September 29, 2009

Texas Securities Fraud: Investment Firm Employee Accused of Making $8.6 Million from Dell Insider Trading

The Securities and Exchange Commission is charging trader Reza Saleh with Texas securities fraud. The agency is accusing the Perot Systems employee of buying call options contracts just two weeks before Dell announced it was acquiring the services company. The SEC says that as a result of insider trading, Saleh made $8.6 million in illegal profits.

Call options allow a buyer to purchase stock at a certain price on a specific day in the future. Right after Dell announced the tender offer on September 21, Reza sold his call options. By this time, Perot Systems’s stock price had gone up by about 65%.

Soon after, the Options Regulatory Surveillance Authority identified Saleh as a suspicious trader. He also allegedly told a Perot Systems director that he bought the options because he knew Dell was going to make the announcement.

Filed in federal court in Dallas, the SEC complaint alleges that Saleh bought 9,332 Perot Systems call options contracts between September 4 and 18, 2009. The call options contracts would expire in October 2009 and January 2010.

The SEC is accusing Saleh of violating the Securities Exchange Act of 1934’s anti-fraud provisions. The SEC wants to place an emergency freeze on Saleh’s assets. It also is seeking a preliminary injunction and a final judgment enjoining the trader from violating relevant provisions of federal securities laws in the future. The agency wants Saleh to pay financial penalties in addition to disgorgement of ill-gotten gains.

Dell announced it was purchasing Perot Systems for $3.9 billion or $30/share in cash. Dell’s tender offer is asking for outstanding Perot Class A common shares. The deal will likely close by the end of January 2010.

Related Web Resources:
SEC: Insider trading charges in Dell deal, CNN, September 24, 2009

SEC Charges Perot Company Employee in $8.6 Million Insider Trading Scheme, SEC.gov, September 23, 2009

Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Continue reading "Texas Securities Fraud: Investment Firm Employee Accused of Making $8.6 Million from Dell Insider Trading " »

September 28, 2009

UBS Securities, Citigroup Global Markets, and Deutsche Bank Securities Agree to FINRA Sanction Over Vonage IPO

Citigroup Global Markets, Deutsche Bank Securities, and UBS Securities have agreed to pay fines for Financial Industry Regulatory Authority sanctions over their handling of Vonage LLC stock's initial public offering in 2006. FINRA says that the firms’ failure to adequately supervise communications with customers cost investors hundreds of thousands of dollars. By agreeing to settle, none of the broker-dealers are agreeing to or denying wrongdoing.

The three firms acted as the Vonage offering’s lead underwriters. A “directed share program” was included. Clients used accounts with the broker-dealers to purchase about 4.2 million shares.

An external company designed and administered a Web site for DSP participants that the firms’ clients used to communicate about the IPO. According to the SRO, however, inadequate supervision and the failure to follow procedures regarding outside sourcing and directed share programs resulted in the broker-dealers being unable to respond appropriately or take effective action when certain clients obtained misinformation about their orders.

By the time customers were finally notified that shares were allocated to them, the Vonage stock price had dropped significantly compared to the offering price. In addition to paying the higher price, investors sustained financial losses when the stocks were sold.

UBS, Citigroup, and Deutsche Bank have agreed to fines totaling $845,000. UBS will pay a $150,000 fine and a maximum of $118,000 to 26 clients who are potentially eligible. In addition to its $175,000 fine, Citigroup will pay 284 potentially eligible customers a maximum of $250,000. Deutsche Bank will pay 59 potentially eligible clients a maximum of $52,000, plus its $100,000. Customers are to be compensated the difference between Vonage stock’s price when clients found out they had been allocated shares and the $17/share IPO price that they paid.


Related Web Resources:
FINRA Fines Citigroup Global Markets, UBS and Deutsche Bank $425,000, Orders Customer Restitution for Supervisory Failures in Vonage IPO, FINRA, September 22, 2009

Citi, UBS, Deutsche Fined Over Vonage IPO

Continue reading "UBS Securities, Citigroup Global Markets, and Deutsche Bank Securities Agree to FINRA Sanction Over Vonage IPO" »

September 27, 2009

Securitization of Life Insurance Settlements Might Lead to Next Financial Crisis, Say Lawmakers

House Financial Services capital markets subcommittee chairman Rep. Paul Kanjorski recently warned that unless “additional safeguards” are put in place, the growing securitization of life insurance settlements could lead to the next financial crisis. During a hearing on the issue, Kanjorski said regulators, Congress, and credit ratings agencies should have done a better job moderating the high demand for subprime mortgage backed securities. He says their failure to supervise contributed to the financial debacle.

