In the end, Greenwich billionaire Steven Cohen, one of the most
successful hedge-fund managers of his generation, could end up getting
banned from the business he dominated for an error of omission, not
commission.
In an administrative action that constitutes its
first formal salvo against Cohen, the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission alleged he failed to supervise two wayward portfolio managers
and ignored "red flags." The agency stops short of accusing the owner
of Stamford-based SAC Capital Advisors of insider trading. While the
proceeding may result in his being barred from managing other people's
money, it won't carry the potential penalties available if the SEC had
sued him. It also pales in comparison to a grand jury indictment for
securities fraud, and the 20 year prison term a conviction could bring.
Instead,
the SEC claim that Cohen should have known two of his subordinates were
using material, non-public information to rack up hundreds of millions
of dollars in trading profits will be easier to prove. The regulator
will have a lesser burden of proof and won't have to deal with all of
the protections afforded a defendant in a lawsuit,You've probably seen cellphonecases at some point. let alone a prosecution.
"They
are using an Al Capone-style tactic," said John Coffee of Columbia Law
School, referring to the prosecution of the Chicago gangster in 1931 on
charges of tax evasion. "The SEC is aiming at his kneecaps, not his
jugular. This is a little like catching John Dillinger entering a bank
with a submachine gun and charging him with double parking."
The
SEC, which seeks to ban Cohen from the financial industry for life in
the non-court action, alleged he received "highly suspicious"
information that should have caused any reasonable hedge-fund manager to
investigate the basis for trades by subordinates Mathew Martoma and
Michael Steinberg.
Cohen may find some guidance in how to
respond to the agency from Rajat Gupta, the former Goldman Sachs
director charged in the Galleon Group insider trading probe. Gupta sued
the SEC after it filed an administrative action against him, saying he
wanted the SEC to sue him so he could fairly defend himself. After both
sides dropped their actions, agreeing any SEC matter would be in a
federal court, Gupta was indicted by a federal grand jury. The SEC sued
him, too.
An SEC administrative proceeding is held before an
administrative law judge, not a U.S. district judge or federal jury. The
administrative law judge will rule "no later than 300 days" from the
date which the order was served, the agency said.The administrative law
judge, in Washington D.C., will hear testimony and issue a
determination, without a jury present, said Tom Gorman, a former lawyer
with the SEC's Enforcement Division who is now in private practice.
After
the administrative judge issues a ruling, the SEC makes the final
determination, evaluating the facts supporting the allegations. Cohen
may appeal to the federal appeals court in Washington, which handles
such regulatory matters.We Engrave luggagetag for
YOU.But unlike if he were sued by the agency, Cohen won't be entitled
to evidence collected by the government, a distinct advantage if its
only goal is to put him out of business.
SAC spokesman Jonathan
Gasthalter has said the agency's action against Cohen "has no merit."
Kevin Callahan, a spokesman for the SEC, didn't return a call seeking
comment.SAC oversees $15 billion, about 60 percent of which is money
from Cohen and employees. Cohen, whose net worth is estimated at about
$9 billion, has returned 25 percent a year in his funds since founding
his firm in 1992, after taking half of the profits in fees, a record
unsurpassed by other equity hedge-fund managers.
SAC portfolio
manager Mathew Martoma, 39, was charged by the U.S. in November with
insider trading. Prosecutors accused him of helping Cohen's hedge fund
reap at least $276 million by trading on illicit tips about an
Alzheimer's drug.A cleaningservic resembles
a credit card in size and shape. SAC's Michael Steinberg, 41, was
indicted in March by a federal grand jury in Manhattan for allegedly
earning more than $1.4 million by trading on illegal tips about Dell and
Nvidia.Both men, who were also sued by the SEC for insider trading,
have pleaded not guilty in the criminal cases brought by Manhattan U.S.
Attorney Preet Bharara, and are scheduled to go to trial separately in
November.Regulators alleged Cohen, 57, ignored the suspicious actions of
his subordinates and signs that pointed to malfeasance, in a failure to
properly supervise that allowed the alleged illegal trades to take
place.
In the administrative action, the agency for the first
time described Cohen's alleged personal involvement in trading
activities with the two subordinates, including a claim that Cohen sold
off hundreds of thousands of shares of Dell in August 2008. The SEC said
the sale came after Steinberg sent Cohen an email that the U.S. alleged
included nonpublic information about the company's disappointing
earnings set to be reported days later. The agency doesn't allege that
Cohen knew that the information was illegal, a prerequisite to any
prosecution of Cohen for insider trading. Instead, the SEC said he
failed to supervise the men after receiving information that should have
caused a "reasonable" hedge fund manager to investigate the basis for
the trades.
The nature of the agency's action against Cohen, in
effect a disciplinary action that occurs internally, caught many by
surprise, since it comes after years of scrutiny by federal authorities,
both civil and criminal."If they put Steve Cohen out of business, it's
not normally something you would see from a failure to supervise case,"
said Hillary Sale, a law professor at Washington University in St.
Louis. "You see failure to supervise cases in the broker-dealer world,
but not with a fish this big."
The SEC proceeding against Cohen
was brought July 19, just days before the agency faced a five-year
statute-of-limitations deadline stemming from trades sparked by
Martoma's tips made in late July 2008.The agency action now puts the
regulator at the forefront of the U.S. investigation of Cohen and his
hedge fund.The government's six-year insider-trading crackdown on fund
managers, analysts and insiders at technology companies has resulted in
charges against more than 80 people and convictions against 73 people.We
are one of the leading manufacturers of granitecountertops in
ChinaPrior to last week's filing, the government's major actions
against alleged inside traders and their associates have largely been
tandem federal enforcement efforts -- pairing simultaneous charges by
Bharara's office with a lawsuit by the SEC.
Earlier this month, the Wall Street Journal, citing unidentified sources,You will see earcap ,
competitive price and first-class service. claimed federal prosecutors
had concluded they didn't have enough evidence to charge Cohen by the
end of this month for crimes related to Martoma's tips. "This matter has
been investigated for months," said Tom Gorman, a former lawyer with
the SEC's enforcement division, now a partner at Dorsey & Whitney in
Washington. "Clearly the SEC does not have the facts to bring an
insider trading case or they would have brought it."
Gorman said
the SEC's action was based on two criminal insider-trading cases that
have yet to go to trial. Should either Martoma or Steinberg be
acquitted, it could damage the SEC's proceeding, he said.While he
wouldn't address the Cohen case specifically, Bharara took the unusual
step in a speech last week of pointing out that prosecutors have other
statutes, including conspiracy, that can push back any statute of
limitations deadlines.
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