investment in Internet service provider Rhythms NetConnections, gaining $7.3 million in the deal...
Labels: Enron, NatWest Three
Click on over to read the full post, with linked articles aplenty.ChoicePoint Drops Ad Claim
(22 Nov) According to its competitor, Aristotle International, ChoicePoint quietly dropped advertising claims about an age verification product that has been approved by several State Attorney Generals. If true, the product would help businesses, such as wine merchants, determine if a potential buyer meets the age requirements.
"In fact, some of the same state law enforcement officials who were said to have supposedly endorsed ChoicePoint's products are actually investigating the company's management practices, securities trading, and contracts...
Regulators May Never Police Hedge Fund ConflictsIndeed. Much more of interest in the full piece, regarding the February '06 hedge fund SEC filing deadline and the hurdles that still remain for the SEC before it can perform an adequate job in policing funds.
By John Wasik
November 28, 2005
Bloomberg
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is trying hard not to look like the bumbling film detective Inspector Clouseau in advance of its hedge-fund registration deadline in February. Already managers of the 8,000 funds that control $1 trillion in assets have found ways of avoiding registration. And it's unlikely the agency's inspection of the advisers will be too extensive, either.
As with many other investment products, you will have to be your own cop to ferret out conflicts at hedge funds and funds of funds, which package several hedge products. "Conflicts of interest -- they're everywhere,'' said Gene Gohlke, associate director of the SEC's Office of Compliance Inspection, who was speaking at a Fund of Funds Forum in New York on Nov. 14. "And they're particularly prevalent in the investment advisory business.''
The SEC is being honest about its inability to adequately supervise a huge, growing and sometimes unruly industry... The agency will only be able to conduct 1,200 to 1,500 inspections a year with 450 staff members. This team also tries to monitor 8,000 mutual funds from 1,000 fund groups... The odds are against the SEC collaring the next Bayou Capital, a $440 million hedge fund that collapsed in August and is under investigation for fraud...
You needn't be discouraged by the regulatory gap and can hire someone to be your watchdog... Hiring someone like an accountant, lawyer or financial planner to vet funds or funds of funds for you makes eminent sense... Some oversight of hedge funds is better than none, although the way the system is now, you will have much better protection if you do it yourself or hire someone akin to a private eye.
Labels: Bayou Group
Joe Nacchio: CEO or Secret Agent?More here.
By Tim Beyers
November 22, 2005
Motley Fool
...Authorities have made [ Quest CEO, Joe] Nacchio the centerpiece of a federal investigation into an accounting scandal that forced the telco to restate its 2000 and 2001 earnings, which were found to be inflated by an aggregate of $2.2 billion.
Nacchio has long denied any wrongdoing in the case, but some might argue he was somewhat more fortuitous in his timing of sales of Qwest stock than your average Joe or Jane Oddlot. Nacchio's defense has been that he established a regular program of pruning to diversify his portfolio and that his hyperbolic public statements that touted the company were nothing more than optimistic puffery grounded in a naive belief that the business was just humming along. Call it the "I didn't know someone else was cooking the books" defense, if you like.
It now appears the story has changed. According to yesterday's edition of The Wall Street Journal, Nacchio's so-called pumping was motivated by the knowledge that the firm had landed secret national security contracts and was expecting to receive more. In other words: By day, he was a mild-mannered spreadsheet-touting CEO. By night, he was a back alley negotiator brokering secret deals with government spooks promising to increase sales and earnings for years. Call it the "I could tell you but I'd have to kill you" defense...
Labels: Joe Nacchio, Quest
Fraud inquiry starts into shell firm's missing millionsYou don't say? The article continues here.
Simon Bowers
November 26, 2005
The Guardian
The Serious Fraud Office has been asked to investigate a suspected fraud at what was thought to be the biggest cash shell on the junior Aim market, Langbar, after it emerged that forensic accountants were "unable to establish the existence" of bank deposits previously said to be worth £365m.
It is by far the biggest suspected fraud to hit Aim, which has been relatively free of scandal since it was set up in 1995. The Stock Exchange said yesterday: "Clearly we are taking this matter very seriously and are working closely with other authorities involved." These include the Financial Services Authority - the City watchdog - City of London Police and, very recently, the SFO.
Concern first arose last month after it was disclosed that Langbar's Monaco-based founder Mariusz Rybak had made £2.5m from a series of share sales in October, selling shares at between 55p and 65p a share when the company was said to have cash deposits in Brazil and the Netherlands worth 220p a share. Trading in shares was suspended on October 12.
In a statement yesterday, the company, which until recently had been known as Crown Corporation, said forensic accountants from investigators Kroll Associates had found it "likely that the company has been subject to a serious fraud"...
Labels: Kroll
Status of high-profile corporate scandalsPass the indictment...and the giblet gravy.
November 23, 2005
By The Associated Press
A look at some of the high-profile corporate scandals of recent years and the status of legal action in each.
ADELPHIA COMMUNICATIONS CORP. -- Michael Rigas, a son of the founder of Adelphia Communications Corp., pleaded guilty on Wednesday to a charge of making a false entry in a financial record, eliminating the need for his retrial on securities fraud and bank fraud charges in a scandal that forced the cable giant into bankruptcy. John Rigas and his son Timothy were convicted in federal court last year of conspiracy, bank fraud and securities fraud. On June 20, John Rigas was sentenced to 15 years in prison, and Timothy Rigas to 20 years. They are free pending appeal. A fourth executive, Michael Mulcahey, was found not guilty of conspiracy and securities fraud. Last month, John and Timothy were indicted in Philadelphia on charges they and other family members didn't pay $300 million in taxes.
WORLDCOM INC. -- Bernard Ebbers, who as CEO of WorldCom oversaw the largest corporate fraud in U.S. history, was sentenced on July 13 to 25 years in prison. The sentence was handed down in Manhattan three years after WorldCom collapsed in an $11 billion accounting fraud, wiping out billions of investor dollars. A judge ruled in September that Ebbers can stay out of prison while he appeals his conviction.
