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This is a photo of the National Register of Historic Places listing with reference number 7000063

Saturday, June 13, 2015

ASSISTANT AG CALDWELL'S REMARKS AT ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING & FINANCIAL CRIME CONFERENCE

FROM: U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT 
Assistant Attorney General Caldwell Remarks at the ACAMS Anti-Money Laundering & Financial Crime Conference
Hollywood, FL United States ~ Monday, March 16, 2015
Thank you for the kind introduction. 

I am honored to open this important event, which commemorates the 20th year of ACAMS’s anti-money laundering conference, and serves as an opportunity for all of us – financial institution representatives, regulators, and law enforcement personnel – to reflect on the relationship between anti-money laundering efforts and the integrity of the worldwide financial system.

The health of the global economy depends on both creating access for a wide range of participants and preventing abuse and corruption.  To accomplish these goals, banks and other financial institutions must maintain robust, effective anti-money laundering and other compliance programs that account for international business realities.

And the increasingly global nature of business means that corporate entities, including banks and other financial institutions, must be attuned to complying with the laws of all the countries in which they operate.

As cross-border crime continues to proliferate, prosecutors and other law enforcement must be prepared to find evidence and witnesses all over the world, and to work in coordination with our law enforcement partners abroad.  The international law enforcement and regulatory communities must continue to work together to prevent, identify, punish and deter financial crime.

Today, I will speak about what we expect of businesses operating internationally, and how we are investigating and prosecuting crimes involving international conduct, particularly within and among financial institutions.

Since last May, I have had the tremendous pleasure of leading the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice.  The Criminal Division includes approximately 600 attorneys who investigate and prosecute federal crimes, help develop criminal law and formulate law enforcement policy.

While the 93 U.S. Attorneys around the country focus on investigating and prosecuting crime in their respective districts, the Criminal Division tends to focus on issues that affect the nation as a whole and on investigations that are international in scope.

As a result, the Criminal Division currently has people stationed in more than 45 countries.  Among other work, those folks facilitate collaboration and cooperation with our law enforcement partners in those locations.

In addition, the Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs obtains foreign evidence needed in U.S. investigations, seeks extradition of people wanted for federal and state prosecution in the United States and responds to extradition and mutual legal assistance requests from foreign governments.

Among the sections and offices that make up the Criminal Division is the Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section, known as AFMLS.  AFMLS attorneys pursue criminal prosecutions and forfeiture actions against financial institutions and corporate officers engaged in money laundering, Bank Secrecy Act violations, and sanctions violations.

They also prosecute facilitators or third-party money launderers who move money for transnational criminal organizations.

In addition, AFMLS forfeits the proceeds of high-level foreign corruption through the Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative, which seeks to recover ill-gotten gains from corrupt foreign officials.  Once secured, the forfeited assets are used, whenever possible, for the benefit of the citizens of the victim country.

The increasingly global scope of the Criminal Division’s work – in particular the international nature of the investigations and prosecutions handled by AFMLS and our Fraud Section – is a direct product of the increasingly global nature of both U.S.-based and foreign-based entities, including financial institutions.

When U.S.-based corporate entities, including financial institutions, conduct business beyond our borders and, conversely, when foreign-based entities operate in the U.S., law enforcement must adapt.

The international nature of our work also is driven by the global reach of the Internet.  Increasingly, we seek data such as email from companies’ operations all over the world and often have to navigate a thicket of data privacy rules that may vary greatly from country to country.

I am not here to discuss cyber threats, but I would be remiss if I did not note that the internet also has allowed foreign criminals to carry out crimes in the U.S., sometimes on a massive scale, without ever having to set foot in our country.  And the victims of those crimes have included many financial institutions.

This is not just a U.S. problem, but a global one.  And we are working closely with our foreign counterparts to try to thwart cyberattacks before they happen, as well as to catch and bring to justice cybercriminals.

Identifying and prosecuting overseas cybercriminals, however, is not easy, and companies must protect themselves.

If your companies have not already done so, you need to make state of the art cybersecurity a top priority, and compliance with cybersecurity policy, a major priority.   Cybersecurity compliance is critical, because even a single human error, such as one person opening the wrong email and thereby allowing access to a company’s computer systems, can have devastating consequences.

Likewise, companies must protect themselves against violations of the law.  Your institutions’ compliance teams are the first line of defense against money laundering and other financial crime.  The importance of your work cannot be overstated.

Robust compliance programs are essential to preventing fraud and corruption.  But they also are an important factor for prosecutors in determining whether to bring charges against a business entity that has engaged in some form of criminal misconduct.

Prosecutors look at “the existence and effectiveness of the corporation’s pre-existing compliance program”.  We also look at what remedial measures were taken by the company once it became aware of the misconduct.

As all of you know, there is no “one size fits all” compliance program.  Rather, effective anti-money laundering and other compliance programs are those that are tailored to the unique needs, risks and structure of each institution.  But, in general, here are some hallmarks of effective compliance programs in our view:

•  An institution must ensure that its directors and senior managers provide strong, explicit and visible support for its corporate compliance policies.

•  The people who are responsible for compliance should have stature within the company.  Compliance teams need adequate funding and access to necessary resources.

•  An institution’s compliance policies should be clear and in writing.  They should be easily understood by employees.  That means that the policies must be translated into languages spoken in the countries in which the companies operate.  That sounds simple, but it is important and sometimes is not done.

•  An institution should ensure that its compliance policies are effectively communicated to all employees.  The written policies should be easy for employees to find.  And employees should have repeated training, which should include direction regarding what to do or with whom to consult when issues arise.

•  An institution periodically should review its policies and practices to keep them up to date with evolving risks and circumstances.  Especially if a U.S.-based entity acquires or merges with a foreign entity, all compliance policies should be reviewed and revised.

•  There must be mechanisms to enforce compliance policies.  Those include incentivizing compliance and disciplining violations.  And any discipline must be even handed.  The department does not look favorably on situations in which low-level employees who may have engaged in misconduct are terminated, but the more senior people who either directed or deliberately turned a blind eye to the conduct suffer no consequences.  Such action sends the wrong message –to other employees, to the market and to the government – about the institution’s commitment to compliance.

•  An institution should sensitize third parties like vendors, agents or consultants to the company’s expectation that its partners are also serious about compliance.  This means more than including boilerplate language in a contract.  It means taking action – including termination of a business relationship – if a partner demonstrates a lack of respect for laws and policies.   And that attitude toward partner compliance must exist regardless of geographic location.

These are just some of the elements of a strong compliance program.  When the Criminal Division evaluates a company’s compliance policy during an investigation, we look not only at how the policy reads “on paper,” but also on the messages conveyed to employees, including through in-person meetings, emails, telephone calls and compensation.

We look at whether, as a whole, a company meaningfully stressed compliance or, when faced with a conflict between compliance and profits, the company chose profits.

In the anti-money laundering and sanctions contexts, in particular, effective compliance requires more.  I’d like to highlight a few points.

First, of course, is “know your customer.”  An institution must ensure that its anti-money laundering, sanctions and other compliance policies and practices are tailored to identify and mitigate the risks posed by its portfolio of customers, and that those customers are providing complete and accurate information.

Second, if a financial institution operates in the U.S. – whether it is a U.S.-based bank or a U.S. branch or component of a foreign bank – it must comply with U.S. laws.  This may sound straightforward in principle, but we have seen that it is all too often not implemented in practice.

Part of that compliance is sharing information about potentially suspicious activity with other branches or offices.  For example, if a foreign branch of a U.S. bank identifies suspicious activity related to an account held by a customer that also maintains an account with the bank in the U.S., compliance personnel in the U.S. should be alerted to the suspicious activity.

In our view, to effectuate these practices, financial institutions with a U.S. presence should give U.S. senior management a material role in implementing and maintaining a bank’s overall compliance framework.

Third, all regulated companies and, in particular, financial institutions, must be candid with regulators.  When we investigate companies, we look closely at the information the companies provided to regulators about the violation.  We look at whether the companies were forthcoming, or not.

The vast majority of financial institutions file Suspicious Activity Reports when they suspect that an account is connected to nefarious activity.  But, in appropriate cases, we encourage those institutions to consider whether to take more action: specifically, to alert law enforcement authorities about the problem, who may be able to seize the funds, initiate an investigation, or take other proactive steps.

Some banks take more action by closing the suspicious account, but sometimes that may just prompt the criminals to move the illicit funds elsewhere.  So, we encourage you to speak with regulators and law enforcement about particularly suspicious activity.

The department appreciates that the global economy, and the international nature of the banking and financial services industries, present a compliance challenge, and often institutions must bridge a cultural, as well as a geographic, divide.  But such challenges do not justify non-compliance.

Overall, we expect financial institutions to take compliance risk as seriously as they take other business-related risks.  Although compliance may not be a profit center, investment in compliance will pay off – and it’s the right thing to do.

The importance of global financial institutions having effective compliance programs – particularly policies that facilitate or mandate information sharing between foreign and domestic branches or components --  is evidenced by the global resolution reached just last week with Commerzbank AG, a global financial institution based on Frankfurt, Germany, and its New York branch Commerz New York.

The bank agreed to forfeit $563 million, pay a $79 million fine and enter into a Deferred Prosecution Agreement with the Department of Justice for violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act and the Bank Secrecy Act.  The bank also entered into settlement agreements with the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

According to the resolution documents, from 2002 to 2008, Commerzbank knowingly and willfully moved approximately $263 million through the U.S. financial system on behalf of sanctioned entities in Iran and Sudan.  To do so, Commerzbank used “cover payments,” which concealed the involvement of the sanctioned entities in transactions processed through Commerz New York and other financial institutions in the U.S.  Internal bank emails show that Commerzbank knew that its practices violated U.S. law.  Commerzbank’s senior management was warned about the violative payments and internal auditors “raised concerns,” but those concerns were not shared with their U.S. counterparts.  Instead, Commerzbank intentionally hid from its New York branch that it was processing payments on behalf of Iranian clients.  So the bank ignored warnings from the internal managers charged with ensuring compliance, then concealed the transactions from its own branch office.

In addition, according to court documents, from 2008 until 2013, Commerz New York violated the Bank Secrecy Act by failing to maintain adequate compliance policies and procedures both to detect and report suspicious activity.  Specifically, Olympus, the Japanese camera maker, used Commerzbank and Commerz New York to conceal hundreds of millions of dollars in losses from auditors and investors.  To perpetuate the fraud, Commerzbank, through its branch and affiliates in Singapore, loaned money to off-balance-sheet entities created by or for Olympus.