Life settlements, also known as viaticals, are not securities, but they do fall under the purview of the Securities and Exchange Commission when they are pooled and put up for sale in the capital markets. They are, however, at this time not subject to a registration requirement and have been sold during private offerings. Because of this, the SEC only has limited authority over life settlements.

The agency has set up a task force to assess the issues involving life settlements. The task force will determine whether regulatory changes need to be made and if Congress should expand the SEC’s authority.

According to the SEC Division of Corporation’s associate director Paula Dubberly, life settlements investors need full disclosure so they can understand the risks that arise with the viaticals' securitization. The task force will examine the “tension” between the insured’s privacy rights and providing investors with this type of disclosure.

Credit Suisse's Life Finance Group global head Kurt Gearhart says that as only 35 states regulate life settlements, consumers are lacking protection in 15 states. National Association of Insurance Commissioners vice president Susan E. Voss, however, disagrees with Gearhart’s figures. He says there is some form of life settlement regulation in 45 states. Meantime, Life Partners Holdings Inc. chairman and chief executive officer Brian D. Pardo is calling for stronger federal regulation.

Related Web Resources:
AARP

Panel To Look At Life Settlement Securitization

Continue reading "Securitization of Life Insurance Settlements Might Lead to Next Financial Crisis, Say Lawmakers" »

September 24, 2009

Regions Bank Settles SEC Charges Over Latin American Investment Fraud Scam

Regions Bank has agreed to a $1 million fine to settle SEC allegations that it helped defraud some 14,000 investors. Most of the affected investors are based in Latin America.

According to the SEC, Regions Bank helped two unregistered broker-dealers, U.S. College Trust Corp. and U.S. Pension Trust Corp., commit securities fraud against Latin American investors.

Beginning October 2001, Regions Bank played the role of “trustee” to the broker-dealers’ investment plans. It continued to accept USPT clients until January 2008. The SEC contends that this affiliation with a US bank gave the securities fraud scheme an aura of “legitimacy” and became a big draw for Latin American investors.

The SEC says that by taking on the role of trustee, Regions Bank formed individual trust relationships with investors, processed client contributions, and bought mutual funds on their behalf.

Investor had the option of paying one lump sum or making yearly contributions. Investors were not notified until March 2006 that USPT deducted substantial chunks of investors’ contributions—up to 85% of initial contributions made by investors who took part in an annual plan and up to 18% of single contributions—and used the money to pay for commissions and other fees.

The SEC says that Regions Bank either knew or should have known about USPT’s deceptive sales practices. The Commission is accusing Regions Bank of dispatching representatives to Latin America to meet prospective investors and allowing USPT to use the bank’s name in marketing and promotional materials.

The $1 million penalty will be placed in a Fair Fund to compensate investment fraud victims. Regions bank has also agreed to a cease-and-desist order.


SEC charges Regions Bank for role in Latin American fraud scheme, Investment News, September 21, 2009

Read the SEC Complaint (PDF)

Continue reading "Regions Bank Settles SEC Charges Over Latin American Investment Fraud Scam" »

September 22, 2009

Bank of America’s Merrill Lynch unit agrees to $26.5 million national settlement stemming from Texas securities fraud claim

Following a Texas securities fraud claim that Bank of America's Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. allowed unregistered sales persons to sell securities, the Bank of America unit has agreed to pay $26.5 million as part of a national settlement over the allegations. The state of Texas’s portion of the settlement is $1.6 million. The other states that were part of the task force, led by the Texas State Securities Board, are Arizona, Colorado, Vermont, Missouri, Delaware, and New Hampshire.

Client associates who accept trade orders must be registered not just in their own state but also in the client’s state. Per the probe, the task force determined that Merrill did not have a supervisory system that was designed in a manner that made sure that associates were in compliance with registration requirements. The task force was investigating a tip, provided in May 2008 by a Merrill Lynch employee, that the company saved money on registration fees by allowing client associates to register only in their home state and in a neighboring state.

Last week, Merrill Lynch agreed to pay the state of Texas another $12.7 million over a Texas securities fraud cause involving auction-rate securities. The settlement ends the state’s probe into the broker-dealer’s handling of ARS and clients’ funds even as the market was collapsing.