HEALTHSOUTH CORP. -- Former CEO Richard Scrushy was acquitted on June 28 on all 36 counts of conspiracy, false reporting, fraud and money laundering in an alleged $2.7 billion earnings overstatement at the rehabilitation and medical services chain over seven years beginning in 1996. He blamed the fraud on 15 former HealthSouth executives who pleaded guilty. Hannibal "Sonny" Crumpler, a former HealthSouth executive, the second person to stand trial in the fraud was convicted last Friday of conspiracy and lying to auditors for his role in the fraud.
TYCO INTERNATIONAL LTD. -- Former Chief Executive L. Dennis Kozlowski and Chief Financial Officer Mark H. Swartz were convicted June 17 on 22 of 23 counts of grand larceny, conspiracy, securities fraud and falsifying business records. Prosecutors accused the two of conspiring to defraud Tyco of millions of dollars to fund extravagant lifestyles. The two were sentenced Sept 19 to eight and one-third to 25 years in prison. A judge refused to release Kozlowski and Swartz on bail while they are appeal their convictions.
ENRON CORP. -- Enron founder Kenneth Lay, former CEO Jeffrey Skilling and former top accountant Richard Causey are scheduled to go to trial in January on federal fraud and conspiracy charges. Former CFO Andrew Fastow pleaded guilty in January 2004 to two counts of conspiracy, admitting to orchestrating schemes to hide the company's debt and inflate profits while pocketing millions of dollars. He agreed to serve the maximum 10-year sentence, which will begin in July 2006, after he testifies against his former bosses.
Fastow's wife, Lea Fastow, completed a yearlong sentence in July on a misdemeanor tax charge for failing to report her husband's kickbacks. Former Enron treasurer Ben Glisan Jr. is serving a five-year sentence for his role in the scandal. And two former Merrill Lynch & Co. executives were sentenced to short prison terms for their roles in a bogus Enron sale of power barges.
CREDIT SUISSE FIRST BOSTON -- The company's former investment banking star, Frank Quattrone, was convicted in May 2004 on federal charges of obstruction of justice, after his first trial ended in a hung jury. Quattrone, who made a fortune taking Internet companies public during the dot-com stock boom, was sentenced to 18 months in prison. He is free on bail, appealing the conviction.
MARTHA STEWART: The founder of the homemaking empire was released March 4 after serving five months in prison, and finished serving an additional five months and three weeks of home confinement at the end of August. She was convicted in federal court last year of conspiracy, obstruction of justice and making false statements related to a personal sale of ImClone Systems Inc. stock. Her former broker at Merrill Lynch, Peter Bacanovic, served a five-month sentence and was released June 16. He still faces five months of home confinement. Stewart's conviction was not related to the company she founded, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia Inc.
CENDANT CORP.: Former Cendant Corp. Vice Chairmen E. Kirk Shelton was convicted in January of conspiracy and securities, wire and mail fraud. He was sentenced on August 3 to 10 years in prison and ordered to pay full restitution for his role in an accounting scandal that cost investors and the company more than $3 billion. Shelton was ordered to pay $3.27 billion to Cendant including an initial "lump sum" payment of $15 million last month. Shelton delivered cash, company stock and company-funded insurance policies, a combination that Cendant said is at least $2.4 million short and fluctuates daily. Shelton stood trial with former Cendant Chairman Walter Forbes, whose case ended in a mistrial and will be retried. Four other former executives have already pleaded guilty.
Labels: 2006, Andy Fastow, Cendant, Dennis Kozlowski, Enron, Health South, money laundering, Tyco
Labels: insider trading
Fund investors turn to private investigatorsThe full article appears here.
Risk Magazine
November 2005
By Jayne Jung
The recent to turn to private investigators to dig deeper into fund managers and to conduct due diligence
A spate of hedge fund-related scandals in recent months has increased concern among investors about fraud, and is prompting many to turn to private investigators to dig deeper into fund managers and to conduct due diligence. "What's going on with Bayou, Refco and Man Financial makes people nervous. And nervous people call investigators," says Michael Thomas, a partner at Caveat, a Washington DC-based corporate investigation firm...
...Caveat's Thomas says investors' focus is broader than the financial markets when making investment decisions, and with good reason. Something as simple as a driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs charge might cause investors to withdraw cash from a fund manager, he says. Investors don't want there to be any kind of question mark hanging over the integrity, or principles, of a manager.
Labels: Bayou Group, Refco
Hedge Fund SleuthsRead on, here....or save time and just give Caveat a call.
November 21, 2005
Business Week
"For sizable fees, they put secretive investment partnerships under a microscope"
The recent high-profile blowups of two hedge funds, Bayou Management and Wood River Capital Management, have raised an important question: What can hedge fund investors do to avoid getting burned by unscrupulous managers? The answer: Quite a bit, as long as you're willing to spend time or money vetting these investments...
Labels: Bayou Group, John Whittier, Wood River Capital
Labels: Bernstein Litowitz and Berger, Melvyn Weiss, Milberg, Milberg Weiss
Refco Buyers, vultures? Matthew Goldstein at TheStreet.com takes a harsh look at the firms that have been circling since Refco's collapse.Whew...not I feel like I am fully back in blogging action. Back later with some interesting news on the status of the Milberg investigation, hedge fund sleuthing and the perils of reputational risk.
Oh and....Bennett plead not guilty.
SEC Probes Firing of Wachovia Analyst...is a bigger scandal waiting to break on this one?
Kroll UK Directors Get Fat-Cash Following Takeover.
NYSE and the NASD joining forces - A new era in self-regulation?
SEC Compliance Office Prepping Hedge Fund Inspection Bootcamp.
Volkswagon hit by claims of sex junkets....sounds uncomfortable.
Labels: Kroll, Milberg Weiss, Refco
Labels: Cendant
Labels: Refco
Firm that pitched Bayou facing questions - After hedge fund blowup, advisory firm says it might have acted differently; others also under fire.Extensive additional details in the full article.
November 7, 2005
By Amanda Cantrell
CNN/Money, staff writer
NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Hedge fund advisor Hennessee Group recommended Bayou to its clients. Now it's being sued. The firm says it regrets steering clients to Bayou but had reason to think at the time the hedge fund was legitimate.
Bayou's founder and CFO pleaded guilty nearly six weeks ago to charges that they raised more than $450 million from investors, lied about the fund's returns and formed a phony accounting firm to audit the firm's results.