Although numerous bank executives and compliance officers expressed suspicion about the nature and structure of the Olympus transactions, Commerz New York failed to file Suspicious Activity Reports as required or to conduct adequate “know your customer” due diligence.

The potential consequences of having weak, or unenforced, compliance programs also are illustrated by the department’s recent, landmark criminal resolution with BNP Paribas (BNPP) – the fourth largest bank in the world.

Between 2004 and 2012, BNPP knowingly violated the IEEPA and the Trading with the Enemy Act by moving more than $8.8 billion through the U.S. financial system on behalf of Sudanese, Iranian, and Cuban entities subject to U.S. economic sanctions.  The majority of the transactions facilitated by BNPP were on behalf of entities in Sudan, which is subject to a U.S. embargo due to the Sudanese government’s role in facilitating terrorism and committing human rights abuses.

BNPP’s criminal conduct took place despite repeated warnings expressed by the bank’s own compliance officers and its outside counsel.  In response to the concerns identified by compliance personnel, high-ranking BNPP officials explained that the questioned transactions had the “full support” of BNPP management in Paris.  In short, VBPP expressly elected to favor profits over compliance.

Ultimately, BNPP pleaded guilty to conspiracy to violate IEEPA and TWEA, and agreed to pay record-setting financial penalties of over $8.9 billion.  And the company admitted its misconduct – including its disregard of compliance advice – in a detailed statement of facts that was made public.

Those are just two examples of recent cases we have handled involving financial institutions and their international businesses.  The Criminal Division has recently resolved financial fraud and sanctions violations investigations with several other major financial institutions, including Standard Chartered, HSBC, UBS, RBS and Barclays, just to name a few.  In those cases, we have often entered into deferred prosecution agreements or non-prosecution agreements – known as DPAs and NPAs – with the banks.

DPAs and NPAs are useful enforcement tools in criminal cases.  Through those agreements, we can often accomplish as much as, and sometimes even more than, we could from a criminal conviction.  We can require improved compliance programs, remedial steps or the imposition of a monitor.  We can require that the banks cooperate with our ongoing investigations, particularly in our investigations of individuals.  We can require that such compliance programs and cooperation be implemented worldwide, rather than just in the United States.  We can require periodic reporting to a court that oversees the agreement for its term.  These agreements can enable banks to get back on the right track, under the watchful eye of the Criminal Division and sometimes a court.

And these agreements have teeth – not just because they are overseen by the Department of Justice and sometimes a court, but because of the potential penalties triggered by a breach.

Let me be clear: in the Criminal Division, we will hold banks and other entities that enter into DPAs and NPAs to the obligations imposed on them by those agreements.  And where banks fail to live up to their commitments, we will hold them accountable.

Just like an individual on probation faces a range of potential consequences for a violation, so too does a bank that is subject to a DPA or NPA.

Under DPAs and NPAs, we have a range of tools at our disposal.  We can extend the term of the agreement and the term of any monitor, while we investigate allegations of a breach, including allegations of new criminal conduct.  Where a breach has occurred, we can impose an additional monetary penalty, or additional compliance or remedial measures.  Most significantly, we can pursue charges based on the conduct covered by the agreement itself – the very conduct that the bank had tried to resolve through the DPA or NPA.

Make no mistake: the Criminal Division will not hesitate to tear up a DPA or NPA and file criminal charges, where such action is appropriate and proportional to the breach.

DPAs and NPAs are powerful tools.  They can’t be ignored once they’re signed, and they can’t be followed partially but not completely.  We will take action to ensure that banks are held accountable for DPA or NPA violations.  And where a bank that violates a DPA or NPA is a repeat offender with a history of misconduct, or where a violating bank fails to cooperate with an investigation or drags its feet, that bank will face criminal consequences for its breach of the agreement.

Many of the cases we have handled with financial institutions involve coordination with regulators and other law enforcement around the world.  To successfully investigate and prosecute cases involving global entities, including financial institutions, we work closely with our foreign law enforcement counterparts and foreign regulators.  Cooperation and coordination with foreign authorities strengthens our collective ability to bring transnational criminals to justice – whether they are multi-national corporations, corporate executives, corrupt political officials, drug or human traffickers, terrorists or hackers behind computer screens.

In May 2013, the department announced charges against Liberty Reserve, a digital currency system that was incorporated in Costa Rica and created for the express purpose of assisting cybercriminals and others in anonymously laundering illicit proceeds through the U.S. and global financial systems.

At the time, Liberty Reserve had more than one million users worldwide who conducted transactions involving more than six billion in funds, which encompassed suspected proceeds of credit card fraud, identity theft, investment fraud, computer hacking, child pornography, narcotics trafficking and other crimes.

But, due to the coordinated efforts of law enforcement authorities in the U.S., Costa Rica, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland, justice prevailed.  Liberty Reserve permanently is out of business, and the government also charged seven individuals connected to Liberty Reserve, including its founder Arthur Budovsky, information technology manager Maxim Chukharev and chief technology officer Mark Marmilev.

To date, four defendants have pleaded guilty.  In December 2014 and January 2015, Marmilev and Chukarev were sentenced to serve five years in prison and three years, respectively.  Budovsky was extradited from Spain to the United States and will stand trial in November.

Our kleptocracy cases are other examples of our cooperation with international authorities to remediate fraud, abuse and corruption.  Through the department’s Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative, we work with law enforcement agencies to forfeit the proceeds of foreign official corruption and to use those recovered assets to benefit the people harmed by the acts of corruption and abuse of office.

One of our kleptocracy cases involves Chun Doo-Hwan, the former president of South Korea, who was convicted in 1997 of receiving more than $200 million in bribes from South Korean businesses and other companies.  President Chun and his relatives laundered some of the corruption proceeds through a web of nominees and shell companies in the U.S.  In coordination with South Korean law enforcement authorities, since 2013, the department has assisted in the recovery of over $27.5 million in corruption proceeds from Chun’s associates.  Earlier this month, the department secured the forfeiture of another $1.2 million in assets in the U.S. traceable to corruption proceeds accumulated by Chun.

Also in connection with the Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative, in October 2014, the department settled a civil forfeiture action against assets in the U.S. of the Second Vice President of the Republic of Equatorial Guinea Teodoro Obiang Mangue.  Obiang looted his own government and solicited and received bribes and kickbacks from businesses to support a lavish lifestyle while his fellow citizens lived in extreme poverty.  In all, Obiang amassed more than $300 million in assets through corruption and money laundering.  Among the assets he purchased with corruption proceeds were a $30 million mansion in Malibu, California; a Ferrari and various items of Michael Jackson memorabilia.  Under the terms of the settlement, Obiang was required to disgorge over $30 million, $10 million of which was to be forfeited, and another $20 million to be used to benefit the people of Equatorial Guinea through a charity.

There have been suggestions – perhaps by some in this room today – that the Department of Justice, in collaboration both with U.S. regulators and foreign law enforcement authorities, are unreasonably targeting financial institutions for investigation and prosecution.  That is not the case.

Simply put, banks and other financial institutions continue to come up on our radar screens because they, and the individuals through which they act, continue to violate the law, maintain ineffective compliance programs or simply turn a blind eye to criminal conduct to preserve profit.  If the government learns of such action (or inaction), it is our obligation to investigate and follow the evidence wherever it may lead.  And we will prosecute banks and other financial institutions for willful failures to maintain effective anti-money laundering programs and for other financial crimes.

I strongly encourage the representatives of banks and other financial institutions participating in this conference to take the opportunity – both during the next few days and once you return to your respective offices – to reflect on whether your institutions have effective anti-money laundering programs and other compliance policies and practices to prevent or mitigate financial crime.  The integrity and viability of the global financial system require that you do.

Thank you.  

Friday, June 12, 2015

SEC ANNOUNCES FOUR CHARGED INCLUDING BANK DIRECTOR FOR ROLES IN INSIDER TRADING CASE

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
Litigation Release No. 23278 / June 8, 2015
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Anthony Andrade, et al., Civil Action No. 15-cv-231 (District of Rhode Island, Complaint filed June 8, 2015)
SEC Charges Director of Rhode Island Bank and Three Others with Insider Trading

The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged Anthony Andrade, a former member of the board of directors of Bancorp Rhode Island, Inc., formerly a publicly-traded bank headquartered in Rhode Island, with tipping inside information about the bank's potential acquisition to three friends and close business associates. The SEC alleges that those individuals then traded on this information and collectively profited by over $80,000 from their insider trading. Two of the traders have agreed to settle the SEC's charges.

According to the SEC's complaint, filed in federal court in Providence, Rhode Island, Bancorp Rhode Island and Massachusetts-based Brookline Bancorp, Inc., publicly announced on April 20, 2011, that Brookline Bancorp would acquire Bancorp Rhode Island. According to the complaint, this acquisition announcement was preceded by weeks of confidential negotiations soliciting the sale of Bancorp Rhode Island, which were led by Bancorp Rhode Island's management and its board of directors, including Andrade.

According to the SEC's complaint, Andrade, of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, illegally tipped inside information about the Bancorp Rhode Island's potential acquisition to his friends and business associates: Robert Kielbasa of Portsmouth, Rhode Island, Fred Goldwyn of Wilmington, Delaware, and Kenneth Rampino of Seekonk, Massachusetts. The complaint alleges that each of the three traded on the inside information Andrade supplied to them, and profited when Bancorp Rhode Island's stock price significantly increased after the April 20, 2011, acquisition announcement. On the day of the acquisition announcement, Bancorp Rhode Island's stock closed at $44 per share, an increase of $13.29 per share, or forty three percent, from the prior day's closing price.

The complaint charges that Andrade, Kielbasa, Goldwyn, and Rampino violated Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder, and seeks to have them be enjoined, disgorge their allegedly ill-gotten gains with interest, and pay civil penalties of up to three times their gains. The complaint further seeks to bar Andrade from serving as an officer or director of a public company.

Goldwyn and Kielbasa agreed to settle the SEC's charges, without admitting or denying the allegations, by consenting to the entry of judgments permanently enjoining them from violating Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. The judgments also order:

Kielbasa to disgorge $39,645 in trading profits plus prejudgment interest of $5,335 and a civil penalty of $39,645, for a total of $84,625.