The board determined that not only did Merrill Lynch not tell investors that the market could very well collapse, but also that the broker-dealer offered financial associates sales incentives to sell ARS despite knowing that the auction process could fail.

September has been a rough month for Bank of America and Merrill Lynch. On the same day that the Texas securities commissioner announced the $26.5 million settlement, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo accused high-level Bank of America Corp. executives of failing to reveal key information about its Merrill Lynch & Co. takeover. Cuomo is threatening to press charges. Bank of America, however, is calling Cuomo’s allegations “spurious.”

BofA's Merrill to pay US$26.5M in settlement on unregistered salespeople, AP/Yahoo, September 8, 2009

Bank of America Calls Cuomo’s Merrill Allegations ‘Spurious,' Bloomberg.com, September 10, 2009

Merrill Lynch pays $12.7M to settle Texas auction rate securities case, Taragana.com, September 14, 2009

Continue reading "Bank of America’s Merrill Lynch unit agrees to $26.5 million national settlement stemming from Texas securities fraud claim " »

September 21, 2009

Former Stifel Nicolaus and AG Edwards Stockbroker Sentenced to 21-Months in Prison for Investment Fraud Scam

A former broker who was fired from both AG Edwards, Inc.and Stifel Nicolaus & Co. has been ordered to serve a 21-month federal prison sentence for selling fraudulent investments to Stifel Nicolaus clients. Neil Rolla Harrison told clients that they were investing in commodities futures or the gold market when in fact the stockbroker was using their money to support his drinking and gambling habits.

A federal grand jury indicted the 54-year-old former broker last May. Harrison pleaded guilty to one count of mail fraud. He has been ordered to pay $91,303 in restitution.

It is not clear, however, whether the investment fraud victims will recoup their losses. One of his targets, 67-year-old Ralph Brock, says that because he has worked as a self-employed trucker for most of his life, the only retirement he had was the one he created through investing.

AG Edwards fired Harrison in 2005 after the broker-dealer discovered that he was borrowing money from clients. Stifel Nicolaus hired him soon after even though the broker-dealer knew that AG Edwards had fired him. Stifel Nicolaus fired Harrison when the thefts were discovered.

Brokers are entrusted with the responsibility of handling a client’s finances. Many investors seek the services of a stockbroker because they don’t have the knowledge and experience to make their own investments in a sound manner.

When a broker breaches that duty of care and money is lost it is usually the victims of securities fraud that suffer. This can be devastating—especially for the many clients who rely on their investments to get them through retirement or put their children through school. Any loss as a result of stockbroker fraud is unacceptable.

Related Web Resources:
Former stockbroker gets 21-month sentence, The Telegraph, September 18, 2009

Stifel broker gets jail time for scam, St. Louis Business Journal, September 18, 2009

United States Postal Inspection Service

Illinois Securities Department

Continue reading "Former Stifel Nicolaus and AG Edwards Stockbroker Sentenced to 21-Months in Prison for Investment Fraud Scam" »

September 16, 2009

Securities Fraud Lawsuit Against UBS AG Gets Added Steam with Employee Email Calling Collateralized Debt Obligations “Vomit”

UBS AG must post a $35.6 million bond, says Superior Court Judge John Blawie. Blawie says that hedge fund Pursuit Partners, LLC has sufficient evidence to pursue its securities fraud case claiming that the investment bank knew it was selling collateralized debt obligations that were toxic to institutional investors but did nothing to inform clients about the risks.

Blawie cited an e-mail written by a UBS employee that called the asset-backed securities “vomit.” Another e-mail noted that UBS was selling Pursuit CDOs that were “crap.”

The judge is letting the securities fraud complaint go forward without ruling on the case’s merits. Between July and October 2007, UBS sold the hedge fund CDOs valued at $40.5 million. Following the global credit crisis, there has been $1.7 trillion in losses and writedowns.

UBS employees marketed the CDOs to Pursuit while they were communicating with Moody’s Investors Services Inc. The credit-rating agency was tasked with reviewing UBS’s CDO investment grade ratings. Blawie says that the UBS employees found out after meeting with Moody’s that the CDOs would become “financial toxic waste.”

