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

Saturday, October 26, 2013

SEC OFFICIAL'S REMARKS TO INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS COUNCIL ANNUAL FALL MEETING

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
Remarks to the Independent Directors Council Annual Fall Meeting
 Norm Champ
Director, Division of Investment Management
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
Chicago, IL

Oct. 22, 2013

Good afternoon.  Thank you, Susan, for your kind introduction, and thank you for inviting me to speak at the Independent Directors Council Conference today.  Before I continue, let me remind you that the views I express are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Commission, any of the Commissioners, or any of my colleagues on the staff of the Commission.[1]

It is a privilege to appear before a group that is so important to the strength and integrity of the fund industry.  Independent directors have significant responsibilities, and it requires tremendous effort and time on your part to do your job well.  I applaud your efforts to learn from the professionals who are participating in this conference.  The insights of the panels you heard yesterday and this morning, and those you will hear after lunch will provide valuable information.

The importance of mutual funds in the lives of American investors is clear.  Mutual funds hold close to $14 trillion of the hard earned savings of over 53 million American households.[2]  The majority of Americans access the markets through mutual funds.  They invest in funds, and hope their investments will grow, for many reasons -- to make a down payment on a house, to save for a college education, and ultimately to pay for a retirement.

The Commission’s mission in this landscape is clear.  It is charged with protecting investors, ensuring fair and orderly markets, and promoting capital formation.  Every one of us in the Division of Investment Management takes seriously how our work fits into that mission.  Indeed, our mission statement was drafted with the help of the entire Division.  In drafting our mission statement, we wanted to determine how our efforts fit in the overall SEC mission.  And we agreed that we work to protect investors, promote informed investment decisions, and facilitate appropriate innovation in investment products and services through regulating the asset management industry.  As I consider the Division’s mission, I see common themes to our mission in the role that independent directors play.  Although you do not regulate the asset management industry, you are first and foremost “independent watchdogs.”  As watchdogs, you oversee funds to protect the shareholders you serve.  You also help facilitate innovation in new products that are designed to meet investor needs.  And you monitor the information your funds provide that helps investors make informed decisions.

Today I want to talk about our common purpose, and how we can work together to advance it.  Specifically, I will talk about the key role communication can play in helping us collaborate to protect investors.  First, I will focus on your role in overseeing funds and how it complements ours at the Commission.  Then I will discuss developments in our efforts to oversee the industry.  Finally, I will highlight how we are striving to improve communication with you to support the mission that we share.

The Role of Independent Directors

Like any corporate director, mutual fund directors must abide by the duties they owe to shareholders under state law.  That is, they are subject to the state law duty of care and the duty of loyalty.[3]  The duty of care requires independent directors to act with the care that an ordinarily prudent person in a similar position would use under similar circumstances.[4]  In satisfying the duty of care, directors should be well informed.  They also should base their decisions on reasonable diligence.[5]  Your duty includes overseeing corporate management and overseeing service providers.[6]   Your oversight includes asking questions when there are red flags.[7]

Under the duty of loyalty, a director must place the best interests of the corporation and its shareholders before his or her own interests or those of anyone else, whether it is a person or an organization.[8]  As the Delaware Supreme Court has stated, “[a] director cannot act loyally towards the corporation unless she acts in the good faith belief that her actions are in the corporation’s best interest.”[9]  Directors stand in a fiduciary relationship to the corporation and its shareholders.[10]  This relationship requires directors not only to protect the interests of the corporation and its shareholders, but also to refrain from doing anything that would cause injury to the corporation.[11]

In fulfilling their obligations, mutual fund directors must apply those general state law principles in the context of the specific responsibilities and restrictions imposed under the federal law.[12]  Federal law doesn’t generally preempt state laws that govern the powers of corporate directors.  But federal law does preempt state law if the state law permits action that federal law prohibits, or if the application of state law would be inconsistent with the federal policy underlying the federal cause of action.[13]  Because of the “extensive layering” of federal regulation under the Investment Company Act, “fund directors must, as a practical matter, consider their responsibilities under state law as inextricably linked to those under federal law.”[14]

Under the Investment Company Act, as independent directors, you have express duties in the governance of mutual funds.  These responsibilities arise because mutual funds are formed and operate so differently from other corporations.  As you well know, conflicts are inherent in a fund’s structure.  The potential for abuses are ever present because the fund is organized by a sponsor -- an investment adviser -- whose primary loyalty and financial interests lie outside the fund, and because third parties provide all the services that allow the fund to operate, including investment management, distribution and custody.