Goldwyn to disgorge $23,565 in trading profits plus prejudgment interest of $3,171 and a civil penalty of $23,565, for a total of $50,301.
The SEC's investigation was conducted by William Donahue and Paul Block of its Boston Regional Office. Litigation of this matter will be led by Richard Harper and Kathleen Shields, also of the SEC's Boston Regional Office.

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Quality Data and the Power of Prevention: Remarks at Meet the Market, North America

Quality Data and the Power of Prevention: Remarks at Meet the Market, North America

SEC STAFF ANALYSE PAY RATIO DISCLOSURES

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

The Securities and Exchange Commission staff  made available additional analysis related to its proposed rules for pay ratio disclosure.  The analysis by the Division of Economic and Risk Analysis (DERA) considers the potential effects of excluding different percentages of employees from the pay ratio calculation.

The analysis is posted on the SEC’s website as part of the comment file for rules proposed by the Commission in September 2013 that would require the disclosure of the median of the annual total compensation of all employees of the issuer; the annual total compensation of the chief executive officer of the issuer; and the ratio of the median of the annual total compensation of all employees of the issuer to the annual total compensation of the chief executive officer of the issuer.  

The staff believes that the analysis will be informative for evaluating the potential effects on the accuracy of the pay ratio calculation of excluding different percentages of certain categories of employees, such as employees in foreign countries, part-time, seasonal, or temporary employees as suggested by commenters.  The staff is making the analysis available for public comment.  This analysis may supplement other information considered in connection with the rules.

Comments may be submitted to the comment file (File No. S7‑07‑13) for the proposed rules and should be received by July 6.

Additional studies, memoranda, or other substantive items may be added by the Commission or staff to the comment file during this rulemaking.  A notification of the inclusion in the comment file of any such materials will be made available on the SEC’s website.

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

SEC CHARGES COMPUTER COMPANY AND FORMER EXECS IN ALLEGED ACCOUNTING FRAUD SCHEME

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION  
06/05/2015 09:40 AM EDT

The Securities and Exchange Commission charged Computer Sciences Corporation and former executives with manipulating financial results and concealing significant problems about the company’s largest and most high-profile contract.  The SEC additionally charged former finance executives involved with CSC’s international businesses for ignoring basic accounting standards to increase reported profits.

CSC agreed to pay a $190 million penalty to settle the charges, and five of the eight charged executives agreed to settlements.  Former CEO Michael Laphen agreed to return to CSC more than $3.7 million in compensation under the clawback provision of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and pay a $750,000 penalty.  Former CFO Michael Mancuso agreed to return $369,100 in compensation and pay a $175,000 penalty.

The SEC filed complaints in federal court in Manhattan against former CSC finance executives Robert Sutcliffe, Edward Parker, and Chris Edwards, who are contesting the charges against them.  Sutcliffe was CSC’s finance director for its multi-billion dollar contract with the United Kingdom’s National Health Service (NHS).

The SEC alleges that CSC’s accounting and disclosure fraud began after the company learned it would lose money on the NHS contract because it was unable to meet certain deadlines.  To avoid the large hit to its earnings that CSC was required to record, Sutcliffe allegedly added items to CSC’s accounting models that artificially increased its profits but had no basis in reality.  CSC, with Laphen’s approval, then continued to avoid the financial impact of its delays by basing its models on contract amendments it was proposing to the NHS rather than the actual contract.  In reality, NHS officials repeatedly rejected CSC’s requests that the NHS pay the company higher prices for less work.  By basing its models on the flailing proposals, CSC artificially avoided recording significant reductions in its earnings in 2010 and 2011.

The SEC’s investigation found that Laphen and Mancuso repeatedly failed to comply with multiple rules requiring them to disclose these issues to investors, and they made public statements about the NHS contract that misled investors about CSC’s performance.  Mancuso also concealed from investors a prepayment arrangement that allowed CSC to meet its cash flow targets by effectively borrowing large sums of money from the NHS at a high interest rate.  Mancuso merely told investors that CSC was hitting its targets “the old fashioned hard way.”

“When companies face significant difficulties impacting their businesses, they and their top executives must truthfully disclose this information to investors,” said Andrew J. Ceresney, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement.  “CSC repeatedly based its financial results and disclosures on the NHS contract it was negotiating rather than the one it actually had, and misled investors about the true status of the contract.  The significant sanctions in this case against the company, CEO, and CFO reflect our focus on ensuring that such misconduct is vigorously pursued and punished.”

Stephen L. Cohen, Associate Director in the SEC’s Division of Enforcement, added, “The wide-ranging misconduct in this case spanned several countries and occurred over multiple years, reflecting significant management lapses and internal controls failures.  We expect this settlement and the recommendations of an independent ethics and compliance consultant will help prevent future misconduct.”

In addition to the accounting and disclosure violations involving the NHS contract, the SEC’s investigation found that CSC and finance executives in Australia and Denmark fraudulently manipulated the financial results of the company’s businesses in those regions.

The SEC alleges that Parker, who served as controller in Australia, along with regional CFO Wayne Banks overstated the company’s earnings by using “cookie jar” reserves and failing to record expenses as required.  They overstated CSC’s operating results by more than 5 percent in the first quarter of fiscal year 2009 and allowed the company to meet analysts’ earnings targets during that period.  Banks agreed to settle the charges and pay disgorgement of $10,990 with prejudgment interest of $2,400, plus accept an officer-and-director bar of at least four years as well as a bar from practicing as an accountant on behalf of SEC-regulated entities for at least four years.  The SEC’s case continues against Parker.

In CSC’s Nordic region, the SEC alleges a variety of accounting manipulations to fraudulently inflate operating results as finance executives there struggled to achieve budgets set by CSC management in the U.S.  Among the misconduct was improperly accounting for client disputes, overstating assets, and capitalizing expenses.  For example, Edwards, who was a finance manager, allegedly recorded and maintained large amounts of “prepaid assets” that CSC was required to actually record as expenses.  This tactic guaranteed these expenses would not reduce CSC’s earnings.  CSC’s finance director of the Nordic region Paul Wakefield also engaged in the accounting fraud, which overstated CSC’s consolidated pre-tax income in Denmark as much as 7 percent.  CSC’s finance manager Claus Zilmer was involved in violations of the financial reporting and books and records provisions of the securities laws.  Wakefield and Zilmer agreed to settle the charges, with Wakefield agreeing to accept an officer-and-director bar of at least three years as well as a bar from practicing as an accountant on behalf of SEC-regulated entities for at least three years.  The SEC’s case continues against Edwards.

CSC and the five settling executives neither admit nor deny the findings in the SEC’s order instituting a settled administrative proceeding against them.  CSC must retain an independent consultant to review the company’s ethics and compliance programs.  The SEC particularly acknowledges the cooperation of Wakefield in its investigation, which was conducted by Shelby Hunt, David Miller, Ian Rupell, Robert Peak, and Joseph Zambuto Jr.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority.

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Dissenting Statement on the Final Interagency Policy Statement:Failing to Advance Diversity and Inclusion

Dissenting Statement on the Final Interagency Policy Statement:Failing to Advance Diversity and Inclusion

SEC ANNOUNCES CANADIAN TRADER TO PAY $1 MILLION FOR ALLEGED VIOLATIONS

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
06/09/2015 01:35 PM EDT

The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that a trader residing in Canada has agreed to pay more than $1 million to settle charges that he shorted U.S. stocks in companies planning follow-on offerings and then illegally bought shares in the follow-on offerings to lock in significant profits with little to no market risk.

An SEC investigation found that Andrew L. Evans through his firm Maritime Asset Management violated an anti-manipulation provision of the federal securities laws known as Rule 105 on nearly a dozen occasions.  Rule 105 prohibits short selling an equity security during a restricted period (generally five business days before a public offering) and then purchasing that same security through the offering.  By purchasing lower-priced shares in the follow-on offerings that he could use to cover his short sales, Evans reaped $582,175 in illegal profits.

“Evans repeatedly gamed the system by short selling shares that he knew he could later obtain at a lower price,” said Jina L. Choi, Director of the SEC’s San Francisco Regional Office.  “Rule 105 was specifically designed to prevent unfair and manipulative trading that erodes pricing integrity and the ability of issuers to effectively raise capital.”

According to the SEC’s complaint filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, Evans’s short selling violations occurred from December 2010 to May 2012.  The settlement, which is subject to court approval, requires Evans to pay disgorgement of $582,175, prejudgment interest of $63,424, and a penalty of $364,389 for a total of $1,009,988.  Without admitting or denying the allegations, Evans agreed to be permanently enjoined from violating Rule 105 in the future.

The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Robert J.  Durham and

Monday, June 8, 2015

SEC WARNS INVESTORS TO CHECK BACKGROUNDS OF INVESTMENT SOLICITORS

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
6/03/2015 11:50 AM EDT

The Securities and Exchange Commission warned investors to thoroughly check the claimed credentials of people soliciting their investments to ensure they are not falsifying, exaggerating, or hiding facts about their backgrounds.  The agency has brought several recent enforcement cases along these lines, including two actions announced today.

An investor alert issued by the SEC’s Office of Investor Education and Advocacy cautions, “Do not trust someone with your investment money just because he or she claims to have impressive credentials or experience, or manages to create a ‘buzz of success.’”  The alert notes that investors sometimes unintentionally contribute to a fraudster’s false reputation of success and accomplishment by merely repeating to others the misrepresentations being made to them.  Investors can conduct background checks of financial professionals to ensure they are properly licensed or registered with the SEC, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, or a state regulatory authority by visiting the “Ask and Check” section of the SEC’s Investor.gov website.

The SEC Enforcement Division today announced two separate fraud cases against investment advisers who made false claims about their experience and industry accolades in an effort to gain the trust and confidence of investors.

“Advisers looking to raise funds cannot lie about their backgrounds to lull investors into a false sense of security about their purported expertise or the profitability of a potential investment,” said Julie M. Riewe, Co-Chief of the SEC Enforcement Division’s Asset Management Unit.  “Each adviser in these cases used false claims about his background to create trustworthiness and lend credibility to their offering schemes.”

An SEC investigation found that Michael G. Thomas of Oil City, Pa., touted that he was named a “Top 25 Rising Business Star” by Fortune Magazine as he solicited investors through blast e-mails and the Internet for a private fund named Michael G. Investments LLC.  No such distinction actually exists at Fortune Magazine, and Thomas also greatly exaggerated his own past investment performance, misrepresented that certain industry professionals would co-manage and advise the fund, and inflated the fund’s projected performance.  To settle the SEC’s charges, Thomas agreed to pay a $25,000 penalty and consented to an order requiring him not to participate in the issuance, offer, or sale of certain securities for five years.  He also is barred from associating with any broker, dealer, or investment adviser for at least five years.