Hennessee Group admits it should have done a better job of spotting red flags at Bayou, including the fact that Bayou wasn't using a well-known auditor. Hennessee recently spoke out about Bayou, acknowledging that the firm didn't catch the fraud, but defended its review process nonetheless.
"I can see why, in hindsight, it might seem like this was all very obvious, but it's important to realize how it appears when you are going through it real time," Leeana Piscopo, senior vice president and chief compliance officer at Hennessee, said in an interview...
Labels: Bayou Group
CFTC files fraud action against Lake Dow Capital and its hedge fundThe original article appears here.
November 8, 2005
Hedgeweek
A US Federal Court has frozen the assets of the Aurora Investment Fund and its operators Lake Dow Capital, LLC and Ty Edwards. The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission announced that the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia entered a restraining order freezing the assets of Lake Dow Capital, LLC and Ty Edwards in a CFTC action alleging fraud committed by those parties. The order also froze the assets of hedge fund Aurora Investment Fund.
Specifically, the CFTC’s complaint alleges that Lake Dow, a registered commodity pool operator and commodity trading advisor, and Edwards, a principal and registered associated person of Lake Dow, falsely represented to actual and prospective participants in the Aurora Fund commodity pool, a hedge fund operated by Lake Dow and Edwards, that Aurora Fund had consistently generated annual profits without a single losing month.
The complaint further alleges that Lake Dow and Edwards misrepresented to actual and prospective participants that they managed between USD 60 and USD 100 million, when funds in the Aurora Fund did not exceed USD 20 million. According to the complaint, Edwards also attributed to the Aurora Fund performance results that were not based upon any actual financial documents, actual performance, or any analysis thereof.
The complaint also alleges that Edwards failed to disclose to participants in the commodity pool the fact that he is a named defendant in a pending Commission civil injunctive action alleging fraud, CFTC v. Risk Capital Trading Group, Deron Baugh, Tyrone Edwards, et. al, Case No. 103 CV-2633 (N.D. GA 2003), and that he withheld material information from the National Futures Association (NFA) by willfully concealing the identity of certain participants in the pool.
The CFTC’s ongoing action seeks orders of preliminary and permanent injunction against the defendants, an accounting for all funds, disgorgement of benefits, repayment to injured participants, monetary penalties and other relief. The National Futures Association assisted the CFTC in its investigation of this matter.
Labels: CFTC
Investment firm reaches settlement with SEC, avoids lengthy investigationThe original article appears here.
November 11, 2005
By Kairi Kurm
Baltic Times
TALLINN - Lohmus, Haavel & Viisemann, the Estonian investment firm whose employees were accused by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission of using insider information on stock trades, reached an out-of-court agreement with the market watchdog and thereby avoided a possible embarrassing hearing that had been scheduled for Nov. 8.
“Last night an agreement was made to cancel the court session and ease the arrest of assets,” Rain Tamm, LHV Group board chairman, said on Nov. 8, adding that a U.S. judge would have to approve the settlement. Tamm stressed that the agreement did not automatically imply LHV’s guilt.
Piret Loone, an Estonian representing LHV through Shearman & Sterling in the U.S. court, released a statement saying that the agreement was an important step forward but didn’t guarantee that the company’s accounts, arrested last week by a U.S. court, would be freed up. LHV officials said they wanted to cooperate with both the Estonian Financial Supervisory Authority and the U.S. SEC in order to clarify all accusations related to the firm.
The SEC has claimed that the firm’s employees profited from trade on U.S. public companies by using more than 360 confidential press releases belonging to Business Wire, a real-time business news agency used by brokers and traders around the world. The watchdog believes that the traders may have racked up some $7.8 million in profits on the illegal trades.
The employment contracts of Kristjan Lepik, Oliver Peek and three other employees suspected in the illegal trades, have been suspended. Peek was a member of LHV’s investments services team, and Lepik an LHV partner and head of the bank’s trading department. Rain Lohmus, one of the firm’s founders, and whose account was reportedly involved in illegal trading, stepped down from his position as chairman of the firm’s council.
Many were surprised to learn that Lohmus had also been a client of Oliver Peek. “Usually we do not comment on our customers’ data, but we found that it was important to say [Lohmus was involved],” said Tonis Haavel, one of the firm’s founders. Lohmus left for Moscow on Nov. 2, the morning news of the scandal broke, and didn’t return before Nov. 4. Haavel couldn’t say if Lohmus had been aware of possible illegal trading.
According to one report, Lohmus opened a $2-million account with LHV Trader in April this year, with the money eventually being deposited with U.S.-based Interactive Brokers. As a result of subsequent transactions, the size of his account swelled to $8.3 million by November.
According to the SEC, the illegal trading activity involved five different accounts, including those of Peek and Lepik. Peek reportedly received $2 million and Lepik $200,000 in nine months this year. “The in-house investigation is ongoing, and we are giving [the SEC] the information they request. It is very voluminous,” Haavel told The Baltic Times.
The firm LHV claims that young the men were trading as private individuals. In every statement, it emphasizes that the investment bank had nothing to do with any possible illegal trading of its former employees, and that the company has in no way profited from any such trading.
Still, the accusations have damaged the company’s reputation. Several customers have pulled their funds from LHV’s accounts, and Vilniaus Akropolis, Lithuania’s largest mall operator, cancelled its contract with LHV. Vilniaus Akropolis had been planning an IPO with the firm.
The SEC has frozen the accounts of about 180 LHV customers. Currently only those who used the LHV Trader investment services on the U.S. market through certain brokers cannot receive their money.
“Our lawyers have spoken to [the SEC]. The commission is in principle ready to unfreeze the accounts of our other clients. When it will happen, we don’t know,” Haavel said, adding that LHV has a total of 4,500 customers. “According to the securities’ act, companies like us keep clients’ assets totally separate.”
The firm’s partners have pledged to increase owners’ equity to $1 million if necessary to cover the claims. The SEC investigation was launched after a drug company, InKine, noticed a spike in trading on its shares on June 23, just before news was released about a planned merger. About 46 percent of the volume came from Estonian traders, who earned some $300,000 by selling the shares immediately after the merger was announced.