Congress gave fund directors, and particularly independent directors, specific responsibilities to address the conflicts of interest that arise because of the way funds are formed and operate.  Under the Investment Company Act, you are the “independent watchdogs” for shareholder interests by being a check on management.  You address the potential for abuse that accompanies those conflicts of interest.

Your responsibilities under the Act flow from the same underlying purpose as do your duties under state law -- to protect the fund’s shareholders.  The purpose underlying the Commission’s responsibilities is the same.  To achieve our common mission of protecting investors, we both oversee funds, but in different ways.  While you are on the front lines overseeing the funds you serve, we are monitoring the entire fund industry.

Division Improvement Initiatives

As the investment landscape changes, with evolving investor needs and new products designed to meet those needs, we as regulators are challenged every day -- to provide effective oversight and to protect investors.  And in the Division, we are working to meet those challenges.  We are focusing our energy, trying to become smarter, more strategic and more targeted.

One area where we have spent a lot of time focusing our energy is on rulemaking initiatives.  To ensure that we are allocating our resources wisely, over the past year, we have taken a fresh look at policy initiatives with a view to analyzing those matters based on four factors:  First, the risk to be mitigated; Second, the urgency associated with a particular initiative; Third the potential impact of an initiative on investors, registrants, capital formation, efficient markets, and the Division’s and the SEC’s operational efficiency; and Fourth, the resources associated with a policy initiative.  We’re looking at factors that we believe would further the SEC’s mission as well as the impact that various regulatory initiatives would have on investors, capital formation, and efficient markets. The analysis has helped to inform the Chairman, in collaboration with the Commissioners, in her determination of which regulatory priorities the Commission will pursue.

I am pleased to report that we have completed the first of the priorities that we identified early this year.  In April, the Commission adopted the “Identity Theft Red Flags Rules” -- rules to detect and prevent theft of the identities of mutual fund investors and clients of asset managers.[15]  I want to mention two other regulatory projects that the staff is focused on now.  The first is additional money market fund reform.  As I’m sure you know, the Commission proposed additional money market fund reforms in June.[16]  The comment period officially closed on September 17, although we continue to receive comments.  The staff is currently reviewing and analyzing the more than 1300 letters we have received to date.

Another rulemaking initiative we’re focused on involves ETFs.  In 2008, the Commission proposed a rule that would basically codify certain exemptive relief that we routinely grant for these funds.[17]  The proposed exemptive rule would have allowed certain ETFs to launch without having to file an exemptive application -- a process that, while important for novel products, can be costly and time-consuming.  If ETFs of new sponsors could come to market without having to obtain their own exemptive relief, the Division could reallocate staff resources from the review of these “plain vanilla” applications to more novel applications.  The Division is considering how to advance consideration of this type of ETF rule.

In our efforts to work smarter, we also focused on the Division as a whole.  During the past year, we began a process to better understand our strengths and areas for improvement.  Enhanced communication and collaboration are key elements of that initiative.  We gathered input from inside the Division as well as from our colleagues throughout the Commission.  We identified and prioritized issues confronting the Division and created teams of managers and staff to address these issues.  These teams have made recommendations, and I am pleased at the number of creative ideas that were generated.  As a result, we have implemented a number of initiatives, which are designed to – First, encourage an inclusive collaborative working environment within IM, across the Commission, and with outside stakeholders.  Second, increase information and knowledge sharing.  And third, provide transparency into our work processes.