A separate SEC investigation found that Todd M. Schoenberger of Lewes, Del., misrepresented that he had a college degree from the University of Maryland and touted his appearances on cable news programs while soliciting investors to purchase promissory notes issued by his unregistered investment advisory firm LandColt Capital LP.  Schoenberger falsely told prospective investors that LandColt would repay the notes through fees earned from managing a private fund.  Schoenberger never actually launched the fund, never had the commitments of capital to the fund that he claimed, and never paid investors the returns he promised.  To settle the SEC’s charges, Schoenberger agreed to pay $65,000 in disgorgement of ill-gotten gains plus interest.  He consented to an order barring him from associating with any broker, dealer, or investment adviser and from serving as an officer or director of a public company.

The SEC’s investigation of Thomas was conducted by Mark D. Salzberg and Corey A. Schuster of the Asset Management Unit, and the case was supervised by Panayiota K. Bougiamas and Jeffrey B. Finnell.  The SEC’s investigation of Schoenberger was conducted by John G. Westrick of the Asset Management Unit and supervised by Stephen E. Donahue.  The investor alert was prepared by M. Owen Donley III and Holly Pal in the Office of Investor Education and Advocacy.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

FOUR CHARGED BY SEC WITH INSIDER TRADING AND STEALING CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
06/03/2015 10:45 AM EDT

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced insider trading charges against four individuals stealing confidential information from investment banks and their public company clients in order to trade in advance of secondary stock offerings.  The scheme allegedly involved at least 15 stocks and generated more than $4.4 million in illegal trading profits.

The SEC alleges that a former day trader living in California, Steven Fishoff, schemed with two friends and his brother-in-law to pose as legitimate portfolio managers and induce investment bankers to bring them “over the wall” and share confidential information about an upcoming secondary offering.  After promising they wouldn’t disclose the nonpublic information to others or trade an issuer’s stock before an offering was announced, they violated the agreements and tipped each other about the upcoming offerings expected to inherently depress the price of the issuer’s stock.  The tippees then shorted the stock before an offering was publicly announced and assured themselves profits on the short sales after the stock price dropped.

According to the SEC’s complaint filed in U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, they eventually expanded the scope of their scheme from short selling to buying stock in advance of a positive corporate news announcement based on confidential information obtained about secret negotiations between two large pharmaceutical companies.

Charged along with Fishoff in the SEC’s complaint is his brother-in-law Steven Costantin of New Jersey, his friend and California neighbor Ronald Chernin, and his friend Paul Petrello, also a former day trader who resides in Florida.  In a parallel action, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey today announced criminal charges against Fishoff, Petrello, Chernin, and Costantin.

“We allege an insider trading scheme based on a short-selling business model designed to systematically profit on confidential information obtained under false pretenses,” said Sanjay Wadhwa, Senior Associate Director for Enforcement in the SEC’s New York Regional Office.  “But the defendants’ short selling proved to be short-sighted as they overlooked the fact that their trading patterns would be detected and they would be caught by law enforcement.”

The SEC’s complaint charges Fishoff, Petrello, Chernin, and Costantin as well as seven entities they collectively controlled with illegal insider trading in violation of the antifraud provisions of the Securities Act of 1933 and Securities Exchange Act of 1934.  The complaint also charges Fishoff, Petrello, Chernin, Costantin, and three associated entities with violations of Rule 105 of Regulation M of the Exchange Act in connection with certain short sales made in advance of public securities offerings in which they purchased shares.

The SEC’s investigation is continuing and being conducted by Dominick Barbieri, David Austin, Matthew Lambert, Stephen Johnson and George Stepaniuk.  The litigation will be led by Todd Brody, Dominick Barbieri, and David Austin.  The case is being supervised by Mr. Wadhwa.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Options Regulatory Services Authority.

Saturday, June 6, 2015

CFTC CHAIRMAN MASSAD'S REMARKS BEFORE GLOBAL EXCHANGE AND BROKERAGE CONFERENCE

FROM:  U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 
Remarks of Chairman Timothy Massad before the Global Exchange and Brokerage Conference (New York)
June 3, 2015
As Prepared For Delivery

Thank you for inviting me today, and I thank Rich for that kind introduction. It’s a pleasure to be here.

Next month, we will observe the fifth anniversary of the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act. As you know, this law made dramatic changes to our regulatory system in response to the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. In particular, it aimed to bring transparency and oversight to the over-the-counter swaps market, and gave the CFTC primary responsibility to accomplish that task.

The timing of this speech is significant to me in another way, as it was exactly one year ago today that I was confirmed by the Senate as chairman of the CFTC. So in light of those two anniversaries, it seems like a good time to take stock. Where are we in implementing these reforms? Is the new regulatory framework achieving the goals envisioned in Dodd-Frank? And what have we done over the last year in particular to advance those objectives? What are our priorities going forward?

All of you appreciate the important role that the derivatives markets play in our economy. In 2008, however, we saw how the build-up of excessive risk in the over-the-counter swaps market made a very bad crisis even worse. There were many causes of the crisis, but particularly because of that excessive swap risk, our government was required to commit $182 billion just to prevent the collapse of a single company – AIG – because its failure at that time, in those circumstances, could have caused our economy to fall into another Great Depression. Our country lost eight million jobs as a result of the crisis. I spent five years at Treasury helping our nation recover from that crisis – including getting all that money back from AIG. I also had a long career working as a corporate lawyer, which included helping to draft the original ISDA master agreements and advising businesses on all sorts of transactions, including derivatives. So I appreciate both the need for reform and the importance of implementing these reforms in a way that ensures that these markets can continue to thrive and contribute to our economy.

The Dodd-Frank Act enacted the four basic reforms agreed to by the leaders of the G-20 nations to bring transparency and oversight to this market: central clearing of standardized swaps, oversight of the largest market participants, regular reporting, and transparent trading on regulated platforms.

Today that framework is largely in place. The vast majority of transactions are centrally cleared. Trading on regulated platforms is a reality. Transaction data is being reported and publicly available. And we have developed a program for the oversight of major market participants.

There is more work to do in all these areas, as I will discuss in a moment. But as I see it, there are a lot of parallels between where we are today with swaps market reform and what happened with securities market reform in the 1930s and 40s. Coming out of the Great Depression, we created a framework for securities regulation and trading which proved tremendously successful. Many of its mandates were revolutionary at the time and therefore quite controversial. When the Securities Exchange Act was passed and required periodic reporting by public companies, the President of the New York Stock Exchange said it was “a menace to national recovery.” History has proved otherwise. Today, the concept of periodic reporting by public companies is about as controversial as seat belts. Indeed, the basic framework created in the 1930s of disclosure, transparency, periodic reporting and trading on regulated exchanges has been the foundation for the growth of our securities markets.

I believe the swaps market reforms we have put in place are similar. I believe the basic framework is one that will benefit our markets and the economy as a whole for decades to come. Is that framework perfect? No. Is there more to do? Yes. So let’s look at where we are.

Congress required that the rules be written within a year of passage of Dodd-Frank, and the agency worked incredibly hard to meet that goal. Now we are in a phase of making necessary minor adjustments to the rules, which is to be expected with any change as significant as this. And so a priority of mine over the last year has been to do just that: to look at how well the new rules are working and to make adjustments where necessary.

So let me give you a quick big picture view of where we are on each of the four key reforms of the OTC swaps market, as well as what I see as the next steps in each of those areas, and then discuss in more detail a couple of key priorities for the months ahead.

Clearing

First is the goal of requiring central clearing of transactions. This is a critical means to monitor and mitigate risk. Here we have accomplished a great deal. Our rules require clearing through central counterparties for most interest rate and credit default swaps, and the percentage of transactions that are centrally cleared in the swaps markets we oversee has gone from about 15 percent in December 2007 to about 75 percent today. That’s a dramatic change.

Importantly, our rules do not impose this requirement on commercial end-users. Nor do we impose the trading mandate on commercial end-users. And an important priority for me over the last year has been to make sure this new framework as a whole does not impose unintended burdens on commercial end-users. They were not the cause of the crisis or the focus of the reforms. And we want to make sure that they can still use these markets to hedge commercial risk effectively.

What are the next steps when it comes to clearing? First, we must recognize that for all its merits, central clearing does not eliminate risk, and therefore we must make sure clearinghouses are strong and resilient. The CFTC has already done a lot of work in this area. Over the last few years, we overhauled our supervisory framework and we increased our oversight. But there is more to do, and there will be significant efforts taking place, including through international organizations.

We will be looking at stress testing of clearinghouses, and whether there should be international standards for stress testing that give us some basis to compare the resiliency of different clearinghouses. And while we hope never to have to use these tools, we will be looking further at recovery and resolution planning.

You may also know that we are engaged in discussions with Europe on cross-border recognition of clearinghouses. While this issue is taking longer to resolve than I expected, I believe we have narrowed the issues and are making good progress. For those interested, I recently gave a speech to a committee of the European Parliament that describes the issues we are discussing in more detail. I believe my counterpart in these discussions, Lord Jonathan Hill of the European Commission, wants to resolve this soon, as I do, and we are working in good faith toward that end. I also believe we can resolve this without disruptions to the market, and I am pleased that the EC has again postponed capital charges toward that end.

Oversight of Swap Dealers

Let me turn to the second reform area, general oversight of major market players. We have made great progress here as well, as we have in place a regulatory framework for supervision of swap dealers. They are now required to observe strong risk management practices, and they will be subject to regular examinations to assess risk and compliance with rules designed to mitigate excessive risk.

Next steps in this area include looking at the swap dealer de minimis threshold. Under the swap dealer rules adopted in 2012, the threshold for determining who is a swap dealer will decline from $8 billion to $3 billion in December of 2017 unless the Commission takes action. I believe it is vital that our actions be data-driven, and so we have started work on a comprehensive report to analyze this issue. We will make a preliminary version available for public comment, and seek comment not only on the methodology and data, but also on the policy questions as to what the threshold should be, and why. I want us to complete this process well in advance of the December 2017 date so that the Commission has some data, analysis, and public input with which to decide what to do.