The securities fraud lawsuit claims that UBS new that Moody’s was going to change its rater’s methodology but that the investment bank continued to promote the CDOs as if the changes were not going to happen. When Moody’s tchanged its market-based formula to focus on where prices were going instead of current prices, the CDOs value immediately fell.

Pursuit contends that it suffered a $35.6 million loss as a result of UBS concealing the non-public data it had about the CDOs investment grade rating dropping. It also says that because UBS took two sides of a derivatives contract, the investment bank was able to liquidate the CDOs and did not sustain losses.

UBS denies the allegations and argues that Pursuit knew the risks that came with buying the CDOs. The investment bank claims that the hedge fund made the purchases at hugely discounted rates as high as 96%. UBS spokesperson said that one e-mail from Pursuit called the CDOs “sh__.”

Moody’s is also a defendant in the securities fraud lawsuit.

Related Web Resources:
Lawsuit Against UBS Resurfaces to Threaten Wall Street Itself, Seeking Alpha, September 15, 2009

UBS Hit by Another Lawsuit, Business Week, March 6, 2008

September 14, 2009

Morgan Keegan Hit with Large Penalty for Fouling Ex-NBA Star

Following a dispute that was resolved in arbitration, broker-dealer Morgan Keegan & Co. must pay former NBA player Horace Grant $1.46 million. The amount is the largest arbitration loss for Morgan Keegan to date. Morgan Keegan is the securities brokerage firm of Regions Financial Corp.

The award, issued by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, is for damages that Grant incurred because he invested in Morgan Keegan’s risky mutual funds that were involved in collateralized debt obligations connected to residential mortgages. Grant had originally sought $1.5 million for the damages he sustained.

There are still several hundred investment fraud lawsuits pending against the brokerage firm over mutual funds involving subprime mortgages that declined because the US housing market fell apart and loans defaulted. Up to 95% of the funds’ value has dissolved since the middle of 2007.

Green used to play for the Chicago Bull, the Los Angeles Lakers, the Seattle Supersonics, and the Orlando Magic. In his arbitration case, the former NBA basketball player contended that Morgan Keegan misrepresented the level of risk that came with the bond funds that he purchased.

Already, Morgan Keegan has lost a number of cases in 2009. Seven of the cases have cost the broker-dealer $3 million. Other professional athletes who have filed lawsuits against Morgan Keegan for losses that they say they sustained from the bond funds are Jerome Woods, formerly of the Kansas City Chiefs, and former St. Louis Cardinals baseball player Tim McCarver. Woods won $950,000 against the brokerage firm while McCarver resolved his claim for $100,000.

Our stockbroker fraud law firm represents numerous investors who have sued Morgan Keegan for misrepresenting risky investments as safer kinds of investments.


Related Web Resources:

Ex-NBA star wins $1.45M arbitration claim against Morgan Keegan, Investment News, September 14, 2009

Morgan Keegan ordered to pay former NBA star $1.4M, Memphis Business Journal, September 14, 2009

NFL retiree gets $950,000 for Morgan Keegan mutual fund losses, Commercial Appeal, April 14, 2009

McCarver Awarded $100K in Morgan Keegan Claim, Memphis Daily, February 26, 2009

Continue reading "Morgan Keegan Hit with Large Penalty for Fouling Ex-NBA Star" »

September 12, 2009

Texas Securities Commissioner, Appointed New President of Nationwide Association of Regulators, Seeks Additional Investigations into Wall Street Fraud

The incoming head of the North American Securities Administrators Association, Denise Voigt Crawford, is warning brokerage firms that more enforcement actions over Wall Street fraud are likely to follow. Crawford is also the Texas Securities Commissioner. She will formally assume her role as NASAA president on September 15.

In her new role, Crawford plans on playing a key role in the government’s plans for regulatory reform. She wants the states to have a more prominent position when it comes to regulatory oversight.

At this time, state regulators only supervise investment advisors that are managing assets of $25 million or below. She wants states to regulate investment advisors with assets as high as $100 million. Since most of these firms are located in regional areas, Crawford says it is easier for state regulators to oversee them.

NASAA represents all states securities regulators and has been pushing forward actions against broker-dealers ever since the auction-rate securities collapse in 2008. According to Crawford, NASAA can be credited with $60 billion in ARS that brokerages are repurchasing. The states have fined large broker-dealers about $597 million.

Crawford says that NASAA is continuing to examine the role that “downstream” firms played in the ARS market collapse. She says NASAA will try to figure out how to unfreeze investor assets that were purchased from firms such as Charles Schwab Corp.