The same scheme was used in July when various earning announcements were released by eBay and Yahoo. In those cases, even larger sums were used. Business Wire made a statement defending the integrity of its data system, stating that traders could not have acquired secret access. Still, Tamm told the press that Peek and Lepik may have come across a security gap in Business Wire’s system.
Estonia’s Financial Supervision Authority has started a separate supervisory procedure into the matter. Meanwhile, a U.S.-based hedge fund manager, speaking on the condition of anonymity, told The Baltic Times that she had assumed on June 23 that whoever placed the order was related to InKine, Salix, one of the investment banks advising on the deal, or perhaps lawyers who had worked on the transaction.
“I just knew someone got very lucky that day, and I assumed it wasn’t luck that prompted them to take that big of a piece of some biotech firm in Philly no one had ever heard of before,” she said. “I had no idea who placed them. Just that someone sure was very timely and bold.” In the fund manager’s opinion, had the traders been “less greedy” on InKine, they never would have been caught, since the total share volume that day would have been within “normal” ranges.
She said that their other deals would have never aroused suspicion anywhere except among the inside compliance people of LHV and U.S. brokers Cyber Trader and InterActives. The latter are supposed to alert regulators if a client is making too many so-called “in-the-money-trades” ahead of major news stories, she said.
Jakob Frenkel, a former SEC enforcement lawyer and former U.S. federal criminal prosecutor, told The Baltic Times, “In cases like this, the SEC probably will demand penalties of $15 – 20 million, plus recovery of the profits from trading. But the SEC will first need to build its case and bring into the grasp of the U.S. courts the individuals charged.”
Frenkel, who is now with Shulman, Rogers, Gandal, Pordy & Ecker, added, “Of greater concern should be whether the SEC is working with U.S. federal or Estonian criminal prosecutors with the objective of criminal prosecutions and jail as the consequence. The allegations are of the type that would suggest the SEC will try to get criminal prosecutions too.”
The fund manager said that, if those traders cooperate, they might only pay a civil fine and avoid prosecution. “I think the Estonian securities regulators will deal with them, unless the Department of Justice wishes to make ‘examples’ of them.”
Other local investment bankers panicked about what the scandal could do to the industry’s reputation. Allan Martinson, managing partner of Martinson Trigon Venture Partners, said, “I can’t see a single person who won from this case. LHV lost, and the work of many years disappeared. Investors lost, Estonia lost, even the U.S.A. lost. This loss is a fact. What caused the loss, a crime or a work accident, is not that important. The effect of the LHV story is bigger than the conviction or justification of two boys,” he said.
As the U.S. fund manager said, “In a way, I respect how bright those boys were. I hope they cooperate - much more leniency is given to those who admit they made a mistake and clean up their act –at least over here [in the U.S.A.]. The regulators are overworked, and they hate it when people lie or refuse to cooperate. It makes them have to work much harder which means other matters get overlooked.”
Labels: database, Department of Justice, insider trading
Hedge fund manager accused of defrauding clientsMore in the original article.
November 9, 2005
Associated Press
BOSTON --A civil complaint against a hedge fund manager alleges he defrauded about 75 investors by hiding losses and overstating the fund's value by about $29 million.
The complaint by the Securities and Exchange Commission also alleges Mark R. Conway tried to make up losses at his Waltham-based firm, Groundswell Partners LLC, by deviating from the fund's original investment strategy without telling investors.
The SEC alleges Conway, 44, of Waltham, altered documents sent to investors to cover up the alleged misrepresentations in violation of federal securities laws. Conway's attorney, John Carman, of Garden City, N.Y., declined to comment...
US watchdog probes CSFB role in RefcoThe original article appears here.
Robert Lea
Evening Standard
November 9, 2005
INVESTMENT bank CSFB is under investigation by the US Securities and Exchange Commission over its role in the doomed float of commodities and futures broker Refco. Refco collapsed last month, just two months after it floated and raised nearly $600m (£345m).
Analysts have predicted that Refco's banking advisers could face claims of up to $200m in the scandal. CSFB was one of three banks that underwrote the Refco flotation. The others were Goldman Sachs and Bank of America. CSFB also handled the $600m sale of Refco junk bonds alongside Bank of America and Deutsche Bank.
New York-based Refco, which also has offices in London, collapsed after it emerged that its former boss, Philip Bennett, had hidden $430m of bad debts at the time of the float.
British-born Bennett was sacked a week before the firm filed for bankruptcy protection. While industry regulators say the collapse of Refco has damaged the derivatives brokerage industry, five bidders have lined up to pick over the broker's carcass, including Man Group, the London-based FTSE 100 hedge fund manager.
Shareholders have already begun legal actions against Refco's advisers including its auditors Grant Thornton. It has emerged that major accountancy firms KPMG and PricewaterhouseCoopers also advised Refco.
Labels: Grant Thornton, KPMG, Refco
Refco Bidder Alaron Has Been Ruled Out of Auction, CEO SaysThe original piece appears here.
Ann Saphir
November 9, 2005
Bloomberg
Alaron Trading Corp., one of five bidders to buy assets of bankrupt futures broker Refco Inc., has been ruled out of a bankruptcy auction, Chief Executive Steven Greenberg said in an interview today.
``The bottom line is we're not going to be able to bid,'' said Greenberg. ``We're disappointed.'' Alaron Managing Partner Gary Weber said in an interview that the auction was ``shrouded in mystery.''
Refco is selling assets after filing the 14th-largest bankruptcy in U.S. history following disclosure that former Chief Executive Officer Phillip Bennett hid $430 million of debt.
Labels: Phillip Bennett, Refco
Former Expert Witness for Milberg Weiss Gets Plea DealThe full Recorder article appears here.
Justin Scheck and Sarah Kelley
The Recorder
November 07, 2005
The most conspicuous thing about John Torkelsen's guilty plea Thursday was what it didn't include: an agreement to cooperate in the ongoing probe of the securities plaintiff firm Milberg Weiss and its former lawyers.
...It has long been thought that any plea deal between Torkelsen and prosecutors would hinge on his willingness to provide information to Los Angeles federal prosecutors. They've spent the past five years investigating charges that Milberg Weiss and former top partner William Lerach paid illegal kickbacks to lead plaintiffs in securities class actions. Lerach formed his own firm, San Diego-based Lerach Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins, last year.
