Archives for November, 2010

Ponzi Scheme Clawback Suit Settled for $10 Million

November 30th, 2010

Investopedia defines a clawback as “Money or benefits that are distributed and then taken back as a result of special circumstances.” We guess that a Ponzi scheme qualifies as special.

Forty-five investors, including hedge fund Mountain Capital Management, have reached a settlement in the in the Westgate Capital Management Ponzi scheme case. The investors will hand back almost $10 million to Westgate’s court-appointed receiver Lee Richards.

Richards had filed clawback lawsuits against the Woodcliff Lake, N.J.-based hedge fund and other investors, demanding they return the fictitious profits paid out by Westgate. Richards had also accused Mountain founder Neil Monteleone of learning that fellow hedge fund Westgate was a fraud three years before it collapsed, and doing nothing about it.

Mountain denied those allegations; its lawyer, Anthony Paccione, said the firm settled as a “necessary step for all parties to try to move forward.

Mountain will return $8.88 million—the bulk of the settlements reached by Richards. Paccione said that accounted for “all of the fictitious profits that [Monteleone's] funds received over a number of years. It is important to note that my client had no knowledge of the fraud and was defrauded like all of the other victims.”

The 45 settlements netted a total of $9.99 million. Richards said he has now recovered 77% of the phony profits he was seeking, adding that “a number” of clawback cases remain outstanding.

Westgate founder James Nicholson was sentenced to 40 years in prison last month for running the $140 million scam. He pleaded guilty in December, a year after his Ponzi scheme fell apart in the wake of the Lehman Brothers collapse.

Source

New European Bonus Rules Has Bankers Squealing in Terror

November 28th, 2010

"The truffles! Won't someone save the truffles?"

Jeeves, tell Chef Pierre to substitute veal for pheasant at tonight’s dinner at the Yacht Club, what with these awful new bonuses we’ll have to start economizing.” This may well be indicative of the absolute terror ripping through the European community of millionaire bankers as they contemplate upcoming cuts to their usual multi-million pound or euro bonuses.

The bonus curbs will be announced by the Committee of European Banking Supervisors in the second week of December. The U.K. Financial Services Authority will publish its own rules a few days after.

Tax lawyers, accountants, and pay consultants are lapping up new business like hogs at the trough.  Tax advisers said schemes under consideration included offering staff recourse loans to tide individuals over until their retained or deferred bonuses vest; structuring bonus payouts to minimize the amount of tax payable immediately; structuring payments to attract a capital gains tax liability instead of income tax; and issuing certificates of deposit or restricted loan notes in place of shares.

However, any efforts to wriggle out of the rules will be closely scrutinized by the FSA, which has said it will clamp down on any attempts to get round the spirit of the rules. “We shall turn these fat hogs into bits of bacon if they give us any trouble” was not actually said by the FSA spokesman, but we are sure that’s what he was thinking. What he actually said was “We would encourage firms to engage with the new rules as soon as possible. The CRD [Capital Requirements Directive] contains anti-avoidance measures and the FSA would take a very dim view of any efforts to avoid the rules. Firms need to comply not only with the rules but also the spirit of the code.”

Sam Whitaker, counsel in law firm Shearman & Sterling’s executive compensation and employee benefits practice, said: “Most banks already have their strategy in place.”

Under the proposed rules staff at UK banks who are paid more than £1m could end up paying out more in tax than they receive in cash.  No doubt smelling salts sales increased on that bit of news.

Jon Terry, head of reward at accountancy firm PwC, said: “The primary focus this year is to ensure that staff don’t get hit with a tax liability for the retention element of their bonus, and to get cash into the hands of their most senior people.”

As the proposed rules stand, 60% of the total bonus for bankers who earn more than £1m must be deferred, 20% will go into a “retention” pot and 20% will be paid as cash. One of the priorities for the banks is ensuring top earners are not hit with a tax liability for the retention element of their bonus.

One way to avoid such a situation occurring is to structure the retention element so that there is a theoretical risk of losing, making the award ineligible for tax until delivery, according to one tax lawyer.

Banks are also considering issuing certificates of deposit or restricted loan notes. These can be issued to minimise a tax liability, but could also be used in place of shares as part of a deferral arrangements. Advisers are awaiting further clarification on this issue from the final CEBS guidelines.