An important tool in our efforts to increase communication and collaboration is our newly created Risk and Examinations Office, or “REO.”  REO supports the Division’s work primarily through two functions.  REO is a multi-disciplinary office staffed with analysts with strong quantitative backgrounds, along with examiners, lawyers and accountants.  REO maintains an industry monitoring program that provides ongoing financial analysis of the investment management industry.  In particular, REO is charged with monitoring activities of investment companies, investment advisers and investment products.  REO intends to conduct rigorous quantitative and qualitative financial analysis of the investment management industry, with a particular focus on strategically important investment advisers and funds.  The REO monitoring program’s work includes analysis of the information the industry provides through various regulatory reports, including Form ADV, the form that investment advisers use to register with the Commission, Form PF, the form that certain investment advisers to private funds use to report risk data, and Form N-MFP, the reporting form that money market funds use to report their portfolio holdings and other key information.  REO also draws on industry information from third party providers.  In addition, REO conducts an examination program that gathers additional information from the investment management industry to inform the Division’s policy making.  Although REO may conduct its own exams, where practical, REO will join examiners from the Commission’s Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations (OCIE) on their examinations of firms.  So far all REO exams have been in association with OCIE.

All of REO’s work will inform the initiatives to which the Division devotes resources and will help inform the rules we are drafting.

I am excited at the prospect that REO can help the staff to be proactive and get out in front of new industry trends, rather than reacting to past practices.  We hope to use the work of REO to make our oversight more efficient and effective.  REO represents a new area of focus for the Division of Investment Management, and I expect REO to complement the work of the SEC as a whole.

I also believe that we can make REO even more effective with enhanced information.  We are working to do this in two ways.  First, we are seeking to be more in tune with industry developments and investors’ experiences.  This effort involves getting a better and more first-hand understanding of the workings of the investment management industry through meeting with fund boards and senior fund management.  I will talk more about this in a moment.

Second, we are working to enhance REO and the Division’s ability to collect and analyze data.  As you know, as part of the money market fund reforms adopted by the SEC in 2010, we now receive monthly data on money market fund portfolio holdings through Form N-MFP.  This new data has been extremely valuable.  We are able to use it to monitor trends, identify outliers and better inform our rule-writing efforts.  What we don’t have, however, is similar information on other mutual funds, closed-end funds and ETFs.  Instead, we have a hodgepodge of data collection and reporting forms with outdated technology behind them.  These forms provide only a patchwork of data that does not tell us detail about mutual funds but often allows rounding and summary information.  That is why Division staff is undertaking an initiative to consider potential ways to streamline the fund reporting forms and develop reporting for funds other than money market funds that could give us timely and accurate information about their operations and portfolio holdings.

In addition to our focus on communication within the Division, we are working on better communication with our colleagues throughout the Commission.  For example, we have worked intentionally towards better coordination and cooperation with other offices in connection with major initiatives, doing this as an integral part of the process, rather than a late stage check-in with another office after the essential work on the matter has been completed.  This involves comparing notes with others on our initiatives early and often, and seeking meaningful substantive input at all stages of a major undertaking like a rulemaking.

We are also working to enhance our communications with the outside.  To further this goal, we are issuing guidance updates in addition to our traditional no-action and interpretive letters.  A recent example that may be of interest to fund directors addresses the merger of two affiliated exchange traded funds – a transaction that is generally not covered in the exemptive orders that the Commission issues to ETFs and their advisers in response to applications.  The guidance provides staff views regarding such a merger that is executed in accordance with the Commission’s exemptive rule permitting fund mergers and where all applicable disclosure and other requirements are met.[18]

The staff also has issued guidance on complying with the representations and conditions of exemptive orders issued to funds and advisers.  The staff noted that funds risk violating the federal securities laws if they fail to comply with the conditions and representations in their orders.  The guidance observed one way to address those risks, and offered approaches on how a fund’s compliance program might address conditions relating to board of directors’ review.[19]

The staff’s guidance and issues of interest are posted on the Division’s recently redesigned website.  They are easy to find on the Guidance Updates section, which we are using to get more information out quickly.  In addition, the IM website has a section that highlights the Division’s current news, which makes it easy to find the most recent guidance.