A source familiar with the Torkelsen investigation said prosecutors last year were confident that they could put Torkelsen in jail for 10 to 15 years and that a plea deal for less than 10 could indicate cooperation. But the plea agreement detailed in a letter from D.C. Assistant U.S. Attorney John Griffith does not explicitly say whether Torkelsen is cooperating.
"There's nothing in this plea agreement that suggests cooperation," said Leo Cunningham, a former assistant U.S. attorney for the Northern District of California and a partner at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati. "Then again, for those of us who can get crafty about it, it doesn't foreclose cooperation." Preston Burton, a D.C.-based partner at Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe and a former D.C. assistant U.S. attorney, agreed. "There is no way to determine from the language in this plea agreement whether he is or isn't," he said.
Cunningham, Burton and other former federal prosecutors said that plea agreements based on cooperation generally make that requirement explicit. But, they agreed, in cases where prosecutors don't want the names of cooperators to become public, they often go to lengths to keep such information under wraps...
Labels: background checks, Melvyn Weiss, Peter Henning
Refco gets 5 bids for some operationsThe original article appears here.
The Associated Press
November 7, 2005
NEW YORK -- Refco Inc., the troubled commodity-brokerage firm, Monday said it received five bids for its U.S., Europe and Asia operations. Friday, after the financial markets closed, Refco said it would not disclose the names of the bidders or any terms.
However, Man Group PLC of Britain said Monday that Man Financial, its brokerage business, has submitted a bid for parts of Refco, which filed for bankruptcy last month amid a scandal involving its former chief executive.
New York-based Refco said it is "extremely pleased" with the number and quality of the bids received and said it will notify qualified bidders by Monday at 5 p.m. The company also said an auction will be held Nov. 9 and the winning bid is expected to be presented to the court at a hearing Nov. 10. Bids for Refco's regulated commodities and futures arm were due Friday at 4 p.m.
The largest known bid was from Refco competitor Interactive Brokers Group LLC, which had offered $858 million. An $828 million rival bid was also expected from a Delaware corporation formed by the Dubai Investment Group and Yucaipa. Original bidder JC Flowers & Co. had dropped its $768 million offer after a U.S. bankruptcy court reduced the deal's break-up fee.
Refco and 23 affiliates filed for bankruptcy protection Oct. 17, after its former chief executive Phillip Bennett was charged with covering up a $430 million debt to the company.
Labels: Phillip Bennett, Refco
Hedge fund fraud less likely in Europe than U.SOriginal article appears here.
Reuters
November 4, 2005
By Pratima DesaiLONDON - The risk that hedge funds will defraud investors is lower in Europe than in the United States, because most European hedge funds turn to independent administrators to value their books, hedge fund analysts said.
A lack of independent valuations contributed to the high-profile failure earlier this year of the U.S.-based Bayou Group hedge fund. Its founder and chief executive pleaded guilty to fraud by misrepresenting the value of assets, in a scheme prosecutors said cost investors $450 million.
"You should be wary of self-administered funds ... That's where the danger is," said Derek Stewart, a director of Mellon Global Alternative Investments.
In Europe there have been no major failures in recent years, because hedge funds normally use independent administrators, even though it is not a legal requirement. Over the years it has become a standard industry practice, which investors have come to expect.
"Hedge funds outside the United States without independent fund administrators are unlikely to have any serious investors," said Joe Seet, senior partner at Sigma Partnership, a specialist hedge fund advisory firm.
"Most hedge funds that collapse do not have fund administrators that are truly independent," he added.
The reputation of an independent administrator is also important, and that means being registered with a local regulator. In Dublin, for example, analysts estimate there are close to 40 fund administrators and that all are registered with Ireland's central bank. Hedge funds based in Asia have in the main taken their cue from Europe and use independent administrators to value their books, analysts say.
STARTING TO CHANGE
In the United States, new SEC rules requiring most hedge funds to be registered by February 2006 mean that funds are starting to change the way their books are valued and that more are turning to independent administrators. But many U.S. independent administrators do not yet have the specialist resources to properly value complex derivatives in hedge fund portfolios.
"Most of the really big hedge funds are still U.S.-based, and they are becoming more sensitive to issues about independent (valuations) ... independent fund directors and corporate governance," Seet said. Investors in hedge funds that trade liquid markets such as listed securities, government bonds or foreign exchange have less cause for worry.
Examples include managed futures funds that trade exchange-traded futures and equity funds that buy and sell stocks on major stock markets in London, New York or Tokyo, where prices are transparent and easily available.
Problems normally arise in less liquid instruments for which prices can be more easily manipulated, which include over-the-counter derivatives such as options, convertible bonds, private equity investments or loans.
"Valuation becomes more important with funds who have illiquid assets," said Doug Fulton, a principal at Westhall Capital. "If there is any reliance upon the fund manager for valuations or on (one) mainstream market source (bank or broker), then it's opaque."
Labels: Bayou Group
PwC dragged into Refco controversy - Big Four firm's US arm advised futures brokerage on financial reporting ahead of collapseOriginal article appears here.
Nicholas Neveling
Accountancy Age
Nov 7, 2005
PwC's US arm has been dragged into the controversy surrounding collapsed futures brokerage Refco after it emerged that the Big Four firm advised it about financial reporting when it changed from a private to public company.
According to the Financial Times PwC advised Refco on accounting issues and preparing more detailed financial statements. Prosecutors and regulators have not spoken to PwC, but Refco's other advisers, including auditors Grant Thornton, are facing shareholder lawsuits.
The FT reports that PwC was appointed in April last year to advise Refco on $600m (£343.2m) debt offering as part of a deal that saw private equity group Thomas H Lee pay $450m for a majority stake in Refco.
PwC is believed to have had one partner and three staff working for Refco. They advised the group on financial reporting and SEC filing requirements for public companies. Refco collapsed last month when CEO Phillip Bennett allegedly used a hedge fund to conceal a $430m debt from investors.
Labels: Grant Thornton, Phillip Bennett, Refco
* Direct the FTC to create rules requiring security for personal information. The FTC would have to take into account the size, nature, and scope of the person's activities, the current state of technology, and the cost of implementing security procedures.With the successful move out of the subcommittee has come another round of folks on both sides of the issue decrying the bill as going too far and alternatively, not going far enough. Meanwhile, Bob Sullivan at MSNBC's Red Tape Chronicles reminds us that 1 in 10 Americans received notification this year that their personal data could have been accessed illegally. And the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse cites eighty publicized data breaches since February. Heck just this morning. And, if you are a serious glutton for punishment, this story also received the Slashdot treatment over the weekend.
