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HedgeCo.net (West Palm Beach) – The SEC announced several actions protecting against short sales and make more short sale information available to the public.
”Today’s actions demonstrate the Commission’s determination to address short selling abuses while at the same time increasing public disclosure of short selling activities that affect our markets” said SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro.
First, the Commission made permanent a rule, that seeks to reduce the potential for abusive ”naked” short selling in the securities market. The new rule, Rule 204, requires broker-dealers to promptly purchase or borrow securities to deliver on a short sale. The temporary rule, approved by the SEC in the fall of 2008, was set to expire on July 31.
Second, the Commission and its staff are working together with several self-regulatory organizations (SRO) to make short sale volume and transaction data available through the SRO Web sites. This effort will result in an increase over the amount of information presently required by another temporary rule, known as Temporary 10a-3T. That rule, which will expire on August 1, applies only to certain institutional money managers and does not require public disclosure.
Apart from these measures, the Commission is continuing to actively consider proposals on a short sale price test and circuit breaker restrictions.
Third, the Commission intends to hold a public roundtable on September 30 to discuss securities lending, pre-borrowing, and possible additional short sale disclosures. The roundtable will consider, among other topics, the potential impact of a program requiring short sellers to pre-borrow their securities, possibly on a pilot basis, and adding a short sale indicator to the tapes to which transactions are reported for exchange-listed securities.
Short selling often can play an important role, the SEC said, in the market for a variety of reasons, including contributing to efficient price discovery, mitigating market bubbles, increasing market liquidity, promoting capital formation, facilitating hedging and other risk management activities, and importantly, limiting upward market manipulations. There are, however, circumstances in which short selling can be used as a tool to manipulate the market.
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West Palm Beach (HedgeCo.net) – Principal at Rothstein Kass, Charles F. Plaveczky will be speaking at a webinar for hedge fund managers interested in meeting the growing demands for increased reporting transparency and control, according to fund manager and host Confluence.
“As the April 30 hedge fund financial reporting cycle clearly demonstrated, prevailing error-prone manual processes for hedge fund reporting are far too brittle and inflexible—and they lack the scalability to meet increasingly complex reporting requirements,” said Plaveczky. “The pressure for greater flexibility and control will only increase with the adoption of additional reporting rules, and challenge current processes even more.”
The webinar entitled “The Change Imperative for Hedge Fund Reporting” and will take place on Friday, May 29 at 11:00 am EDT.
Kirk Botula, Chief Operating Officer of Confluence, will also provide information on new hedge fund reporting trends and challenges, discussing processes to maximize accuracy, efficiency and control in the reporting process as hedge funds deal with a variety of reporting requirements—such as FAS 157 fair market reporting, FAS 161 disclosures about derivative instruments and hedging activities, and how new International Financial Accounting Standards from IASB will challenge prevailing back-office reporting processes.
“Multiple stakeholders are demanding greater reporting diligence from hedge funds and their administrators. Regulators are clearly focused on greater transparency, investors are demanding additional disclosures and more frequent reporting, and accounting and auditor firms are mandating improved process control and documentation,” said Botula. “Hedge funds must consider how technology and automation can improve their reporting processes in order to provide the speed, control and flexibility needed to weather a new era of reporting transparency and control.”
Hedge fund companies and their fund administration service providers can register for this complimentary webinar at www.confluence.com/GETCONTROL. Individuals who register will also receive Confluence’s new whitepaper, Hedge Fund Reporting: The Change Imperative.
HedgeCo.Net is a premier hedge fund database and community for qualified and accredited investors only. Membership on www.hedgeco.net is FREE and EASY. We also offer FREE LISTINGS for Hedge Funds!
Welcome, I’m Steve Forbes. It’s a pleasure and privilege to introduce you to our featured guest, Cantor Fitzgerald CEO Howard Lutnick. He’ll tell us why October was his company’s best month ever.
But first…This ongoing financial crisis is driven by fear, not by a lack of cash or liquidity in the global markets. There is no reason why our economy can’t get back on track by springtime. But how do we get there form here? One answer is that we simply let financial markets work.
The economy still has very real strengths, and we know how smart, pro-growth policies work. We also already know what doesn’t work. Tax and spending does not work. One-time stimulus checks have no lasting effect. But if we actually lowered tax rates, including corporate tax rates, we’d see real stimulus.
Even Detroit could self-repair, if we let it. Right now they make money everywhere but North America. Why? Because they aren’t allowed to count the thrifty cars made overseas toward their efficiency standards. This makes no sense. Also, consider how the economy would roar ahead if we got rid of the government’s crazy mark-to-market accounting rule and had a sensible monetary policy and a strong dollar. Because if the dollar isn’t right, the world isn’t right economically. That’s the bottom line.
Cayman Net News- The Royal Cayman Islands Police Service (RCIPS) have arrested an unidentified 47-year-old man in connection with last month’s collapse of several Cayman-domiciled investment funds.
Detectives from the Financial Crimes Unit (FCU) arrested the man on suspicion of theft, false accounting and uttering false documents after their investigations into the collapse of four hedge funds listed under the umbrella name “Grand Island”.
In June the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority (CIMA) confirmed that the “Grand Island” funds were put into voluntary liquidation by the funds’ shareholders. Three of the four funds involved were registered with CIMA in 2006 and one other was an unregulated fund.
Police say that the funds were believed to have been worth millions of dollars, though it is still unclear how much money was lost and how many people are affected by its collapse.
However, it is widely speculated that the losses are up to $70 million dollars and the main commodity being traded was oil. Because of the nature of the three registered funds investors had to contribute at the very least US$100,000.
Hartford Courant- An investor has sued a Greenwich hedge fund management firm, accusing its operators of siphoning off money and enriching themselves at the expense of investors.
Westerly Capital sued Windmill Management LLC, manager of SageCrest hedge fund, and operators Alan and Philip Milton and Richard Weyand in Stamford Superior Court earlier this month.
It is demanding an accounting of money that has been lost and accuses the operators of Windmill of overvaluing fund assets "in furtherance of a scheme and/or course of conduct designed to personally enrich themselves even if this proved detrimental to the fund and its investors."