Communication and Support on Fund Governance

I have just outlined several ways in which we are working toward continuous improvement in the Division, including how we oversee funds.  As independent directors, you have a special perspective that makes your oversight different from but complementary to ours.  You are monitoring the funds you serve rather than the entire industry, and you best understand those funds.  You know the funds’ investment objectives and thus the shareholders’ expectations.  You scrutinize the funds’ advisory contracts and fees.  You oversee fund distributions, the valuation and pricing of fund shares, custody arrangements, securities lending, and many other fund activities.  You confer regularly with fund management.  You are on the front lines, seeing new developments and troubleshooting problems as they arise.  As a result of all your interactions, you are closer to the needs of investors than we can be and you are better positioned to understand how best to serve their interests.  Just as I expect the Commission will benefit from the work that REO will do, I believe that we already benefit from the work of independent directors.  And to help you be the most effective in your work, we want to do what we can to support you.

Our interest in this collaboration is not new.  The Division and the Commission have considered fund governance and have engaged with independent directors on how to maximize their value over many years.  For example, more than twenty years ago, in 1992, the staff reviewed the role of independent directors.  It concluded that the governance model embodied in the Investment Company Act is sound, and that the “watchdog” function you perform has served investors well at minimal cost.[20]  But the staff also recognized that independent directors faced increasing responsibilities, and so it made recommendations, many of which were adopted by the Commission, to reduce those responsibilities that involved more ritual than substance.

Several years later, in 1999, the Commission held a roundtable devoted to examining the role of independent directors.  Many recommendations emerged from the roundtable on ways to improve the mutual fund governance structure.  Following the roundtable, the industry and the Commission both worked to enhance the role of independent directors.  In June 1999, the ICI’s Advisory Group on Best Practices for Fund Directors published a report identifying best practices for fund boards to enhance the independence and effectiveness of investment company directors.[21] And I note the success of that effort because by 2003, a significant portion of mutual funds had followed all or most of the recommendations of that report.[22]  In November 1999, the Commission proposed rule changes, which it adopted in 2001, “designed to reaffirm the important role that independent directors play in protecting fund investors, strengthen their hand in dealing with fund management, reinforce their independence, and provide investors with greater information to assess the directors’ independence.”[23]

More recently in 2007, one of my predecessor’s as Division Director began a series of meetings designed to determine what the Commission and its staff could do to enable fund directors to be more effective in their oversight role.  We gained valuable insights in these meetings, and learned how we might be able to assist directors.  For example, in response to concerns we heard, the Division issued guidance on approaches a fund board could take regarding determinations they must make when they perform their quarterly review of certain transactions permitted under our exemptive rules.[24]  

This type of communication, I believe, is essential to a successful collaboration.  I mentioned earlier that the Division has been reaching out to boards of directors and senior fund management.  Our meetings with the industry have started with the largest or most strategically important funds.  We have identified a number of potential firms, and at this point we have conducted a number of visits.  Our outreach will extend to other funds as well.  In these discussions, we want to learn from directors and fund management about specific fund risks and how they manage those risks.  We also want to know what you perceive to be the critical risks to the industry as a whole.  I have been joined by REO in these meetings because we believe this information will further inform REO’s work, and REO’s work in turn will inform the initiatives to which the Division devotes resources and the rules we are drafting.

I think that the conversations between us can be the most productive when we can speak with you and your fund management directly and get to know you better.  To illustrate our commitment to the process, we have met with fund management and boards at their headquarters.

These meetings allow us to obtain a first-hand view of the systems, controls, personnel, and even a sense of the culture of an individual firm.  And we find we can learn more about a firm’s business operations by seeing the board and fund management at their offices.  We will be better regulators to the extent that we better understand the workings of the industry we regulate.  And if you and fund managers see our willingness to reach out and to listen, we hope you and they will respond with increased cooperation and more effective communication.

The discussions we have had with fund management and directors to date have already borne fruit.  Boards have shared with us their different perspectives on a variety of issues, including risk management, valuation and compliance, and how those perspectives inform many of their fund practices.  Those perspectives help us understand the different methods that might be brought to bear in addressing pressing fund issues and implementing compliance programs.  And in turn, if it’s appropriate we are sharing the good practices that we learn about from one firm with other funds.