* Require entities to have a security policy that explains the "collection, use, sale, other dissemination, and security" of the data they hold.
* Require entities to appoint and identify a person in the organization that is responsible for information security.
* Require any entity that experiences a breach of security to notify all those in the United States whose information was acquired by an unauthorized person as a result of the breach. Conspicuous notice on the breached entity's Web site is also required. The FTC must also be notified.
* Define "breach of security" as the unauthorized acquisition of personal information where it is reasonable to conclude there is significant risk of identity theft.
* Provide for an FTC or independent audit of an information broker's security practices following a breach of security. It permits the FTC to conduct or require audits for a period of five years after the breach, or until the commission determines security practices are in compliance with the act and are adequate to prevent further breaches.
* Prohibit costly and disruptive lawsuits by preempting state breach notification laws with private rights of action. It expressly preserves state consumer protection laws, as well as state trespass, contract, tort, and other state laws relating to fraud.
...Social Security numbers should not be made accessible to everyone. We also believe that such personal data should only be made available for those with a legitimate need for it. We are asking members of the Energy and Commerce Committee to provide an exception from the limitation on the use of Social Security numbers for specific purposes as follows:Our role is risk mitigation in a business transaction. Without access to personal identifiers, such as social security numbers, we would face the nearly impossible task of separating one John Smith from the next and our essential role in facilitating business transparency would be undercut. Moreover the suggesed restrictions would in no way actively combat security lapses that brought aggregators into the public cross-hairs in the first place.
Âto identify or locate missing or abducted persons, witnesses, criminals and fugitives, persons that are or may become parties to litigation, parents delinquent in child support payments, organ and bone marrow donors, pension fund beneficiaries, missing heirs and persons material to due diligence inquiries.Â
Labels: data breech, identity theft
Millennium nears $100M fraud settlement - Hedge fund talking with Spitzer, SEC over $100M pactThe original article appears here.
By Alistair Barr
MarketWatch
November 3, 2005
SAN FRANCISCO - Millennium Partners LP, a $5 billion hedge-fund firm run by Israel Englander, is in talks with New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer and the Securities and Exchange Commission about settling securities-fraud charges, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.
The New York-based company could pay more than $100 million to settle charges that it traded mutual funds between 2000 and 2003 at improper prices after the close of trading, as well as charges that the firm tried to disguise its identity to help it trade the funds rapidly, the newspaper said, citing an unidentified person close to the talks...
Labels: Eliot Spitzer, New York AG
Deloitte's failed BCCI case against Bank of England cost £100 million; Multinational bank was "the largest case of organized crime in history"Click here for the full article which offers more information on the now abandoned suit as well as a full review of the BCCI scandal.
By Finfacts Team
November 3, 2005
The most expensive battle in English legal history ended on Wednesday when a £850m lawsuit brought by liquidators of Bank of Credit and Commerce International (known by many as the Bank of Crooks and Crime International) against the Bank of England was withdrawn leaving a £100m legal bill in its wake.
Lawyers for Deloitte, BCCI's liquidator, said the action was being ended after one of the High Court's most senior judges ruled that it was “no longer in the best interests of the creditors for the litigation to continue”.
BCCI collapsed in 1991 owing £10bn. The misfeasance claim, which was brought against the Bank of England in 1993, had accused senior officials of acting in bad faith and with deliberate disregard for depositors' interests over the supervision of BCCI.
Wednesday's ruling, was made in private by the judge who heads the Chancery Division and is understood to have followed a decision two months ago by BCCI's English creditors' committee that the costly litigation was no longer in the interest of all creditors...
Legal fight looms after J&J threatens to drop plan to buy GuidantThe original article (which first appeared in the New York Times) can be found here.
By Barry Meier and
Andrew Ross Sorkin
The New York Times
November 3, 2005
Johnson & Johnson has threatened to abandon its plan to acquire Guidant, a troubled maker of heart devices, setting the stage for a financial and legal confrontation between the two companies over a deal valued at $25.4 billion.
The development, announced on Wednesday, was a stunning reversal for a deal that was applauded when it was announced in December as both a handsome payoff for Guidant shareholders and a way for Johnson & Johnson to enter the growing market for implanted heart devices.
But along the way, Guidant, the second-largest U.S. maker of heart devices, found itself ensnared by safety issues and product recalls that appeared to spin out of control.
Guidant disclosed in late May, for example, that one of its defibrillators had repeatedly failed because of an electrical flaw. That disclosure led to regulatory scrutiny, a string of product recalls and, most recently, a Department of Justice investigation.
In a statement, Johnson & Johnson, based in New Brunswick, New Jersey, said on Wednesday that it believed that the recalls and federal investigations had materially affected Guidant's "short-term results and long-term outlook."
Guidant, based in Indianapolis, responded that any impact from the recalls would be short-term and that Johnson & Johnson was legally obligated to complete the deal by Friday as originally negotiated.
Guidant's legal problems also grew more complex on Wednesday as the New York State attorney general, Eliot Spitzer, filed a lawsuit accusing the company of fraud in connection with sales of a defibrillator model that short-circuited in some cases. The lawsuit seeks to force Guidant to disclose device malfunction data and disgorge its profit from sales of the defibrillator.
The deal's breakdown could present a challenge to Johnson & Johnson's strategy of growth by acquisition.
Guidant and Johnson & Johnson did not rule out continuing talks, but with the original deal valued at $76 a share, any new agreement will depend on whether the two sides can compromise on a lower price. People involved in those talks described the latest moves by both companies as a high-stakes game, with neither particularly interested in walking away just yet.
But these people suggested that a gap remained between the price that Johnson & Johnson is now willing to pay and the price that Guidant is willing to accept. These people said Johnson & Johnson was hoping to pay no more than something in the mid-$60s a share, while Guidant was seeking a price in the low $70s.