NASAA does not want FINRA to expand the role it plays in investment advisor oversight. The self-regulatory organization now regulates Series 7 licensed registered reps, but not Series 65 licensed advisors.

Our Texas securities fraud law firm is working hard to help our clients recover their ARS that froze when the market collapsed. We continue to offer free case evaluations to potential clients whose ARS became frozen even after brokers told them that their securities were liquid like cash. Broker misconduct should not be tolerated. There are ways to recover your losses if you were the victim of investment fraud.

Related Web Resources:
New NASAA President: More Enforcement Actions to Come, Financial Planning

NASAA

Texas State Securities Board

September 10, 2009

SEC Warns Broker-Dealers to be Mindful of Their Recruiting Bonuses

Securities and Exchange Commission Head Mary Shapiro is warning broker-dealers to be careful of the recruiting tactics they employ—especially those involving recruiting bonuses. She cautioned that attractive compensation packages can compel registered representatives to watch out for their own self-interests over the interests of investors, resulting in acts of securities fraud. For example, Shapiro cautioned that a broker who knows that she or he will be given a larger compensation for meeting certain commission goals might make unsuitable investment recommendations, churn customer accounts, or take part in other commission-revenue focused actions that aren’t necessarily in the clients' benefit.

Shapiro is also asking broker-dealer heads to watch over big up-front bonuses. Brokerage firms continue to offer large recruiting bonuses to top registered representatives at rival investment banks. Recruiting packages at wirehouses Merrill Lynch, UBS, Morgan Stanley, and Wells Fargo Advisers are between 200-250% of trailing 12-month production. In many instances, an investment adviser who satisfies production targets and brings in a certain percentage of assets is frequently rewarded.

Shapiro’s letter to the firm’s CEOs reminded them that it is the broker-dealer’s responsibility to “police such conflicts” and supervise broker-dealer activities, especially those related to sales practices. She reminded the broker-dealers that when a sales group expands, it is the investment bank's responsibility to not just supervise advisers but to make sure the compliance structure maintains the adequate capacity. She noted that investor interests must always be of prime importance when investment products, such as securities, are sold.

Unfortunately, there are brokers who choose to place their own financial gain over the interests of their clients. This can result in securities fraud losses for investors. A few examples of broker misconduct include churning, misrepresentation, negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, and unauthorized trading.

Related Web Resources:
Read Shapiro's Letter (PDF)

Schapiro Message to B-D CEOs: Watch Your Recruiting Tactics, Research Mag, September 1, 2009

Chairman Mary Schapiro, SEC

Continue reading "SEC Warns Broker-Dealers to be Mindful of Their Recruiting Bonuses" »

September 8, 2009

$150 Million Settlement in Merrill Lynch Securities Class Action Lawsuit is Granted Preliminary Approval by District Court Judge

A district court judge issued his preliminary approval of a proposed $150 million settlement in the securities class action lawsuit against Merrill Lynch. The securities fraud lawsuit was filed for purchasers of specific Merrill Lynch preferred securities and bonds.

The plaintiffs of the Bond Action had invested in over $24 billion in preferred debt and securities that the broker-dealer had made available to the public between October 2006 and May 2008. The lead plaintiffs in the securities class action lawsuit were the Louisiana Municipal Police Employees’ Retirement System and the Louisiana Sheriffs' Pension and Relief Fund. They pursued their claims under the Securities Acts’ Sections 11, 2, and 15.

In addition to Merrill Lynch, a number of the company’s officers and directors, as well as the offering underwriters, are named as defendants in the complaint.

The lawsuit claims that offering documents for certain securities offerings did not accurately reveal the “existence and the value of tens of billions of dollars of complex derivative securities linked to subprime mortgages” that were contained in Merrill’s balance sheet. Such exposures allegedly almost “wiped out” the broker dealer by September 2008 and nearly caused Bank of America, Merrill’s acquirer, to “topple.” A federal bailout helped rescue the merger.

The parties had previous agreed to a $475 million settlement, in addition to a $75 million settlement for a related class action per ERISA.

The defendants went into the settlement even though the motions to dismiss the amended complaint were pending. A November 23 hearing for granting final approval is now scheduled.