In addition, we encourage directors to share with us ways in which the Division could help them be more effective.  If we hear ideas in our meetings on where you need additional guidance or where you have uncertainty about the law, we will work diligently to get the appropriate guidance out there.

We will continue to seek ways in which we can provide guidance or otherwise assist fund boards, and particularly independent directors, in fulfilling their duties.  This is one way we can better serve the public and industry participants.

I look forward to future meetings as our initiative advances.  I am particularly glad to have an opportunity today to share views with you and receive feedback.  In addition, as I have mentioned, the Division’s door is open, and we want to hear from you what we can do to help make you more effective.  Working together, we are better positioned to accomplish our common mission of protecting investors.

Thank you for your time today.


[1]              The Securities and Exchange Commission, as a matter of policy, disclaims responsibility for any private publication or statement by any of its employees.  The views expressed herein are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Commission or of the author’s colleagues on the staff of the Commission.

[2]              See Investment Company Institute (“ICI”), Trends in Mutual Fund Investing August 2013 ( http://www.ici.org/research/stats/trends/trends_08_13 ); ICI, Profile of Mutual Fund Shareholders 2013, available at ( http://www.ici.org/pdf/rpt_13_profiles.pdf ).

[3]              Edward Brodsky & M. Patricia Adamski, Law of Corporate Officers and Directors:Rights, Duties and Liabilities 6 (2013).

[4]              Graham v. Allis-Chalmers Mfg. Col, 188 A.2d 125, 130 (Del. Ch. 1963); see also Shenker v. Laureate Educ. Inc., 983 A.2d 408, 419 (Md. 2009).

[5]              See Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805, 812 (Del. 1984).

[6]              See Robert A. Robertson, Fund Governance: Legal Duties of Investment Company Directors § 2.04[1] (2011) (“Fund Governance”).

[7]              See id., at § 2-04[2][b](ii); see also Graham, 188 A.2d, at130.

[8]              See, e.g., Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 634 A.2d 345, 361 (Del. 1993), modified on reargument, 636 A.2d 956 (Del. 1994).

[9]              Guttman v. Huang, 823 A.2d 492, n.34 (Del. Ch. 2003).

[10]            Guth v. Loft, 5 A.2d 503, 510 (Del. 1939).

[11]            Id.

[12]            Burks v. Lasker, 441 U.S. 471, 486 (1979).

[13]            Id. at 479.

[14]            Fund Governance, supra note 6, § 2.01.

[15]            Identity Theft Red Flags Rules, Investment Company Act Release No. 30456 (Apr. 10, 2013), 78 FR 23637 (Apr. 19, 2013), available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/final/2013/34-69359.pdf.

[16]            Money Market Fund Reform; Amendments to Form PF, Investment Company Act Release No. 30551 (June 5, 2013), 78 FR 36834 (June 19, 2013), available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/2013/33-9408.pdf.

[17]            Exchange-Traded Funds, Investment Company Act Release No. 28193 (Mar. 11, 2008), 73 FR 14618 (Mar. 18, 2008), available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/2008/33-8901.pdf.

[18]            Merger of Two Exchange-Traded Funds, IM Guidance Update No. 2013-06 (Sept. 2013), available at http://www.sec.gov/divisions/investment/guidance/im-guidance-2013-06.pdf.

[19]            Compliance with Exemptive Orders, IM Guidance Update No. 2013-02 (May 2013), available at http://www.sec.gov/divisions/investment/guidance/im-guidance-2013-02.pdf.

[20]            Division of Investment Management, Protecting Investors:  A Half Century of Investment Company Regulation 253 (1992), available at http://www.sec.gov/divisions/investment/guidance/icreg50-92.pdf.

[21]            Investment Company Institute, Report of the Advisory Group on Best Practices for Fund Directors:  Enhancing a Culture of Independence and Effectiveness (June 24, 1999), available at http://www.idc.org/pdf/rpt_best_practices.pdf .