Another priority for us over the next few months in the area of general oversight is to finalize our proposal on margin requirements for uncleared swaps. This is one of the most important Dodd-Frank requirements that remains to be finalized, and one of the most important overall. There will always be a large part of the swaps market that is not and should not be centrally cleared, and therefore margin is key to minimizing the risk to our system that can come from uncleared bilateral trades. The proposal applies to swap dealers, in their transactions with one another and their transactions with financial institutions that exceed certain thresholds. As with the clearing and trading mandates, commercial firms are exempted.

We are working closely with the bank regulators on this rule. They have the responsibility to issue rules that apply to swap dealers that are banking entities under their respective jurisdictions, and our rule will apply to other swap dealers. It is vitally important that these rules be as consistent as possible, and we are making good progress in this regard. We are also working to have our U.S. rules be similar to rules being considered by Europe and Japan. I expect that they will be consistent on many major issues.

Reporting

With regard to reporting, the public and regulators are benefiting from a new level of market transparency – transparency that did not exist before. All swap transactions, whether cleared or uncleared, must be reported to registered swap data repositories (SDRs), a new type of entity responsible for collecting and maintaining this information. You can now go to public websites and see the price and volume for individual swap transactions. And the CFTC publishes the Weekly Swaps Report that gives the public a snapshot of the swaps market. This means more efficient price discovery for all market participants. Equally important, this reporting enables regulatory authorities to engage in meaningful oversight, and when necessary, enforcement actions.

While we have much better data today than in 2008, we have a lot more work to do to get to where we want to be. One step is revising our rules to bring further clarity to reporting obligations. Later this summer I expect that we will propose some initial changes to the swap reporting rules for cleared swaps designed to clarify reporting obligations and, at the same time, improve the quality and usability of the data in the SDRs. And we are looking at other possible changes as well to improve the data reporting process and usefulness of the information.

This is also an international effort. There are around two dozen data repositories globally. And there are participants around the world who must report. We and the European Central Bank currently co-chair a global task force that is seeking to standardize data standards internationally. While much of this work is highly technical, it is vitally important to international cooperation and transparency.

We will also make sure participants are taking their obligations seriously to provide us good data in the first place. We have taken, and will continue to take, enforcement action against those who do not.

Transparent Trading

Let me turn to the last reform area, which is trading. Today, trading swaps on regulated platforms is a reality. We have nearly two dozen SEFs registered. Each registered exchange is required to operate in accordance with certain statutory core principles. These core principles provide a framework that includes obligations to establish and enforce rules, as well as policies and procedures that enable transparent and efficient trading. SEFs must make trading information publicly available, put into place system safeguards, and maintain financial, operational, and managerial resources necessary to discharge their responsibilities.

So we are making progress, but here too, there is more work to do. We have been looking at ways to improve the framework, focusing on some operational issues where we believe adjustments can improve trading. We have taken action in a number of areas, including steps to make it easier to execute package trades and correct error trades, and steps to simplify trade confirmations and reporting obligations. We are looking at additional issues pertaining to SEF trading as well. For example, we are planning to hold a public roundtable later this year on the made-available-for-trade determination process, where many industry participants have suggested that the agency play a greater role in determining which products should be mandated for trading and when.

We have also been working to harmonize our trading rules with the rules of other jurisdictions where possible. CFTC staff worked with Australian swap platforms to clarify how they can permit U.S. participation under our trading rules. One platform, Yieldbroker, confirmed that it intends to apply for relief and achieve compliance by this fall. This is an important step and we are open to working with other jurisdictions and platforms.

Responding to Changes in the Market

I began by saying that the approaching five year anniversary of Dodd-Frank was a good time to take stock of what has been accomplished in terms of implementing the reforms required by the law. Equally important to consider is: How have the markets changed over the last five years? How does that impact what we are doing? After all, there is always the danger that as regulators, we focus on fighting the last war.

It is beyond the scope of my speech today to discuss all the significant changes to markets over the last few years, or how regulatory actions may be affecting market dynamics and costs. These are important, complex subjects, but they are well beyond the time I have today to explore. Today, however, I’d like to take a few minutes more to just note one major way in which our markets are changing, and how that is affecting our work.

That change has to do with the increased use of electronic and automated trading. Some speak of “high frequency trading” or HFT, a classification that is hard to define precisely. I will focus on automated or algorithmic trading. Over the last decade, automated trading has increased from about 25 percent to well over 50 percent of trading in U.S. financial markets. Looking specifically at the futures markets, almost all trading is electronic in some form, and automated trading accounts for more than 70 percent of trading over the last few years.

I commend to you a recent paper by our Chief Economist office which gives some interesting data on our markets. This looked at over 1.5 billion transactions across over 800 products on CME over a two year period. It found that the percentage of automated trading in financial futures – such as those based on interest rates, currencies or equity indices – was 60 to 80 percent. But even among many physical commodities, there was a high degree of automated trading, such as 40 to 50 percent for many energy and metals products. The paper also provides a lot of rich detail on what types of trades are more likely to be automated.

The increase in electronic, and particularly automated, trading has changed what we do, and how we do it. Let me say at the outset that the increased use of electronic trading has brought many benefits, such as more efficient execution and lower spreads. But it also raises issues. These are somewhat different in the futures markets than in the cash equity markets where they have received the most attention, in part because typically in the futures market, trading of a given product occurs on only one exchange. Nevertheless, the increased use of automated, algorithmic trading poses challenges for how we execute our responsibilities, and it raises important policy questions. For example, it creates profound changes in how we conduct surveillance. The days when market surveillance could be conducted by observing traders in floor pits are long gone. Today, successful market surveillance activities require us to have the ability to continually receive, load, and analyze large volumes of data. We already receive a complete transactions tape, but effective surveillance requires looking at the much larger sets of message data—the bids, offers, cancelations which far outnumber consummated transactions.

And consider that we oversee the markets in a wide range of financial futures products based on interest rates, currencies and equities, as well as over 40 physical commodity categories, each of which has very different characteristics.

Surveillance today requires a massive information technology investment and sophisticated analytical tools that we must develop for these unique environments. And we must have experienced personnel who understand the markets we oversee, who can discern anomalies and patterns and who have the experience, judgment, and skills to know when to investigate further.

The increased use of high speed and electronic trading has impacted our enforcement activity as well. We have recently brought several spoofing cases, where market participants used complex algorithmic strategies to generate and then cancel massive numbers of bids or offers without the intention of actually consummating those transactions in order to affect price. Some have asked, does that mean I cannot cancel a trade without fear of enforcement coming after me? Hardly. Intent is a key element that we must prove. There is a difference between changing your mind in response to changed market conditions and canceling an order you previously entered, and entering an order that you know, at the time, you have no intention of consummating.

The Commission is also looking at automated trading and specifically the use of algorithmic trading strategies from a policy perspective. We have adopted rules requiring certain registrants to automatically screen orders for compliance with risk limits if they are automatically executed. The Commission has also adopted rules to ensure that trading programs, such as algorithms, are regularly tested. In addition, the Commission issued a Concept Release on Risk Controls and System Safeguards for Automated Trading Environments. We received substantial public comment, and we are currently considering what further actions may be appropriate.

Although we have not made any decisions yet, let me note a few areas we are thinking about. Traditionally, our regulatory framework has required registration by intermediaries handling customer orders and customer funds. In addition, proprietary traders who were physically present on the floor of the exchange and active in the pits had to register as floor traders. Today, the pits are gone, and physical presence on the floor of an exchange is no longer a relevant concept. We are considering whether the successors to those floor traders – proprietary traders with direct electronic access to a trading venue – should be subject to a registration requirement if they engage in algorithmic trading.

We are considering the adequacy of risk controls, and in particular pre-trade controls, with respect to algorithmic trading. The exchanges, and many participants themselves, have put controls in place. The question is whether our rule framework should set some general principles to require measures such as message and execution throttles, kill switches, and controls designed to prevent erroneous orders. We also may consider standards on the development and monitoring of algorithmic trading systems.

We are also considering who should have the responsibility to implement controls. This may include persons using algorithmic trading strategies as well as the exchanges. But what about the role of clearing members who do not see the orders of customers using direct electronic access? Today, our rules require exchanges that permit direct electronic access to have systems to facilitate the clearing member’s management of the financial risk of their direct access customers. Should there be a similar requirement for the exchanges to facilitate the management by clearing members of risks related to those customers’ use of algorithmic trading?

We are looking self-trading – that is, when orders from distinct trading desks or algos from the same firm transact – and its potential implications and effects on the markets. In addition, we are looking at the adequacy of disclosure by exchanges of market maker and incentive programs.

Conclusion

I said at the outset that where we are today in the implementation of reforms of the swaps market has many parallels to the reforms of the securities market after the Great Depression. The framework created then – including public disclosure and regular reporting, and trading on regulated platforms – was controversial at the time. But it has proven to not only be effective, it has provided a vital foundation on which our securities markets grew to become the most dynamic in the world. I believe we can achieve the same result with the derivatives market. We must always be attentive to how the market is changing, and adapt core principles to those changes. I look forward to working with you to achieve that goal.

Last Updated: June 3, 2015

Friday, June 5, 2015

Structured Products – Complexity and Disclosure – Do Retail Investors Really Understand What They Are Buying and What the Risks Are?

Structured Products – Complexity and Disclosure – Do Retail Investors Really Understand What They Are Buying and What the Risks Are?

INVESTMENT ADVISER TO PAY OVER $1 MILLION TO ONCLUDE FRAUD CASES WITH SEC

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
Litigation Release No. 23273 / June 1, 2015
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Sage Advisory Group, LLC and Benjamin Lee Grant, Civil Action No. 10-cv-11665 (D. Mass. September 29, 2010)
Securities and Exchange Commission v. John A. Grant, Sage Advisory Group, LLC and Benjamin Lee Grant, Civil Action No. 11-cv-11538 (D. Mass. September 1, 2011)
Court Orders Massachusetts Investment Adviser to Pay Over $1 Million to Conclude Two SEC Fraud Cases

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced that, on May 29, 2015, the Honorable George A. O'Toole Jr. of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts entered final judgments against the one-time registered investment adviser Sage Advisory Group, LLC, and its principal, Benjamin Lee Grant ("Lee Grant"), both of Boston, MA, in two fraud cases filed by the SEC. A federal court jury previously found Sage and Lee Grant liable for fraud in the first case, and Sage and Lee Grant recently admitted liability for fraud in the second case. Among other relief, the final judgments impose permanent injunctions against future violations of certain antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws and order Sage and Lee Grant to pay a total of $1,051,038.

