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Bloomberg – Pequot Capital Management Inc., once the world’s biggest hedge-fund manager, was cited in at least 44 private reports from exchange watchdogs in the past four years alerting U.S. regulators to potential insider trading, market manipulation or other misconduct, government documents show.
Trades linked to Google Inc., Cox Communications Inc., International Securities Holdings Inc., Premcor Inc. and dozens of other companies prompted surveillance units policing U.S. exchanges to make the referrals to the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to agency records obtained by Bloomberg News. Thirty-six reports flagged possible insider trading. Four indicated possible manipulation and four were labeled “other.”
New York (HedgeCo.Net) – Two New York residents were charged yesterday by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission after allegedly misappropriating at least $553 million of client’s funds.
Stephen Walsh of Sands Point, NY and Paul Greenwood of North Salem, NY are being hit with futures fraud in connection with their companies, which include Westridge Capital Management Inc., WG Trading Investors, LP, and WGIA, LLC.
“Defendants treated investor money– some of which came from a public pension fund– as their own piggy bank to lavish themselves with expensive gifts,” said Stephen J. Obie, Acting Director of Enforcement for the CFTC.
According to the complaint, Walsh and Greenwood took approximately $1.3 billion from investors in their entities since 1996. The men allegedly told their clients that all of the funds would be employed in a single investment strategy of index arbitrage.
They then doctored false promissory notes to keep up the appearance to investors. In reality, the funds were transferred to another entity, where Walsh and Greenwood dipped into the cash for personal spending sprees which included horses, residences, and even an $80,000 teddy bear. It is estimated that they withdrew $160 million total for personal expenses.
The CFTC is seeking a statutory restraining order that will freeze their assets while preserving records.
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Bloomberg – The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission opened a new investigation into whether Pequot Capital Management Inc., the hedge fund run by Arthur Samberg, illegally profited in 2001 by tapping inside information on Microsoft Corp., two people familiar with the matter said.
Investigators learned of documents that show former Microsoft employee David Zilkha may have obtained confidential information about the software maker, said one of the people, declining to be identified because the investigation isn’t public. Zilkha left the company in 2001 to join Pequot.
West Palm Beach (HedgeCo.Net) – Cayman Island based hedge fund manager Rival Capital Management Inc., announced the launch of the Rival North American RRSP Growth Fund, an RRSP eligible fund that will invest in the current Rival North American Growth Fund LP.
The new fund plans to buy units in the current fund instead of holding individual securities, the fund enables accredited investors who wish to make RRSP investments to gain access to the Firm’s flagship Fund through their RRSP.
Investing primarily from both a long and short perspective in small and midcap growth stocks listed in Canada and the US, the fund’s investment process is centered around a top-down disciplined technical and fundamental approach. The fund employs a rigorous proprietary screening process to identify stocks exhibiting certain technical and fundamental characteristics that Rival considers key to identifying long term performance.
Tony Warzel, Chief Investment Officer and head of the Rival investment team is primarily responsible for stock selection as well as overall portfolio management of the Rival North American Growth Fund.
With approximately $14.9 million in assets under management, Rival Capital was founded in 2006. It is a niche investment management firm that provides pooled fund portfolio management services to accredited investors.
Seattle Times – Bill Fleckenstein, a well-known Seattle investor who bets exclusively on falling stocks, is shutting his 12-year-old fund and starting a new one that will buy equities, too.
Fleckenstein said he doesn’t think the worse is over in the U.S. stock market. Yet he no longer wants to limit himself to so-called short bets.
"I’m not wildly bullish right now," he said. "The market hasn’t reached its ultimate lows, but we might be in a trading range for a long time."
Short sellers have been the best-performing hedge funds this year, up 32 percent through November, according to Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research, whose data show an industry average decline of 18 percent during that period. Fleckenstein, founder and president of Fleckenstein Capital, declined to comment on the fund’s size or its returns.
New Yorker – “Death by a thousand cuts.” “Fire-sale liquidation.” “A vortex of selling.” No matter how people described the market collapse that hit a month ago, the message was the same: it felt like there was nowhere to go but down, and it felt like we’d be going there forever. (Given last week’s dip, it still does.)
Beginning on September 29th, the U.S. stock market fell on nine of the next ten trading days, plummeting twenty-six per cent; then, after a short, sharp rally, it lost ten per cent more in less than two days.
Explanations for the crash often focussed on the hysteria and panic that periodically seem to seize investors. But the madness of crowds wasn’t the whole story. In a healthy market, there are countercyclical forces—mechanisms and institutions that go against the general market trend and encourage diversity of thinking—that make it harder for feedback loops and vicious cycles to take hold. Lately, though, many of these institutions and mechanisms have become procyclical: instead of countering trends, they amplify them.
USA Today – The great unwind in the secretive hedge fund world caused by steep losses has contributed to the megapain in the stock market.
Wealthy folks and big investors yanked a record $31 billion to $43 billion out of hedge funds in the third quarter, according to estimates from tracking firms Hedge Fund Research (HFR) and TrimTabs. As a result of ongoing redemption requests from worried investors, the so-called smart-money crowd has been forced to sell assets to raise money to pay back investors.
That vicious cycle of forced selling by these private investment funds has exacerbated the heavy pressure that has pushed the U.S. stock market down as much as 43% from its October 2007 high. "It is really like a global margin call. It feeds on itself," says Woody Dorsey, president of Market Semiotics, which specializes in behavioral finance.