[22]            See Richard M. Phillips, Mutual Fund Independent Directors: A Model for Corporate America?, Investment Company Institute Perspective, Aug. 2003, at 3, available at http://www.ici.org/pdf/per09-04.pdf .

[23]            Role of Independent Directors of Investment Companies, Investment Company Act Release No. 24816 (Jan. 2, 2001), at paragraph preceding section I [66 FR 3759 (Jan. 16, 2001)].

[24]            See Staff Letter to the Independent Directors Council and the Mutual Fund Directors Forum (Nov. 2, 2010), available at http://www.sec.gov/divisions/investment/noaction/2010/idc-mfdf110210.pdf.

SEC CHARGES MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY COMPANY WITH VIOLATING FCPA

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged a Michigan-based medical technology company with violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) when subsidiaries in five different countries bribed doctors, health care professionals, and other government-employed officials in order to obtain or retain business.

An SEC investigation found that Stryker Corporation’s subsidiaries in Argentina, Greece, Mexico, Poland, and Romania made illicit payments totaling approximately $2.2 million that were incorrectly described as legitimate expenses in the company’s books and records.  Descriptions varied from a charitable donation to consulting and service contracts, travel expenses, and commissions.  Stryker made approximately $7.5 million in illicit profits as a result of the improper payments.

Stryker has agreed to pay more than $13.2 million to settle the SEC’s charges.

“Stryker’s misconduct involved hundreds of improper payments over a number of years during which the company’s internal controls were fatally flawed,” said Andrew M. Calamari, director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office.  “Companies that allow corruption to occur by failing to implement robust compliance programs will not be allowed to profit from their misconduct.”

The SEC’s order instituting settled administrative proceedings details improper payments by employees of Stryker’s subsidiaries as far back as 2003.  They used third parties to make the payments in order to win or keep lucrative contracts for the sale of Stryker’s medical technology products.  For example, in January 2006, Stryker’s subsidiary in Mexico directed a law firm to pay approximately $46,000 to a Mexican government employee in order to secure the winning bid on a contract.  The result was $1.1 million in profits for Stryker.  The subsidiary reimbursed the Mexico-based law firm for the bribe and booked the payment as a legitimate legal expense.  However, no legal services were actually provided and the law firm simply acted as a funnel to pay the bribe.

According to the SEC’s order, Stryker’s subsidiary in Greece made a purported “donation” of nearly $200,000 in 2007 to a public university in Greece to fund a laboratory that was a pet project of a public hospital doctor.  In exchange for the payment, the doctor agreed to provide business to Stryker.

The SEC’s investigation also found that Stryker’s subsidiaries bribed foreign officials by paying their expenses for trips that lacked any legitimate business purpose.  For example, in exchange for the promise of future business from the director of a public hospital in Poland, Stryker paid travel costs for the director and her husband in May 2004.  This included a six-night stay at a New York City hotel, attendance at two Broadway shows, and a five-day trip to Aruba.

The SEC’s order requires Stryker to pay disgorgement of $7,502,635, prejudgment interest of $2,280,888, and a penalty of $3.5 million.  Without admitting or denying the allegations, Stryker agreed to cease and desist from committing or causing any violations and any future violations of Sections 13(b)(2)(A) and 13(b)(2)(B) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

The SEC’s investigation was led by Sharon Binger and Justin Alfano of the New York Regional Office with significant assistance from the Enforcement Division’s FCPA Unit.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

MARK CUBAN FOUND NOT LIABLE FOR INSIDER TRADING

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Jury Finds Mark Cuban Not Liable for Insider Trading

On October 16, 2013, after a three-week trial, a nine-person federal jury found Mark Cuban not liable for insider trading. On November 17, 2008, the Commission filed a Complaint against Cuban alleging that he engaged in insider trading in securities issued by Mamma.com in violation of Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder.