In the first case, filed on September 29, 2010, the Commission alleged that Lee Grant had fraudulently led his brokerage customers to transfer their assets to Sage, his new advisory firm. Prior to October 2005, Lee Grant was a registered representative of broker-dealer Wedbush Morgan Securities and had customer accounts representing approximately $100 million in assets, virtually all of which were managed by California-based investment adviser First Wilshire Securities Management. According to the complaint, Lee Grant resigned from Wedbush in September 2005 so that he could operate Sage, his own newly-minted investment advisory firm. Lee Grant made false and misleading statements to his former brokerage customers. Among other things, Lee Grant misled customers by telling them that the changes in their accounts were being done at the suggestion of First Wilshire and that First Wilshire was not willing to continue managing the customers' assets if they stayed with Wedbush. Lee Grant also told customers that the "wrap fee" program being offered by Sage offered potential savings, based on historical commission costs - without disclosing that a new arrangement with a discount broker would produce substantial savings to the benefit of Sage, not the customers, under the "wrap fee." To rush his customers to sign up as advisory clients with Sage, Lee Grant falsely suggested that they might suffer disruption in First Wilshire's management of their assets unless they signed and returned the new advisory and custodial account documents as soon as possible.

Following trial, on August 13, 2014, a federal district court jury found both Sage and Lee Grant liable for fraud under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, among other charges.

In the second case, filed on September 1, 2011, the Commission alleged that Sage and Lee Grant separately violated the antifraud provisions of the Investment Advisers Act, as did Lee Grant's father, Jack Grant. The Commission's complaint alleged that Jack Grant violated a Commission bar from association with investment advisers by associating with Sage and by acting as an investment adviser himself. The Commission bar had been based on a 1988 Commission enforcement action against Jack Grant alleging that he sold $5,500,000 of unregistered securities and misappropriated investors' funds. The Commission alleged in its September 2011 complaint that, notwithstanding his agreement to accept a Commission bar to settle the 1988 action, Jack Grant did not remove himself from the securities business and instead continued to provide investment advice to individuals and small businesses. The Commission's complaint alleged that he retooled his service as the Law Offices of Jack Grant and used his son, Lee Grant, to help implement his investment advice. The complaint further alleged that Jack Grant, Lee Grant, and Sage failed to inform their advisory clients that Jack Grant was barred from associating with investment advisers. In May 2013, the court entered a final judgment against Jack Grant on a settled basis, ordering Jack Grant to pay a total of $201,392.27, among other relief.

The final judgments entered against Sage and Lee Grant on May 29, 2015 conclude the cases and were entered with Sage's and Lee Grant's consent. The final judgment in the first case acknowledges the jury's liability finding, imposes permanent injunctions against future violations of Sections 206(1), 206(2), 206(4), and 204A of the Investment Advisers Act and Rules 204A-1 and 206(4)-7 thereunder, orders Sage and Lee Grant to pay on a joint and several basis $500,000 in disgorgement and $51,038 in prejudgment interest, and orders Lee Grant to pay an additional $350,000 civil penalty. The final judgment in the second case imposes additional permanent injunctions against future violations of Sections 206(1), 206(2), and 207 of the Investment Advisers Act and orders Lee Grant to pay an additional $150,000 civil penalty. As part of their consent in the second case, Sage and Lee Grant acknowledged that their conduct violated the federal securities laws and admitted the underlying facts establishing the violations.

Lee Grant also consented to the Commission's entry in follow-on administrative proceedings of a permanent bar, pursuant to Section 203(f) of the Investment Advisers Act, prohibiting him from association with any broker, dealer, or investment adviser, among other entities. The Commission entered the administrative order on June 1, 2015.

For further information on the first case, see Litigation Release No. 21672 (September 29, 2010) (SEC Charges Massachusetts-Based Investment Adviser with Fraud); and Litigation Release 23066 (August 13, 2014) (Jury Returns Verdict Against Massachusetts Investment Adviser in SEC Fraud Case).

For further information on the second case, see Litigation Release No. 22081 (September 1, 2011) (SEC Charges Massachusetts-Based Attorney for Violating an Investment Adviser Bar and his Son for Failing to Disclose his Father's Bar to Advisory Clients); and Litigation Release No. 22708 (May 30, 2013) (SEC Obtains Final Judgment and Issues Administrative Orders against John A. ("Jack") Grant).

Thursday, June 4, 2015

SEC CHAIRMAN WHITE'S REMARKS BEFORE ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON SMALL AND EMERGING COMPANIES

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
Opening Remarks of SEC Chair Mary Jo White before the SEC Advisory Committee on Small and Emerging Companies
Chair Mary Jo White
June 3, 2015

Good morning. Thank you all for being here. Steve, Chris, and all committee members, I appreciate the full agenda you have today, and I will be brief in my update and comments so that you can get to the business at hand.

I am pleased to note that since your last meeting, the Commission in March adopted Regulation A+. I know this Committee was eager for that rule to be finalized, as were we. I believe the rule we adopted will provide an additional and effective path to raising capital that also provides strong investor protections. I look forward to seeing companies put the rules to good use to raise capital.

On other fronts, we continue to advance the completion of our other rulemaking mandates under the JOBS Act and the Dodd-Frank Act, and as we have discussed before, it is one of my priorities to complete the crowdfunding rulemaking this year, which is our last significant JOBS Act rulemaking. Crowdfunding in its various forms obviously remains a focus of many others, including this Committee, the states and in various countries around the world.

Indeed, more than 20 states have enacted some form of intrastate crowdfunding legislation or rules, and a number of others are considering similar initiatives. As states are seeking to expand the avenues in which issuers may conduct intrastate offerings, we have focused on the fact that some of our laws and rules were put into place years ago prior to widespread use of the internet and may present challenges to the states’ efforts.

For example, Securities Act Rule 147, which you will be discussing today, created a safe harbor that issuers often rely on for intrastate offerings. Rule 147 was adopted in 1974, and how an issuer might conduct an intrastate offering using the internet was not contemplated at that time. The staff in the Division of Corporation Finance is currently considering ways to improve the rule, by looking at, among other things, the conditions included in the rule for an offering to be considered intrastate. Securities Act Rule 504, an exemption that could be used to facilitate regional crowdfunding offerings for up to $1 million that are registered in one or more states, is another rule that may benefit from modernization and the staff is considering ways to do that. We look forward to having your input on these topics and to hearing your thoughts on whether there are aspects of these or other rules that could be usefully updated or changed.

It is also quite timely for this Committee to be taking up public company disclosure effectiveness. As you know, the staff in the Division of Corporation Finance is hard at work on our initiative to improve the effectiveness of the public company disclosure regime for investors and companies. The staff has sought input from a broad range of market participants and is in the process of developing recommendations for the Commission’s consideration. We welcome your thoughts in this area that I know is of particular interest to many of you.

I look forward to your input on the other topics on your agenda, including the Section 4(a)(1½) exemption, and the issues surrounding broker-dealer registration for those who identify or otherwise “find” potential investors in private placements. I am also glad to see a continuation of your consideration of venture exchanges as an avenue for secondary market liquidity.

I will stop here. As always, we very much appreciate the time and expertise you devote to this Committee. I wish you a very productive meeting.

Thank you.

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

CFTC COMMISSIONER GIANCARLO MAKES STATEMENT ON GOVERNMENT POLICIES AND FUTURES COMMISSION MERCHANTS

FROM:  U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 
Statement of Commissioner J. Christopher Giancarlo for the Market Risk Advisory Committee Meeting
June 1, 2015

Federal government policies are making America’s Futures Commission Merchants (FCMs) an endangered species. The most recent example is the storied commodities firm, Bache, founded in 1879, that is now being dismembered. A French bank is acquiring a portion of it, while thousands of its clients are being told to find new FCMs to serve their business needs.1

While not a household term, “FCMs” are the futures markets equivalent of stock brokers providing critical services for businesses that need to hedge against business and production risks. Today, because of a combination of mismanagement by a few, U.S. monetary policy and over-regulation, FCMs are consolidating at an alarming rate with dire consequences for America’s farmers, ranchers and manufacturers. Tomorrow, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s (CFTC) Market Risk Advisory Committee (MRAC), under the sponsorship of Commissioner Sharon Bowen, will hold a hearing to discuss the plight of American FCMs.

That hearing will undoubtedly recognize that there are far fewer FCMs than there used to be. The number of FCMs has dramatically fallen in the past 40 years: from over 400 in the late 1970s, to 154 before the 2008 financial crisis,2 and down to just 72 today.3 Of the 72 FCMs registered with the CFTC as of March 2015, 15 firms were dormant, leaving only 57 active firms serving customers.4 As the number of FCMs has dwindled, systemic risk has increased with the five largest firms accounting for more than 70 percent of the market.5 Meanwhile, customer assets held by all FCMs have grown from $169.5 billion in December 2007 to $245.7 billion in March 2015.6

Industry consolidation derives from several factors. Fraud and mismanagement caused spectacular failures of firms like Refco, MF Global and Peregrine Financial. The prolonged U.S. monetary policy of near zero percent interest rates has eliminated a key source of income for FCMs through reinvestment of customer money.7

Another threat to FCM survival comes from burdensome new regulations. The collapse of MF Global and Peregrine Financial prompted a series of new customer protection rules,8 some of which were undoubtedly needed. However, these new rules have impacted small FCMs more harshly than large ones. In addition, the CFTC’s new rules on ownership and control reporting greatly increased compliance and paperwork burdens for FCMs.9 The CFTC also further expanded FCM recordkeeping obligations to include the recording of all oral and written communications leading up to the execution of a transaction.10 The supplementary leverage ratio (SLR) rule issued last year by U.S. prudential regulators will make it more expensive for bank-owned FCMs to clear customer trades. That is because the SLR requires banks to hold more capital for every asset on their books, even margin held for clients on cleared trades of commodity futures, leading to diminished FCM income and increased client costs.

FCMs as an industry are spending millions of dollars for infrastructure, technology and compliance personnel to implement these complex regulations. Smaller FCMs that traditionally serve agricultural and small manufacturing interests must devote precious resources to comply with cumbersome rules more easily handled by large bank-affiliated competitors. FCMs are also overwhelmed by significantly increased demands for information from self-regulatory organizations and the CFTC. One FCM told me that it receives around 9,000 regulatory requests per year!