While some analysts said Johnson & Johnson appeared to have the negotiating edge, other analysts said Guidant executives might choose to sue Johnson & Johnson because they believe that the company's stand-alone value is close to $60 a share. On Wednesday, Guidant closed at $60.40 a share, down 4.3 percent, or $2.70 a share.
"They are playing chicken, and right now it appears that J&J has the upper hand," said Joanne Wuensch, an industry analyst with Harris Nesbitt.
The centerpiece of any legal fight will revolve around a single but complex issue: whether Guidant's product recalls and related events have had a materially negative impact on its future sales and profit. Not surprisingly, both companies on Wednesday staked out their positions. In its statement, Johnson & Johnson said it believed that developments had clouded Guidant's future prospects. For its part, Guidant characterized those effects as "near-term."
Courts have found that a significant negative impact must extend beyond the near term to qualify as grounds for terminating a contract. In 2001, a Delaware court ruled that Tyson Foods was not justified in terminating its merger deal with IBP, a beef processor. Tyson had argued that undisclosed financial problems at an IBP subsidiary had invalidated the deal.
Guidant's chief executive, Ronald Dollens, said in a statement, "We believe that the fundamentals of our business are strong and our markets and products have attractive prospects for growth."
Spokesmen for both companies declined to comment beyond their public statements or make executives available for interviews. Johnson & Johnson issued its statement immediately after the Federal Trade Commission on Wednesday gave it conditional approval to acquire Guidant.
It was in mid-December that Johnson & Johnson announced its plan to purchase Guidant, with the $25.4 billion deal representing the company's biggest acquisition by far. The move represented a decision by Johnson & Johnson to move into the market for implantable defibrillators and pacemakers, a field that is rapidly growing because of an aging population.
Defibrillators are devices that send out an electrical charge to disrupt a potentially fatal heart rhythm; a pacemaker controls a heart that is beating too fast or too slowly.
Spitzer's lawsuit, filed on Wednesday in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan, accuses Guidant of fraud in connection with its failure to alert doctors about the electrical flaw in the defibrillator known as the Prizm 2 DR. In a statement, Spitzer said doctors needed safety information about implanted devices to determine which model was most appropriate for a patient.
"We would not permit this type of conduct in connection with the sale of cars or washing machines," said Spitzer, who last year sued drug companies to force them to disclose more clinical trial data. "It is simply unconscionable that it occurred with a critical medical device."
Late Wednesday, a Guidant spokesman, Steven Tragash, said the company had not seen the lawsuit. The company, however, has said repeatedly that it has done nothing wrong.
In a recent filing with the drug regulator, Guidant also said it planned to release more detailed data to doctors to show how many units of a particular model had failed because of severe malfunctions like a short circuit that prevented a unit from delivering therapy. The company has declined to say when it will begin disclosing that data.
NEW YORK Johnson & Johnson has threatened to abandon its plan to acquire Guidant, a troubled maker of heart devices, setting the stage for a financial and legal confrontation between the two companies over a deal valued at $25.4 billion.
The development, announced on Wednesday, was a stunning reversal for a deal that was applauded when it was announced in December as both a handsome payoff for Guidant shareholders and a way for Johnson & Johnson to enter the growing market for implanted heart devices.
But along the way, Guidant, the second-largest U.S. maker of heart devices, found itself ensnared by safety issues and product recalls that appeared to spin out of control.
Guidant disclosed in late May, for example, that one of its defibrillators had repeatedly failed because of an electrical flaw. That disclosure led to regulatory scrutiny, a string of product recalls and, most recently, a Department of Justice investigation.
In a statement, Johnson & Johnson, based in New Brunswick, New Jersey, said on Wednesday that it believed that the recalls and federal investigations had materially affected Guidant's "short-term results and long-term outlook."
Guidant, based in Indianapolis, responded that any impact from the recalls would be short-term and that Johnson & Johnson was legally obligated to complete the deal by Friday as originally negotiated.
Guidant's legal problems also grew more complex on Wednesday as the New York State attorney general, Eliot Spitzer, filed a lawsuit accusing the company of fraud in connection with sales of a defibrillator model that short-circuited in some cases. The lawsuit seeks to force Guidant to disclose device malfunction data and disgorge its profit from sales of the defibrillator.
The deal's breakdown could present a challenge to Johnson & Johnson's strategy of growth by acquisition.
Guidant and Johnson & Johnson did not rule out continuing talks, but with the original deal valued at $76 a share, any new agreement will depend on whether the two sides can compromise on a lower price. People involved in those talks described the latest moves by both companies as a high-stakes game, with neither particularly interested in walking away just yet.
But these people suggested that a gap remained between the price that Johnson & Johnson is now willing to pay and the price that Guidant is willing to accept. These people said Johnson & Johnson was hoping to pay no more than something in the mid-$60s a share, while Guidant was seeking a price in the low $70s.
While some analysts said Johnson & Johnson appeared to have the negotiating edge, other analysts said Guidant executives might choose to sue Johnson & Johnson because they believe that the company's stand-alone value is close to $60 a share. On Wednesday, Guidant closed at $60.40 a share, down 4.3 percent, or $2.70 a share.
"They are playing chicken, and right now it appears that J&J has the upper hand," said Joanne Wuensch, an industry analyst with Harris Nesbitt.
The centerpiece of any legal fight will revolve around a single but complex issue: whether Guidant's product recalls and related events have had a materially negative impact on its future sales and profit. Not surprisingly, both companies on Wednesday staked out their positions. In its statement, Johnson & Johnson said it believed that developments had clouded Guidant's future prospects. For its part, Guidant characterized those effects as "near-term."
Courts have found that a significant negative impact must extend beyond the near term to qualify as grounds for terminating a contract. In 2001, a Delaware court ruled that Tyson Foods was not justified in terminating its merger deal with IBP, a beef processor. Tyson had argued that undisclosed financial problems at an IBP subsidiary had invalidated the deal.
Guidant's chief executive, Ronald Dollens, said in a statement, "We believe that the fundamentals of our business are strong and our markets and products have attractive prospects for growth."
Spokesmen for both companies declined to comment beyond their public statements or make executives available for interviews. Johnson & Johnson issued its statement immediately after the Federal Trade Commission on Wednesday gave it conditional approval to acquire Guidant.