Sophie Dworetzsky, a partner at law firm Withers, said: “If the recipient wants to be subject to capital gains tax rather than income tax when value is realised, it is possible to achieve this, but in this case income tax will have to be paid upfront on grant of the certificates of deposit. The employer can look into making a loan to discharge the income tax liability in this situation.”

Another option for banks is to offer recourse loans to certain staff. CEBS sets out in its guidelines that non-recourse loans, where the loan could be written off after a certain period, are disallowed. However, recourse loans – which give power to the lender and cannot be written off – may be offered selectively to certain staff, say advisers.

Banks which pay bonuses in January – including JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs – are expected to present their plans to staff in the next few weeks. Others are unlikely to make any concrete plans until the CEBS guidelines have been confirmed.

Several European and US banks have already announced they will increase fixed pay to minimise the cash impact of incoming bonus rules. HSBC this month confirmed it was increasing base salaries as a proportion of total compensation. It follows similar moves from Credit Suisse and Royal Bank of Scotland.

Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs also paid selected staff mid-year bonuses in expectation of the new rules. Credit Suisse paid out cash bonuses to around 400 senior London-based staff in September. Goldman Sachs, which capped bonuses at £1m last year, handed out shares to about 80 senior bankers also in September.

Any attempts to soften the blow for bankers are likely to get short shrift from regulators. Employee trusts, which had been used by banks to minimise the tax burden on deferred bonuses in the past, are being challenged in the courts by HM Revenue & Customs.

Jonathan Fenn, a partner at law firm Slaughter and May, said: “Recent challenges by the Revenue, and the Revenue’s announcement that it is reviewing the use of trusts and other vehicles in the remuneration context have made tax planners increasingly nervous about using ‘highly engineered’ structures .

A spokeswoman for the FSA said: “We would encourage firms to engage with the new rules as soon as possible. The CRD [Capital Requirements Directive] contains anti-avoidance measures and the FSA would take a very dim view of any efforts to avoid the rules. Firms need to comply not only with the rules but also the spirit of the code.”

Alistair Woodland, a partner at law firm Clifford Chance, said: “The truth is that no one will escape the new bonus rules completely.”

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Prosecutors Win Right to Use Rajaratnam Wiretaps

November 26th, 2010

Raj Rajaratnam

The winning streak of Galleon Group hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam came to an end on Wednesday when federal prosecutors won their bid to present secret recordings in the upcoming insider-trading criminal trial.

U.S. District Judge Richard Holwell supported the use of wiretaps by prosecutors to uncover a fraudulent insider trading racket, even though the order does not specifically authorize wiretaps to investigate insider trading alone.

He rejected defense arguments that the wiretaps were poisoned because FBI agent B.J. Kang had misled a different judge who authorized them in March 2008 about their need, and were unnecessary because the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission was pursuing its own civil fraud case without them.

While finding it “troubling” that prosecutors withheld details of the SEC probe, Holwell allowed the wiretaps of more than 2,000 conversations. He said that because much of the alleged scheme was conducted by phone, investigators were unlikely to fully uncover it by conventional means.

“Disclosure of all the details of the SEC’s investigation that the government recklessly omitted would ultimately have shown that a wiretap was necessary and appropriate,” Holwell wrote in his 68-page opinion.

Danielle Chiesi, a co-defendant and former trader with New Castle Funds LLC, had also sought to suppress the wiretaps.

Jim McCarthy, a spokesman for Rajaratnam, declined to comment. Alan Kaufman, a lawyer for Chiesi, declined immediate comment. A spokeswoman for U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara in Manhattan said that office does not discuss ongoing cases.

Rajaratnam and Chiesi face up to 20 years in prison if convicted on charges including securities fraud and conspiracy. A trial is scheduled for January 17.

“The ruling significantly increases the pressure on the defendants to consider whether to plead guilty,” said David Siegal, a partner at Haynes and Boone LLP in New York and a former federal prosecutor.

“Recordings of the precise words spoken by a tipper and tippee in an insider trading case can be powerful evidence to demonstrate criminal intent,” Siegal continued. “Nevertheless, a sentence arising from a guilty plea may be so severe that a defendant may choose to go to trial anyway.”

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Pension Funds Don’t Like the Smell Coming From Hedge Fund Probe

November 25th, 2010

Hey, where did everybody go?

If there is one thing pension funds can’t stand, it’s the even remotest whiff of scandal. With the FBI raiding hedge funds and carting off truckloads of evidence in the ever-widening federal insider-trading investigation into such giants as Citadel Investment Group, it’s safe to say pensions smell a stink bomb and may be heading for the exits.