While many new rules contain plausible protections, regulators have lost sight of the increased costs for FCMs. Most of the rules have been imposed without a true analysis of the effect on FCMs and end-users.11 As a result, many small to medium-sized FCMs providing specialized services to everyday businesses are charging higher fees or leaving the industry because they cannot afford the additional infrastructure, technology and compliance costs imposed by the swelling regulations. Still, others have stopped clearing swaps for customers, which has the perverse effect of concentrating risk in fewer and fewer firms, a dangerous proposition in light of Dodd-Frank’s clearing mandate.

The Dodd-Frank Act was ostensibly about reforming “Wall Street.” Yet, again, the increased costs and burdens that directly or indirectly flow from the law have negatively impacted Main Street and America’s farmers, ranchers and manufacturers who need the services of the remaining small and medium-sized FCMs. Rules born out of the law are forcing America’s farmers, ranchers and manufacturers to pay higher fees for less choice in FCM services. With fewer firms serving a bigger market, risk is being more concentrated in large bank-affiliated firms, increasing the systemic risk that Dodd-Frank promised to reduce. Undoubtedly, heightened systemic risk arising from FCM consolidation is appropriate for consideration and analysis by MRAC.

If we are not careful, America’s rural producers will soon be left with few places to protect against business risk. The Midwest farmer who plants 1,000 acres of corn may have no choice but to go unhedged against market volatility. Sadly, it appears that the markets where “derivatives” were born are quickly losing their core service providers, possibly forever.

1 Christian Berthelsen and Tatyana Shumsky, SocGen Deal for Bache Illustrates Commodity-Trading Woe, The Wall Street Journal, May 26, 2015, available at http://www.wsj.com/articles/socgen-deal-for-bache-illustrates-commodity-trading-woe-1432681628.

2 CFTC, Selected FCM Financial Data as of December 31, 2007, http://www.cftc.gov/files/tm/fcm/fcmdata1207.pdf (last visited May 26, 2015) (excludes firms registered solely as retail foreign exchange dealers).

3 CFTC, Selected FCM Financial Data as of March 31, 2015, http://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/@financialdataforfcms/documents/file/fcmdata0315.pdf (last visited May 26, 2015) (excludes firms registered solely as retail foreign exchange dealers).

4 Id.

5 Joe Rennison, Nomura Exits Swaps Clearing for US and European Customers, Financial Times, May 12, 2015, available at http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/e1883676-f896-11e4-be00-00144feab7de.html#axzz3bSYWViZ4 (based on amount of customer collateral required according to CFTC data).

6 The March 2015 number includes $53.1 billion in cleared swaps customer assets that was not included in the December 2007 number. See supra note 2 and 3.

7 17 C.F.R. 1.25.

8 Enhancing Protections Afforded Customers and Customer Funds Held by Futures Commission Merchants and Derivatives Clearing Organizations, 78 FR 68506, 68510-12 (Nov. 14, 2013) (discussing recent customer protection initiatives).

9 Ownership and Control Reports, Forms 102/102S, 40/40S, and 71, 78 FR 69178 (Nov. 18, 2013).

10 17 C.F.R. 1.35. The rule applies to transactions in a commodity interest and related cash or forward transactions. Oral communications that lead solely to the execution of a related cash or forward transaction are excluded.

11 7 U.S.C. 19(1), CEA 15(a). Given the CFTC’s lax cost-benefit consideration requirements.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

SEC.gov | Capital Unbound: Remarks at the Cato Summit on Financial Regulation

SEC.gov | Capital Unbound: Remarks at the Cato Summit on Financial Regulation

SEC CHARGES MERRILL LYNCH ENTITIES WITH USING INACCURATE DATA

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 

The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged two Merrill Lynch entities with using inaccurate data in the course of executing short sale orders.  Merrill Lynch agreed to admit wrongdoing, pay nearly $11 million, and retain an independent compliance consultant in order to settle the charges.

According to the SEC’s order instituting a settled administrative proceeding, Merrill Lynch and other broker-dealers are routinely asked by customers to “locate” stock for short selling, and firms prepare easy-to-borrow (ETB) lists comprised of stocks they have deemed readily accessible for the purpose of granting locates.  At times during the course of a trading day, some securities that Merrill Lynch placed on its ETB list that morning became no longer easily available to borrow as determined by lending desk professionals tracking market events and other daily developments.

The SEC’s order finds that Merrill Lynch personnel appropriately ceased using the ETB list to source locates when availability of certain shares became restricted, but the firm’s execution platforms were programmed to continue processing short sale orders based on the ETB list.  For example, while personnel received responses from lenders that a supply of a particular security was no longer available, Merrill Lynch’s systems continued to rely on the ETB list and execute short sales totaling thousands of shares of that security.  It wasn’t until the platforms received the next day’s ETB list that they returned to utilizing accurate and present data.  After the SEC started investigating, Merrill Lynch began implementing systems enhancements to correct the problem.

“Firms must comply with their short-selling obligations by making sure they do not rely on inaccurate ETB lists,” said Andrew M. Calamari, Director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office.  “When firm personnel determine that a security should no longer be considered easy to borrow, the firm’s systems need to incorporate that knowledge immediately.”

The SEC’s order further finds that for a period until 2012, a flaw in Merrill Lynch’s systems occasionally triggered the inadvertent use of day-old data when constructing ETB lists.  The stale data caused some securities to be included on an ETB list when they should not have been.

Merrill Lynch admits violating Rule 203(b) of Regulation SHO of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and the SEC’s order requires the firm to cease and desist from committing or causing any future violations.  Merrill Lynch agreed to pay a $9 million penalty, $1,566,245.67 in disgorgement, and $334,564.65 in prejudgment interest.  The independent compliance consultant must conduct a comprehensive review of the firm’s policies, procedures, and practices for accepting short sale orders for execution, effecting short sales in reliance on the ETB list, and monitoring compliance.

The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Elzbieta Wraga, Adam Grace, and Daphne Downes in the New York office with substantial assistance from Nancy Brown and John Lehmann.  The case was supervised by Sharon Binger.

Monday, June 1, 2015

SEC ALLEGES FRAUD IN CASE INVOLVING THE TOUTING THE PROSPECTS OF CERTAIN MICROCAP COMPANIES

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
05/26/2015 12:30 PM EDT

The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced fraud charges against a securities lawyer who used his New York law office as the headquarters for planning and implementing market manipulation schemes.  Also charged are two stock promoters from Canada who assisted him.

The SEC alleges that Adam S. Gottbetter orchestrated promotional campaigns that touted the prospects of microcap companies and enticed investors to buy their stock at inflated prices so he and his cohorts could sell shares they controlled and reap massive profits.  Gottbetter enlisted Mitchell G. Adam and K. David Stevenson to help him in the last of three schemes he conducted in a six-year period.  They repeatedly cautioned each other about the dangers of missteps that might draw law enforcement attention to the scheme, such as failing to keep secret the identities of Adam and Stevenson.  The three rehearsed stories they would tell if ever questioned by law enforcement.  During one meeting in New York City, Gottbetter complained about the difficulties of stock manipulation but conceded that robbing a bank was the only other way to make so much money so quickly.

Gottbetter agreed to pay $4.6 million to settle the SEC’s charges.  Stevenson also agreed to settle the SEC charges against him while a case against Adam will be litigated in federal court in Newark, N.J.

In a parallel action, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey today announced criminal charges against Gottbetter, Adam, and Stevenson.

“As a securities lawyer, Gottbetter should have served as a gatekeeper and protected the capital markets and investors from fraudsters.  Instead, he swung the gates wide open and illicitly profited at investors’ expense,” said Andrew Ceresney, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement.

According to the SEC’s complaint, Gottbetter was involved in the manipulation of the stocks of Kentucky USA Energy Inc. (KYUS) and Dynastar Holdings Inc. (DYNA) before teaming up with Adam and Stevenson in July 2013 to utilize their offshore ties for a new and potentially more lucrative scheme.  Together they schemed to drive up the stock price for purported oil and gas exploration company HBP Energy Corp. (HBPE) through fraudulent trades generated by a trading algorithm.  They then planned to launch an extensive promotional campaign featuring multiple call centers, roadshows, and a listing on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.  After creating the false appearance of liquidity and investor interest, they planned to dump their shares of the stock on unsuspecting investors around the world.  While Stevenson and Adam managed to do some small coordinated trades, the scheme was thwarted before the planned manipulation and promotion could be launched when Stevenson was arrested by the FBI.

The SEC’s complaint alleges that Gottbetter violated Sections 5(a), 5(c) and Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, and violated and aided and abetted violations of Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5.  The complaint alleges that Adam and Stevenson violated and aided and abetted violations of Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5.

Gottbetter agreed to be barred from the penny stock industry in addition to paying $4.6 million in disgorgement and prejudgment interest from ill-gotten gains in the Kentucky USA Energy manipulation scheme.  He consented to injunctions against future violations.  Stevenson also agreed to be barred from the penny stock industry and consented to an injunction against future violations.  The settlements are subject to court approval.

The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Simona Suh of the Market Abuse Unit and Nancy A. Brown and Elzbieta Wraga of the New York office.  The case was supervised by Amelia A. Cottrell and Michael J. Osnato Jr.  The SEC’s litigation against Adam will be led by Ms. Brown and Ms. Suh.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Newark Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey, and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

Sunday, May 31, 2015

SEC ALLEGES CO-OWNERS OF BROKERAGE FIRM USED INVESTOR FUNDS INAPPROPRIATELY

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
05/20/2015 01:00 PM EDT
The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced fraud charges against the co-owners of a Manhattan-based brokerage firm.

The SEC alleges that as Arjent LLC and its UK-based affiliate Arjent Limited were approaching insolvency, chairman and CEO Robert P. DePalo attempted to keep the firms afloat and maintain his extravagant lifestyle by selling shares in a holding company called Pangaea Trading Partners.  DePalo along with managing director and co-owner Joshua B. Gladtke allegedly misrepresented to investors the value of Pangaea’s assets and how their money would be used – transferring the first $2.3 million raised in the offering directly to his own bank accounts and using it for his personal benefit.  DePalo also allegedly transferred investor funds to Gladtke, and sought to cover up their fraud by making misrepresentations to SEC examiners.

“We allege that DePalo and Gladtke sold overvalued interests in Pangaea and then raided investor funds for their own personal benefit,” said Andrew M. Calamari, Director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office.  “They later allegedly falsified records in an effort to cover up their scheme.”

In a parallel action, the New York County District Attorney’s Office today announced criminal charges against DePalo and Gladtke.