It was in mid-December that Johnson & Johnson announced its plan to purchase Guidant, with the $25.4 billion deal representing the company's biggest acquisition by far. The move represented a decision by Johnson & Johnson to move into the market for implantable defibrillators and pacemakers, a field that is rapidly growing because of an aging population.
Defibrillators are devices that send out an electrical charge to disrupt a potentially fatal heart rhythm; a pacemaker controls a heart that is beating too fast or too slowly.
Spitzer's lawsuit, filed on Wednesday in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan, accuses Guidant of fraud in connection with its failure to alert doctors about the electrical flaw in the defibrillator known as the Prizm 2 DR. In a statement, Spitzer said doctors needed safety information about implanted devices to determine which model was most appropriate for a patient.
"We would not permit this type of conduct in connection with the sale of cars or washing machines," said Spitzer, who last year sued drug companies to force them to disclose more clinical trial data. "It is simply unconscionable that it occurred with a critical medical device."
Late Wednesday, a Guidant spokesman, Steven Tragash, said the company had not seen the lawsuit. The company, however, has said repeatedly that it has done nothing wrong.
In a recent filing with the drug regulator, Guidant also said it planned to release more detailed data to doctors to show how many units of a particular model had failed because of severe malfunctions like a short circuit that prevented a unit from delivering therapy. The company has declined to say when it will begin disclosing that data.
Labels: Department of Justice, Eliot Spitzer, New York AG
The original article appears here.SEC probing GE's hedge accounting 02, 2005
Reuters
A Securities and Exchange Commission probe into General Electric Co and its use of hedge accounting for derivatives was upgraded to a formal investigation in August, but GE delayed disclosure until its third-quarter financial statements last week.
In January the SEC's Boston district office began an informal investigation into GE's accounting for derivatives used to hedge risks, requesting that GE and its GE Capital division voluntarily provide documents and information.
But in its quarterly financial filing on Oct 24, GE said SEC staff in August advised the company that the commission had elevated the probe to a formal investigation, which means SEC staff are authorized to subpoena witnesses and documents.
GE officials could not be reached immediately for comment. GE, in the filing, said it believed the upgrade is "a common step in the process in such matters." The company said it has continued to voluntarily provide documents and information to the SEC Staff and "we intend to continue to cooperate fully with its investigation."
GE in May restated its earnings from 2001 through the first quarter of 2005 after an internal audit found that its accounting for currency and interest rate derivatives did not comply with accounting standards. The company at the time said the restatement resulted in a total non-cash increase of $381 million, or less than six tenths of 1 per cent of total earnings, for that period.
Estonian bank suspends staff at centre of SEC probe
November 2, 2005
By David Mardiste
Reuters
...The SEC on Tuesday charged Estonian company Lohmus Haavel & Viisemann (LHV) and two of its employees with fraud in relation to a scheme to steal corporate news release data from Business Wire in advance of the official release.
Estonia's financial watchdog told Reuters it also was mounting its own investigation into the allegations.
In a statement in Tallinn on Wednesday, LHV said it had suspended two employees pending the results of its inquiry. LHV Managing Partner Rain Tamm said his bank neither participated in nor authorised the scheme.
"We have suspended them (the employees) while conducting an internal investigation," Tamm said. "We are cooperating fully with the SEC in order to identify the cause of this situation and to resolve it."
The SEC statement said that Estonian citizens Oliver Peek, 24, and Kristjan Lepik, 28, were charged with the "electronic theft and trading in advance of more than 360 confidential press releases issued by more than 200 U.S. public companies".
Peek and Lepik could not be reached for comment.
According to the complaint, LHV became a Business Wire client in June 2004 and then used a programme to gain unauthorised access to confidential information contained in impending press releases.
LHV said its investment funds and trading accounts were not used in the scheme and that the internal inquiry was focused on five specific customer accounts on its products used by professional traders...
The full article appears here. You can read about the SEC investigation here.
--MDT
"We acted today to stop a clever and pernicious securities fraud and to preserve funds for investors. This case highlights that even when fraudsters invent new ways to violate the securities laws, the Commission will track them down and stop them, wherever they are located," said Daniel M. Hawke, Associate District Administrator of the Commission's Philadelphia District Office.
The Commission's complaint alleges that, in June 2004, Lohmus became a client of Business Wire for the sole purpose of gaining access to Business Wire's secure client website. Once defendants had access, they surreptitiously utilized a software program, a so-called "spider" program, which provided unauthorized access to confidential information contained in impending nonpublic press releases of other Business Wire clients, including the expected time of issuance.
The complaint further alleges that the information fraudulently stolen by the defendants has allowed them to strategically time their trades around the public release of news involving, among other things, mergers, earnings, and regulatory actions. Using several U.S. brokerage accounts, the defendants have bought long or sold short the stocks of the companies whose confidential press release information they have stolen, and purchased options to increase their profits.
Named in the Commission's complaint are the following defendants.
Lohmus Haavel & Viisemann, headquartered in Tallinn, Estonia, is an investment bank established in 1999. Lohmus, which also has offices in Latvia and Lithuania, provides corporate financing, private equity, asset management, investment services, and structured financing services to the Eastern European market.
Oliver Peek, age 24, is a citizen of Estonia currently residing in Tallinn. Peek is employed by Lohmus and works for its investment services team.
Kristjan Lepik, age 28, is a citizen of Estonia currently residing in Tallinn. Lepik is a partner at Lohmus.
Read the rest here.
-- MDT
Labels: database
Man Group in Refco talksThe original article appears here.
November 1, 2005
Sharecast
Man Group’s brokerage arm admitted today that it has agreed a confidentiality agreement, allowing it access to Refco's financial data. The agreement marks a key step for the Man Financial in agreeing a deal to buy all or parts of the bankrupt company.
Man said it was entering a non disclosure agreement with Refco, which plunged into bankruptcy last month amid a financial scandal after charges were levelled against its former CEO Phillip Bennett.
The fund manager is the latest suitor to access Refco's financial data, which it will use to consider submitting a formal bid, following Interactive Brokers Group last week while TradeLink is also thought to be interested.
Others also thought to be mulling a potential offer are a group consisting of Merrill Lynch, private equity firm Warburg and Susquehanna.
Bids for Refco are due on November 4.
Labels: Phillip Bennett, Refco