Related Web Resources:
BofA to settle Merrill lawsuit for $150 million, Reuters, August 24, 2009

Court Preliminarily Approves $150 Million Subprime-Related Merrill Lynch Bond Action Settlement, The D & O Diary, August 27, 2009

Louisiana Municipal Police Employees’ Retirement System

Louisiana Sheriffs' Pension and Relief Fund

Continue reading "$150 Million Settlement in Merrill Lynch Securities Class Action Lawsuit is Granted Preliminary Approval by District Court Judge" »

September 4, 2009

Citigroup Global Markets Sales Assistant Accused of Stealing from Clients is Banned by FINRA from the Securities Industry

Citigroup Inc. sales assistant Tamara Lanz Moon has been barred from the securities industry by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. Moon is accused of stealing over $850,000 from at least 22 clients who were either sick, elderly, or unable to closely monitor their accounts for some other reason. Her father is reportedly one of her securities fraud victims.

Moon allegedly misappropriated $30,000 from him. She also is accused of taking tens of thousands of dollars from an 83-year-old widow and $55,000 from a US diplomat who works abroad. She allegedly transferred assets from one widow’s Citigroup account to her own account, as well as to accounts belonging to other clients to replace money she stole from those victims.

Moon is also accused of recordkeeping violations, falsifying account records, forging signatures on letters asking for unauthorized address changes, and taking part in unauthorized trades while employed with Citigroup Global Markets. She is accused of using the funds to pay for personal expenditures, such as the remodeling of her residence. She also allegedly used some of the stolen money to invest in real estate.

Citigroup has compensated the victims for their financial losses. Moon’s alleged misconduct reportedly took place over an 8-year period that concluded in March 2008 when she was let go from her job.

FINRA enforcement chief Susan L. Merrill has reiterated that broker-dealers and banks are responsible for supervising not just their brokers but also their sales assistants, who are able to access confidential client information.

Shepherd Smith Edwards & Kantas LTD LLP represents clients who have suffered financial losses because a member of the securities industry misappropriated funds, stole their money, engaged in some other form of securities fraud, or was negligent in other ways while mishandling the victims’ savings or investments. Unfortunately, the sick and elderly tend to be easy targets of securities fraud and financial theft.


Related Web Resources:
Finra Bars Citigroup Sales Assistant, The Wall Street Journal, August 25, 2009

FINRA Bars Citigroup Sales Assistant for Taking More Than $850,000 From Customers, Falsifying Records, Making Unauthorized Trades, FINRA, August 25, 2009

Continue reading "Citigroup Global Markets Sales Assistant Accused of Stealing from Clients is Banned by FINRA from the Securities Industry " »

September 3, 2009

SEC, NASD, FINRA & SIPC: New SEC Report Card on Madoff Catastrophy Further Reveals How Investor Protection Is Severely Flawed!

A new report by the Inspector General at the Securities Exchange Commission recounts 16-years of failures at the SEC which led to the financial crime of the century perpetrated by Bernard Madoff and his firm. The report states that the agency “never properly examined or investigated Madoff's trading and never took the necessary, but basic, steps to determine if Madoff was operating a Ponzi scheme.”

The IG confirms that the SEC failed to heed direct warnings and warning signs as early as 1992 which “could have uncovered the Ponzi scheme well before Madoff confessed” to the $50 billion fraud, leading to his 150 year prison sentence.

Critics of cecurities regulators and the securities regulatory system have for years complained that the system is not only inept but perhaps corrupt. Accusations have included that regulators overlook wrongdoing by Wall Street insiders while “rounding up the usual suspects" to appear as if they are doing their jobs. Madoff may be the poster child for this theory.

In the 1930’s, after the crash of 1929, securities laws were passed to protect investors which had recently grown from mostly east coast financial types to a broader group of wealthier Americans nationwide who invested through “wire houses.” In the second half of the 20th century, as more and more of us were drawn into the securities market, many claim that investor protection became more diluted allowing fraud to proliferate. SInce 2000 securities fraud has exploded.

The system of securities regulation works (or not) as follows: Congress delegated oversight of the industry to the SEC. The SEC then delegates day to day regulation of securities firms to “Self-Regulatory Organizations, or “SRO’s.” The largest of the SRO’s was the National Association of Securities Dealers, or NASD, which last year took over the regulatory authority of the second largest SRO, the New York Stock Exchange, and became the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, or FINRA.