The SEC’s complaint filed in federal court in Manhattan charges DePalo and Gladtke with violating the antifraud and books-and-records provisions of the federal securities laws.  Also charged in the SEC’s complaint are Pangaea, the Arjent entities, and another entity owned and controlled by DePalo called Excalibur Asset Management.  The SEC also charged another principal at Arjent LLC named Gregg A. Lerman, who agreed to settle the charges.  Subject to court approval, Lerman is enjoined from future violations with any disgorgement and financial penalty amounts to be determined by the court at a later date.

The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Andrew Dean, Kerri Palen, Nathaniel Kolodny, Bennett Ellenbogen, and Lara Mehraban in the New York Regional Office.  The case was supervised by Amelia A. Cottrell, and the SEC’s litigation will be led by Michael Birnbaum and Mr. Dean.  The examination that preceded the investigation was led by Steven Vitulano, Terrence Bohan, Doreen Piccirillo, and Frank Sze of the New York office.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the New York County District Attorney’s Office, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Financial Conduct Authority in the United Kingdom, City of London Police, and Northumbria Police.

Friday, May 29, 2015

DEFENDANT IN INSIDER TRADING CASE INVOLVING AMATEUR GOLFERS PLEADS GUILTY

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
Litigation Release No. 23264 / May 18, 2015
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Eric McPhail, et al., Civil Action No. 1:14-cv-12958 (District of Massachusetts, Complaint filed July 11, 2014)
United States v. Eric McPhail and Douglas Parigian, 1:14-cr-10201-DJC (District of Massachusetts filed July 9, 2014).
Defendant in SEC Insider Trading Case Involving Group of Amateur Golfers Pleads Guilty to Criminal Charges

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced that, on May 13, 2015, Douglas Parigian pleaded guilty to criminal charges of conspiracy and securities fraud for his role in an insider trading ring involving trading in the stock of Massachusetts-based American Superconductor Corporation. The criminal charges against Parigian arose out of the same fraudulent conduct alleged by the Commission in a civil securities fraud action filed against Parigian and others in July 2014.

On July 9, 2014, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts indicted Parigian and another defendant, Eric McPhail, for conspiracy and securities fraud and, for Parigian only, lying to FBI agents. The U.S. Attorney charged that McPhail had a history, pattern and practice of sharing confidences with a senior executive at American Superconductor. Between 2009 and 2011, the senior executive provided McPhail with material, nonpublic information concerning the company's quarterly earnings and other business activities (the "Inside Information") with the understanding that it would be kept confidential. Instead, McPhail used email and other means to provide the Inside Information to his friends, including Parigian, with the intent that they profit by buying and selling American Superconductor stock and options. Parigian used the Inside Information to profit on the purchase and sale of American Superconductor stock and options.

On July 11, 2014, the Commission filed a civil injunctive against Eric McPhail and six of his golfing buddies, including Parigian, alleging that McPhail repeatedly provided them with material nonpublic information about American Superconductor. According to the Commission's Complaint, McPhail's source of the information was an American Superconductor executive who belonged to the same country club as McPhail and was a close friend. The Complaint further alleged that, from July 2009 through April 2011, the executive told McPhail about American Superconductor's expected earnings, contracts, and other major pending corporate developments, trusting that McPhail would keep the information confidential. McPhail instead misappropriated the information and tipped his friends, who improperly traded on the information. Without admitting or denying the allegations, four defendants settled the SEC's charges by consenting to the entry of judgments permanently enjoining them from violating the antifraud provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, paying disgorgement and civil penalties. The SEC's case against Parigian, McPhail and another individual, Jamie Meadows, is ongoing.

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

DEUTSCHE AGREES TO PAY $55 MILLION TO SETTLE SEC CHARGES IT FILED MISSTATED FINANCIAL REPORTS

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
05/26/2015 11:25 AM EDT

The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged Deutsche Bank AG with filing misstated financial reports during the height of the financial crisis that failed to take into account a material risk for potential losses estimated to be in the billions of dollars.

Deutsche Bank agreed to pay a $55 million penalty to settle the charges.

An SEC investigation found that Deutsche Bank overvalued a portfolio of derivatives consisting of “Leveraged Super Senior” (LSS) trades through which the bank purchased protection against credit default losses.  Because the trades were leveraged, the collateral posted for these positions by the sellers was only a fraction (approximately 9 percent) of the $98 billion total in purchased protection.  This leverage created a “gap risk” that the market value of Deutsche Bank’s protection could at some point exceed the available collateral, and the sellers could decide to unwind the trade rather than post additional collateral in that scenario.  Therefore, Deutsche Bank was protected only up to the collateral level and not for the full market value of its credit protection.  Deutsche Bank initially took the gap risk into account in its financial statements by adjusting down the value of the LSS positions.

According to the SEC’s order instituting a settled administrative proceeding, when the credit markets started to deteriorate in 2008, Deutsche Bank steadily altered its methodologies for measuring the gap risk. Each change in methodology reduced the value assigned to the gap risk until Deutsche Bank eventually stopped adjusting for gap risk altogether.  For financial reporting purposes, Deutsche Bank essentially measured its gap risk at $0 and improperly valued its LSS positions as though the market value of its protection was fully collateralized.  According to internal calculations not for the purpose of financial reporting, Deutsche Bank estimated that it was exposed to a gap risk ranging from $1.5 billion to $3.3 billion during that time period.

“At the height of the financial crisis, Deutsche Bank’s financial statements did not reflect the significant risk in these large, complex illiquid positions,” said Andrew J. Ceresney, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement.  “Deutsche Bank failed to make reasonable judgments when valuing its positions and lacked robust internal controls over financial reporting.”

In addition to the $55 million penalty, the SEC’s order requires Deutsche Bank to cease and desist from committing or causing any violations or future violations of Sections 13(a), 13(b)(2)(A), and 13(b)(2)(B) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rules 12b-20, 13a-1, and 13a-16.  Deutsche Bank neither admits nor denies the SEC’s findings in the order.

The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Amy Friedman, Michael Baker, Eli Bass, and Kapil Agrawal.  The case was supervised by Scott Friestad, Laura Josephs, Ms. Friedman, and Dwayne Brown.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority and the United Kingdom Financial Conduct Authority.

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

MICROSOFT EMPLOYEE AND FRIEND RESOLVE ALLEGATIONS OF INSIDER TRADING

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Litigation ReleaSe No. 23261 / May 14, 2015
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Brian D. Jorgenson, et al., Civil Action No. 13-cv-02275 (W.D. Wash.)
Former Microsoft Employee and His Friend Resolve Insider Trading Case

The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that a former Microsoft employee and his friend have agreed to settle insider trading charges filed in 2013 alleging that they unlawfully traded based on material nonpublic information misappropriated from Microsoft.

In consent judgments approved by the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, Brian D. Jorgenson, a former Senior Portfolio Manager in Microsoft's corporate finance and investments division, and Sean T. Stokke, Jorgenson's long-time friend and business partner, admitted their unlawful conduct and consented to the entry of orders holding them jointly and severally liable for over $400,000 in ill-gotten gains realized from their illegal trading as well as prejudgment interest. Both men are enjoined from future violations of Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5. Jorgenson is also barred from acting as an officer or director of a public company.

Both men previously pled guilty to criminal charges arising out of the same conduct. Jorgenson was sentenced to 24 months in jail and Stokke was sentenced to 18 months in jail.

The SEC's litigation has been led by John V. Donnelly III and G. Jeffery Boujoukos of the SEC's Philadelphia Regional Office. The SEC's investigation was conducted by Brendan P. McGlynn, Patricia A. Paw, John S. Rymas, and Daniel L. Koster.

The SEC appreciates the assistance of the US Attorney's Office for the Western District of Washington, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Options Regulatory Surveillance Authority, and Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

Monday, May 25, 2015

Effective Regulatory Oversight and Investor Protection Requires Better Information

Effective Regulatory Oversight and Investor Protection Requires Better Information

SEC CHARGES BHP BILLITON WITH VIOLATING FOREIGN CORRUPT PRACTICES ACT

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged global resources company BHP Billiton with violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) when it sponsored the attendance of foreign government officials at the Summer Olympics.

BHP Billiton agreed to pay a $25 million penalty to settle the SEC’s charges.

An SEC investigation found that BHP Billiton failed to devise and maintain sufficient internal controls over its global hospitality program connected to the company’s sponsorship of the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing.  BHP Billiton invited 176 government officials and employees of state-owned enterprises to attend the Games at the company’s expense, and ultimately paid for 60 such guests as well as some spouses and others who attended along with them.  Sponsored guests were primarily from countries in Africa and Asia, and they enjoyed three- and four-day hospitality packages that included event tickets, luxury hotel accommodations, and sightseeing excursions valued at $12,000 to $16,000 per package.

“BHP Billiton footed the bill for foreign government officials to attend the Olympics while they were in a position to help the company with its business or regulatory endeavors,” said Andrew Ceresney, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement.  “BHP Billiton recognized that inviting government officials to the Olympics created a heightened risk of violating anti-corruption laws, yet the company failed to implement sufficient internal controls to address that heightened risk.

According to the SEC’s order instituting a settled administrative proceeding, BHP Billiton required business managers to complete a hospitality application form for any individuals they sought to invite to the Olympics, including government officials.  However, the company did not clearly communicate to employees that no one outside the business unit submitting the application would review and approve each invitation.  BHP Billiton failed to provide employees with any specific training on how to complete forms or evaluate bribery risks of the invitations.  Due to these and other failures, a number of the hospitality applications were inaccurate or incomplete, and BHP Billiton extended Olympic invitations to government officials connected to pending contract negotiations or regulatory dealings such as the company’s efforts to obtain access rights.

“A ‘check the box’ compliance approach of forms over substance is not enough to comply with the FCPA,” said Antonia Chion, Associate Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. “Although BHP Billiton put some internal controls in place around its Olympic hospitality program, the company failed to provide adequate training to its employees and did not implement procedures to ensure meaningful preparation, review, and approval of the invitations.”

The SEC’s order finds that BHP Billiton violated Sections 13(b)(2)(A) and 13(b)(2)(B) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.  The settlement, in which the company neither admits nor denies the SEC’s findings, reflects BHP Billiton’s remedial efforts and cooperation with the SEC’s investigation and requires the company to report to the SEC on the operation of its FCPA and anti-corruption compliance program for a one-year period.

The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Dmitry Lukovsky and Devon Leppink Staren, and the case was supervised by Alec Koch.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Department of Justice’s Fraud Section, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Australian Federal Police.