SEC ANNOUNCES FORMER SECURITIES PROFESSIONAL WILL PAY FINE AND SENTENCED TO PRISON

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Former Securities Professional Aleksey Koval Settles Insider Trading Case

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced that on October 7, 2013, the Honorable Alvin K. Hellerstein of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York entered a final judgment against Aleksey P. Koval a/k/a Alexei Koval, formerly a registered securities professional. Koval had been charged with involvement in a long-running insider trading scheme in which a former UBS investment banker tipped Koval about eleven impending acquisitions, tender offers, or other business combinations. Koval traded on the basis of that information and tipped another couple, who also participated in the trading.

The Commission's complaint, filed on March 24, 2010, alleged that, from at least July 2005 through February 2009, Koval participated in an insider trading ring that netted over $1 million in illicit profits. According to the complaint, Koval traded securities in each of the impending corporate transactions based on material, nonpublic information which he obtained from Igor Poteroba, an investment banker in UBS's Global Healthcare Group. Pursuant to the insider trading scheme as described in the complaint, Koval also tipped his friend, defendant Alexander Vorobiev. In a parallel criminal proceeding, Koval pleaded guilty to three counts of securities fraud, was ordered to pay a forfeiture of $1,414,290, and was sentenced to twenty-six months of imprisonment.

Koval consented to the entry of a judgment that permanently enjoins him from violating Sections 10(b) and 14(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rules 10b-5 and Rule 14e-3 thereunder. In addition, the final judgment found Koval liable for disgorgement in the amount of $1,086,457, representing profits obtained as a result of the conduct alleged in the Complaint, together with prejudgment interest in the amount of $159,620, with those amounts deemed satisfied by the criminal forfeiture order. The Commission determined not to seek a civil penalty in light of Koval’s term of imprisonment.

Separately, the Commission today issued an administrative order that bars Koval from association with any investment adviser, broker, dealer, municipal securities dealer, or transfer agent, and from participating in any offering of a penny stock, based on his criminal conviction in the parallel proceeding.


Wednesday, October 23, 2013

SEC ANNOUNCES JURY VERDICT AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS IN OFFERING FRAUD CASE

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
SEC Obtains Jury Verdict in Its Favor Against All Defendants On All Counts

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced today that, on October 10, 2013, a jury in the Eastern District of Tennessee, Knoxville Division, returned a verdict against AIC, Inc., Community Bankers Securities, LLC, and Nicholas D. Skaltsounis on all counts.  Defendant AIC was a financial services holding company for three broker-dealers and an investment adviser based in Richmond, Virginia.  Defendant Community Bankers Securities was one of the subsidiary broker-dealers.  Defendant Skaltsounis was the founder, President, and Chief Executive Officer of AIC and Community Bankers Securities.  The Commission’s complaint, which was filed in April 2011, alleged that Skaltsounis devised and orchestrated an offering fraud by offering and selling millions of dollars of AIC promissory notes and stock.

The complaint alleged that, from at least January 2006 through November 2009, Skaltsounis, directly and through registered representatives associated with Community Bankers Securities, offered and sold AIC promissory notes and stock to numerous investors across multiple states, many of whom were elderly, unsophisticated brokerage customers of CB Securities.  The Defendants misrepresented and omitted material information to investors relating to, among other things, the safety and risk associated with the investments, the rates of return on the investments, and how AIC would use the proceeds of the investments.  AIC and its subsidiaries were never profitable.  AIC earned de minimis revenue, and its subsidiaries did not earn sufficient revenue to meet their expenses.  The Defendants used money raised from new investors to pay back principal and returns to existing investors.  

Prior to trial, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee granted the Commission’s motion for partial summary judgment and found in favor of the Commission on its claims against AIC, Community Bankers Securities, and Skaltsounis under Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act of 1933.  The court also found in favor of the Commission on its claims against three relief defendants, Allied Beacon Partners, Inc. (f/k/a Waterford Investor Services, Inc.), Advent Securities, Inc., and Allied Beacon Wealth Management, LLC (f/k/a CBS Advisors, LLC), all of which were subsidiaries of AIC and all of which received proceeds from the Defendants’ illegal and fraudulent conduct.  In addition, prior to trial, two co-defendants, John B. Guyette, of Greeley, Colorado, and John R. Graves, formerly of Pensacola, Florida, and now incarcerated at the Federal Detention Center at Oakdale, Louisiana, both of whom were participants in the scheme, entered into settlement agreements with the Commission.  A final judgment ordering injunctive relief, disgorgement of ill-gotten gains, and civil penalties was entered against Guyette, and a final judgment ordering injunctive relief and civil penalties was entered against Graves.