Yet, FINRA is neither the regulator of the entire financial industry, nor an “Authority.” It continues to be a non-profit corporation owned by securities firms, with a charter similar to that of a country club. FINRA makes rules and reports to the SEC regarding its rule changes and enforcement, but it is run by none other than the securities firms it purports to regulate. The NASD, now FINRA, then delegates regulation of each firm’s activities to the firm itself. Each firm designs its own regulatory system then submits this to FINRA for approval. “At least annually” a firm is supposed to be audited by NASD/ FINRA, with further action taken as complaints arise.

Thus, while the SEC is properly feeling heat over the Madoff mess, it was the NASD which had primary power to regulate its member, the Madoff Securities firm – “at least annually.” Here is some interesting info: Bernie Madoff was not only a prominent member of the securities industry, but served as vice chairman of the NASD, a member of its board of governors and chairman of its New York region. He was also a member of NASDAQ Stock Market's board of governors and its executive committee and served as chairman of its trading committee. Anyone else thinking about foxes and henhouses?

For almost a decade, the head of NASD enforcement, which had responsibility to audit Madoff Securities “at least annually, was Mary Shapiro. Ms. Shapiro left that job just this year when appointed by President Obama as Chairman of the SEC. Does this not comfort you as an investor?

If a brokerage firm fails, investors are protected by something called SIPC insurance. Protection by the Securities Industry Protection Corporation merely means that “what you see is what you get” in a securities account. If a brokerage firm goes out of business coverage for investors is $100,000 of cash in their account and up to $500,000 total, including securities. One problem is that investors are not covered for being defrauded into buying worthless securities. If the firm closes you get your securities, even if these have become worthless.

Yet, in the Madoff mess SIPC did not even want to pay for what was listed in accounts, saying these were just false entries. Perhaps because of the great notoriety, SIPC was forced to pay up. Thirty years ago, SIPC was set up to pay the above limits, which have not been raised with inflation. Instead, premiums paid by brokerage firms had been reduced from a small percentage of their revenues to only $150 annually by each firm. Thus, SIPC barely had the funds to even pay the difference in that recovered from Madoff and the tiny fraction covered by SIPC (less than 5% of the total lost!)

In a previous installment we covered the “race to the bottom” in securities regulation. Wall Street decries that if regulations are not further relaxed it can not compete with other countries. We feel this is a sham and further insult to an already beleaguered investing public.

September 2, 2009

Disgruntled Investors Continue to File Securities Fraud Litigation Against Merrill Lynch Even Eight Months After Its Acquisition by Bank of America Corp.

The plaintiffs of some 166 of the 221 cases filed against Merrill Lynch & Co. since January 1, 2009 are alleging securities fraud-related violations. This means that Bank of America Corp, which acquired the broker-dealer at the beginning of the year, has assumed responsibility for the outcome of these civil cases. Some of these investor fraud claims were filed as late as last month.

Some cases discuss Merrill’s involvement in the marketing, underwriting, and selling of securitizations, or asset-backed securities. Other cases delve into Merrill’s dealings in the auction-rate securities market. A number of the securities fraud cases against Merrill are class action lawsuits. Merrill Lynch is the lead defendant in many of the cases and one of several financial firms named in the other complaints.

Some of the Securities Fraud Cases Against Merrill Lynch:
Gordon v. Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc.: Merrill Lynch and several other financial firms are accused of misrepresenting or omitting key information in offering documents when participating in securitization underwriting.

Public Employees Retirement System of Mississippi v. Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc.: Merrill is accused of violated specific sections of the 1933 Securities Act when it allegedly made bogus statements in registering and offering documents connected to asset-backed securities.

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. v. Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc.: The pharmaceutical company plaintiff contends that it lost $5 million when investing in ARS that the broker-dealer structured and sold.

Ginsberg v. Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc.: This class action claim accuses Merrill of failing to tell shareholders that the firm was significantly exposed to collateralized debt obligations and other high-risk financial products. The plaintiffs claim that senior management at Merrill Lynch let bogus information go out during conference calls and in registration statements and news releases.

If you are a former Merrill Lynch investor and you believe you were the victim of securities fraud, our stockbroker fraud law firm would be happy to offer you a free case evaluation.


Related Web Resources:
Gordon v. Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc, S.D.N.Y., 09-cv-00704, 1/28/09

In re: Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc., Auction Rate Securities (ARS) Marketing Litigation, Justia Docket