Three prominent pensions are considering such a move right now. Two of those pensions, the Ohio School Employees Retirement System and Massachusetts Pension Reserves Investment Management, have money with both Diamondback Capital Management and Level Global Investors. Ohio Teachers has $72.4 million invested in Diamondback and $35.1 million in Level Global.

And they are watching the growing insider-trading probe carefully.

The third pension, the New Jersey Division of Investment, has $83 million invested directly with Level Global. A spokesman said that it “will monitor the events connected with these hedge funds in order to do everything we can to protect our investments.”

The Garden State pension also has exposure to Diamondback and to SAC Capital Advisors, which has been subpoenaed in the federal investigation, through fund of hedge funds Arden Asset Management.

Tim Barbour, a spokesman for the Ohio Teachers, told Pensions & Investments that both Diamondback and Level Global had contacted it to reassure about the raids and to say they were cooperating fully. But no formal action was taken “because we really don’t have enough information.”

MassPRIM’s exposure is slightly more modest, with $48.4 million in Level Global and $17.2 million in Diamondback. But Executive Director Michael Trotsky assured the fund’s trustees that he was monitoring the situation.

Two fund officials have been in touch with the two hedge funds “to learn about the investigation and to determine what options are available to us.”

“While very few details of the investigation are currently available, our team is working diligently to ensure that we are doing everything we can to avoid a permanent loss of capital,” he said.

The New Jersey Division of Investment has $83 million invested directly with Level Global. A spokesman told P&I that it “will monitor the events connected with these hedge funds in order to do everything we can to protect our investments.”

The Garden State pension also has exposure to Diamondback and to SAC Capital Advisors, which has been subpoenaed in the federal investigation, through fund of hedge funds Arden Asset Management.

Source

Boo Hoo! Rajaratnam Moll Cries Over Miranda Rights

November 24th, 2010

Raj and Danielle

Nothing like high-paid consultants suddenly getting all dumb about their rights as they are being arrested.  That’s the sob story Danielle Chiesi, former hedge fund consultant and insider-trading co-defendant of Galleon Group founder Raj Rajaratnam, is giving in her first testimony on the stand.  Her lawyers are trying to suppress her statements made on the morning of her arrest.

Chiesi, formerly of New Castle Partners, said she was not informed of her Miranda rights for 90 minutes. Five Federal Bureau of Investigation agents woke her at 6 a.m. on Oct. 16, 2009, and told her she was being arrested.

During that time, Chiesi said the agents questioned her and offered her an opportunity to cooperate in the probe. She said the agents wanted her to place a call—which would be recorded—to a person on the West Coast. Chiesi did not identify that person.

Prosecutor Reed Brodsky countered that Chiesi was advised of her rights twice and that she only remembers the second. But U.S. District Judge Richard Holwell would not allow Brodsky to question her about the information covered during the first 90 minutes she was questioned in her Manhattan apartment.

Unlike Rajaratnam—who answered only monosyllabically during a pro-forma hearing earlier this year about a potential conflict of interest on the part of his lawyers—Chiesi testified at length and in some detail. She even admitted that she briefly considered accepting a deal and wearing a wire.

Chiesi, who admitted being nervous on the stand, said she considered taking the FBI agents, who she called “very nice,” up on their offer to cooperate. She also noted that at least one of them, “Claire,” won the affections of her usually antisocial cat.

“She’s usually very mean to people, and now I’m getting arrested and she’s in a good mood,” Chiesi said.

Source

Former SocGen Trader Now Officially a Thief – Convicted of Stealing Software

November 23rd, 2010

Samarth Agrawal, convicted thief

The proprietary trading software developed by a trading firm is considered the crown jewel of the operation. Woe to any disgruntled employee who tries to steal it. And woe was exactly what was visited on former Société Générale trader Samarth Agrawal, accused of stealing the bank’s high-frequency trading software for use at his new hedge fund job. The jury convicted him yesterday in a quick decision.

Agrawal was also convicted of transporting stolen property across state lines. The jury verdict was expected, given that Agrawal admitted on the stand Wednesday “all the essential elements” of the theft of trade secrets charge, U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff said.

For most of the two-week trial, Agrawal denied any wrongdoing. Indeed, during the first part of his testimony, he said that he had taken SocGen’s code home on orders from his superiors. But he later admitted that he “did it because I have to build the similar system at Tower” Research Group, a hedge fund that had hired him.