At the conclusion of the almost three-week trial, the jury returned a verdict for the Commission and against Defendants AIC, Community Bankers Securities, and Skaltsounis on all of the remaining claims.  In particular, the jury found in favor of the Commission on its claims under Section 17(a) of the Securities Act and under Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder.  In addition, the jury found in favor of the Commission on its claims against Defendants AIC and Community Bankers Securities under Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act and against Skaltsounis under Section 20(e) of the Exchange Act.

The trial team from the Commission’s Philadelphia Regional Office consisted of trial attorneys Michael J. Rinaldi, John V. Donnelly III, G. Jeffrey Boujoukos, and Scott A. Thompson and trial paralegal Nichelle Pridgen.


Tuesday, October 22, 2013

SEC CHARGES DIEBOLD, INC. WITH FOREIGN CORRUPT PRACTICES ACT VIOLATIONS IN CHINA, INDONESIA AND RUSSIA

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
SEC Charges Diebold with FCPA Violations in China, Indonesia, and Russia

The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged Diebold, Inc. ("Diebold"), an Ohio corporation that is a global provider of ATMs and bank security systems, with violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act ("FCPA") for lavishing international leisure trips, entertainment, and other improper gifts on foreign officials to obtain and retain lucrative business with government owned banks in China and Indonesia, and for paying other bribes in connection with the sale of ATMs to private banks in Russia. The SEC's complaint, filed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, alleges that Diebold paid approximately $3 million in illicit payments in these countries from 2005 through 2010. To settle the SEC's charges, Diebold has agreed to consent to final judgment, which is subject to court approval, ordering a permanent injunction, payment of $22,972,942 in disgorgement and prejudgment interest, and appointment of independent compliance monitor.

As alleged in the SEC's complaint, from 2005 through 2010, through its Chinese subsidiary Diebold Financial Equipment Company (China), Ltd., Diebold provided international leisure trips and entertainment to officials of government owned banks in China. This included trips to Europe, with stays in Paris, Amsterdam, Florence, Rome and other European cities, and trips to the United States, with travel to the Grand Canyon, Napa Valley, Disneyland, Las Vegas, and other popular tourist destinations. The SEC alleges that Diebold spent approximately $1.6 million on leisure trips, entertainment, and other improper gifts for government bank officials in China. During this same time period, the SEC alleges, Diebold spent over $147,000 on leisure trips and entertainment for officials of government banks in Indonesia. As alleged in the complaint, Diebold executives in charge of the company's operations in Asia knew of these improper payments, which were falsely recorded in Diebold's books and records as training or other legitimate business expenses.

The SEC's complaint further alleges that from 2005 through 2008, through its Russian subsidiary Diebold Self-Service Ltd., Diebold paid bribes on the sale of ATMs to private banks in Russia. As alleged in the complaint, these bribes totaled approximately $1.2 million, and were funneled through a Diebold distributor in Russia. According to the complaint, Diebold's Russian subsidiary executed phony service contracts with its distributor to hide and falsely record the payments as legitimate business expenses.

The SEC's complaint charges Diebold with violating Sections 30A, 13(b)(2)(A), and 13(b)(2)(B) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Diebold has agreed to consent to a final judgment that permanently enjoins the company from future violations of these provisions, orders Diebold to pay $22,972,942 in disgorgement and prejudgment interest, and requires the appointment of an independent compliance monitor. In a parallel criminal proceeding, Diebold has agreed to pay a $25.2 million criminal fine as part of a deferred prosecution agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice.

The SEC's investigation was led by Devon A. Brown and Brian O. Quinn with assistance from Jennifer Baskin of the FCPA Unit and Kristen Dieter. The SEC thanks the U.S. Department of Justice's Fraud Section, the United States Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Ohio, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, for their assistance in this matter.