Tower has denied that it hired Agrawal to get access to the prime broker’s high-frequency trading software.

Agrawal will be sentenced on Feb. 24. Rakoff said on Wednesday that he suspected the late admission was part of a “sympathy defense.” It appears to have worked; on Friday, Rakoff said Agrawal “may be entitled” to a lesser sentence due to his “acceptance of responsibility.” He faces between three years and 10 months and four years and nine months under federal sentencing guidelines; the Indian citizen will likely be deported from the U.S. after completing his sentence.

SocGen said it was “satisfied” with the verdict.

Source

Hedge Fund Hotel Heartbreak: UBS Settles for $100K

November 22nd, 2010

The “Hedge Fund Hotel” wasn’t a four-star luxury palace where fund managers went to be pampered and spoiled, though we are sure such places do exist. Rather, it’s the term used for an arrangement conferring office space, technology and other services to hedge funds by a certain prime broker.  Now, Massachusetts has fined UBS Securities LLC $100,000 to settle a complaint the prime broker didn’t fully disclose its arrangements with hedge fund advisers.

UBS Securities, a unit of UBS AG. settled the allegations without admitting or denying wrongdoing, a spokesman for Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth William F. Galvin said Thursday. UBS spokeswoman Allison Chin-Leong said, “we’re pleased to have resolved the matter.”

The case dates back to a 2002 inquiry into ABN Amro Securities LLC, a prime broker that offered an arrangement known as a “hedge-fund hotel.” UBS acquired ABN Amro’s prime brokerage business in 2003 for $250 million. Massachusetts’ Galvin said UBS didn’t enforce a requirement that its hedge-fund hotel clients disclose their arrangements with the bank to investors.

Prime brokers profit off spreads they charge hedge funds to finance trades as well as fees for clearing and other services. In a hedge-fund hotel, a prime broker provides start-up hedge funds equipment and other services to help incubate their business. But the arrangement can create conflicts unknown to the endowments, pensions, or other investors in the funds.

In a 2007 administrative complaint against UBS, Massachusetts’ Galvin accused the firm’s prime brokerage division of maintaining a quid pro quo with hedge-fund advisers, requiring them to meet benchmarks of profitability for UBS or ensure they don’t use other prime brokers.

In one instance, the 2007 complaint alleged, a hedge-fund adviser who refused to alter his trading strategy to meet UBS’ demand for greater revenue was no longer welcomed in UBS’ office space.

Galvin didn’t allege any investors were damaged by the practice.

The hedge-fund advisers are supposed to disclose their arrangements with prime brokers to investors, but Galvin contends UBS failed to enforce these disclosures even though it had a policy to do so. In settling the allegations, UBS agreed to retain an independent consultant to review its disclosure policy and monitor it for three years.

Source

Former Auto Czar Settles with SEC, Slapped with New York Lawsuit

November 19th, 2010

Steven Rattner

At one time, Quadrangle Group founder Steven Rattner was President Obama’s auto industry restructuring czar.  Now, Mr. Rattner’s future is being restructured by federal and state investigators. Although Rattner has just settled Securities and Exchange Commission charges stemming from the pay-to-play scandal at New York’s largest public pension fund, he was been slapped by a lawsuit filed by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo.

Rattner’s difficulties stem from the pay-to-play scandal at New York’s largest public pension fund. Rattner will pay $3.2 million in disgorgement and a $3 million fine for allegedly paying $1.1 million in finder fees to Henry Morris, the chief political consultant to former New York Comptroller Alan Hevesi. Hevesi’s office oversaw the New York State Common Retirement Fund, which invested $150 million in a Quadrangle private equity fund, earning the firm $7 million.

AG Cuomo’s lawsuit is seeking four times as much as the SEC got in its settlement and a lifetime ban from the securities industry for Rattner.

Rattner is also accused of getting a DVD distribution deal for “Chooch,” a movie produced by the brother of David Loglisci, who served as chief investment officer of the pension fund.

Morris, Hevesi and Loglisci have all pleaded guilty to criminal charges stemming from the pay-to-play scandal. Morris struck a deal with Cuomo two weeks ago, agreeing to plead guilty to “a minor charge” that carries no more than 4 years in prison and for “certain restitution.” That deal is still pending; New York State Supreme Court Justice Lewis Stone, who called the case “one of the most important cases relating to corruption in government in the state of New York and perhaps one of the almost seminal cases involving that in the country,” said he wanted more time to consider the plea deal.

Cuomo, whose tenure as attorney general is set to end in seven weeks, when he is sworn in as the Empire State’s new governor, appears uninterested in striking a similar deal with Rattner. A spokesman for Cuomo said his office is not pursuing a settlement with Rattner.

Instead, Cuomo wants him to cough up at least $26 million. He also wants him banned from the New York securities industry for life.

“The application for an immediate securities ban is based on the fact that Rattner engaged in fraud and refused to answer 68 question based on his Fifth Amendment privilege,” Cuomo said. “Rattner was willing to do whatever it took to get his hands on pension fund money, including paying kickbacks, orchestrating a movie deal and funneling campaign contributions.”

Rattner dismissed Cuomo’s lawsuit as “politically motivated.”

“While settling with the SEC begins the process of putting this matter behind me, I will not be bullied simply because the attorney general’s office prefers political considerations instead of a reasoned assessment of facts,” Rattner said in a statement. “This episode in the first time during 35 years in business that anyone has questioned my ethics or integrity.”

Source

Herr Kiener’s Excuse for Hedge Fund Fraud: Greedy Victims

November 18th, 2010

Helmut Kiener to his victims: "Its YOUR fault!"

Yesterday, we reported how alleged fraudster Helmut Kiener had spent the last year in lockup awaiting indictment for his crimes. He found out only this week that he will be facing over 100 counts of fraud and related charges.

Perhaps the year in the Big House affecting his thinking, because it has become quite convoluted. Herr Kiener plans to blame the clients of his K1 Group hedge fund for the €345 million scam he is accused of masterminding.

Kiener, who was arrested last October but only charged with forgery, fraud and tax evasion this week, will take the stand in his own defense “to expose how greedy the customers were,” his lawyer, Lutz Libbert, told the Financial Times.

How greedy were they? They apparently believed Kiener’s promises of annualized returns of 17%.  The investment community is shocked, SHOCKED at such greed.

Libbert did not comment on the more than 100 counts facing his client, but he did not sound sanguine about Kiener’s chances of beating the rap when he said, “the greed of the investors should help reduce any sentence the court may decide to hand down.”

Kiener has consistently denied any wrongdoing and has claimed K1′s losses were the result of bad investments. Prosecutors say he was running a Ponzi scheme and lied to his banks, Barclays Capital and BNP Paribas, costing them hundreds of millions of euros.

A total of eight people have been arrested in the K1 case, including a managing director of the hedge fund’s administrator, Treukapital Treuhandverwaltung. That man, identified only as Claus Z., was also charged this week.

Source

German Prosecutors Indict Ponzi Fraudster After A Year In Detention

November 17th, 2010

Suspect was detained in a German prison for over a year.

During WWII, the German Gestapo would think nothing of incarcerating a suspect for a year or longer before perhaps filing charges. Maybe that’s why German prosecutors were comfortable keeping alleged hedge fund fraudster Helmut Kiener on ice for a year as they got their ducks all lined up in a row.

Prosecutors raided Mr Kiener’s home office in Aschaffenburg, near Frankfurt, a year ago and put him under investigative custody. Finally, Kiener has been formally charged with defrauding investors, banks and brokers of €345 million.

Würzburg prosecutors pounded the K1 Group founder with 86 counts of forgery, 35 counts of aggravated fraud and one count of tax evasion. Kiener was arrested last October on suspicion of fraud, one of eight K1 employees or associates arrested in the alleged Ponzi scheme.

Lutz Libbertz, defence lawyer, said Mr Kiener would take the stand in court “to expose how greedy the customers were” who were lured by K1 brochures boasting of stellar returns of 17 per cent a year.

“The investors were allegedly promised substantial profits even though both funds had massive losses,” Dietrich Geuder, a spokesman for the prosecutor’s office, said. “Pretend profits could only be paid out using newly invested money.”

A second suspect in the case, identified as Claus Z., was also charged today. He was a managing director of Treukapital Treuhandverwaltung, K1′s administrator.

Z. was one of three previously unidentified people arrested last week as the investigation continues. Two of them, 35 and 80 years old, were managing directors of Treukapital. The other was the auditor of two K1 funds.

Treukapital’s David Zuendorf was among the five people arrested earlier. Two Kiener associates have been arrested in the U.S., while the fifth, Dieter Frerichs, former managing director of two K1 funds, committed suicide in July.

Source

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