Posts Tagged U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
As Facebook Seeks Answers, S.E.C. Investigates Exchanges – NYTimes.com
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Facebook on June 22, 2012
JUNE 21, 2012
As Facebook Seeks Answers, S.E.C. Investigates Exchanges
BY BEN PROTESS, EVELYN M. RUSLI AND MICHAEL J. DE LA MERCED
Zef Nikolla/Facebook, via European Pressphoto Agency Facebook executives ring the opening bell on May 18 with Nasdaq chief Robert Greifeld.
Nasdaq has blamed Facebook’s botched debut last month on flawed computers and “technical errors.”
Regulators suspect it may be something more. The Securities and Exchange Commission has opened an investigation into the exchange for its role in the initial public offering of Facebook, according to people briefed on the inquiry. Regulators are examining whether Nasdaq failed to properly test its trading systems, which broke down during the I.P.O., and whether the exchange violated rules when it rewrote computer code to jump-start trading.
The Facebook investigation comes after a broader inquiry into trading breakdowns and other problems at the nation’s largest exchanges, including two previously undisclosed cases involving Nasdaq’s archrival, the New York Stock Exchange, the people said.
The agency’s enforcement unit, which has opened more than a dozen related cases, is examining whether exchanges lack adequate controls and favor select investors.
As investor confidence in the market wanes, the worry is that missteps by the exchanges are contributing to the dissatisfaction. Since the financial crisis, investors have seen their portfolios erode, prompting them to flee stocks.
“If exchanges have technical problems, that slows capital formation and erodes the confidence,” said Senator Jack Reed, Democrat of Rhode Island, who held a hearing this week on the initial public offering process.
While none of the exchanges has been accused of any wrongdoing and the S.E.C. may never take enforcement action, the crackdown represents a significant shift. Traditionally, the agency has been relatively cozy with the industry, which is increasingly under pressure to produce profits since the exchanges became publicly traded companies.
Along with the threat of enforcement cases, the S.E.C. has stepped up its inspections of exchanges and introduced several measures to improve the safety of the markets. For example, the agency has approved proposals that would help limit volatility in specific stocks, including circuit breakers that would halt trading.
“Cases against exchanges are few and far between, and inevitably a big deal,” said Stephen J. Crimmins, a partner at the law firm K&L Gates and a former enforcement official at the S.E.C.
Facebook’s initial public offering highlights the problems facing exchanges — and how regulators are finding their responses lacking.
On May 18, its first day of trading, Facebook got off to a rocky start. Nasdaq delayed the start of trading and later flooded the market with shares, adding to investor trepidation.
Nasdaq’s lack of communication — and at times, lack of contrition — aggravated the situation, according to documents and executives, bankers and regulators. On a May 31 call with the chairwoman of the S.E.C., Mary L. Schapiro, and other officials, Nasdaq’s chief executive expressed confusion about the S.E.C.’s aggressive approach.
“We’re regulators, too,” said the chief executive, Robert Greifeld, adding “we’re all in this together.”
The Facebook debacle comes after a flurry of trading breakdowns. In March, BATS Global Markets canceled its own I.P.O., after its systems faltered. Nasdaq last year halted trading in dozens of stocks amid technical problems.
Such experiences echo the so-called flash crash. On May 6, 2010, the Dow Jones industrial average plummeted more than 700 points in minutes, before recovering shortly thereafter.
In nearly every case, companies blamed technical malfunctions. But regulators say some breakdowns may point to more fundamental issues.
The S.E.C. is also examining whether some exchanges give undue priority to high-frequency trading firms and big institutional investors through its order types and data disclosure.
The New York Stock Exchange is among the most prominent players facing scrutiny from regulators, who have opened two investigations into the Big Board, according to people briefed on the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the cases are not public.
The S.E.C., the people said, is examining whether the New York exchange violated rules by distributing in-depth stock data to paying clients faster than the public received general information. The issue was first discovered in the rubble of the flash crash.
The exchange declined to comment. But people close to the exchange have attributed the problem to unintended technical shortcomings.
The S.E.C., which has penalized the Direct Edge exchange for having “weak internal controls,” is also pursuing the Chicago Board Options Exchange for not properly policing the markets.
In February, BATS Global Markets acknowledged receiving a request from the S.E.C. The agency, a person briefed on the matter said, is examining whether any collaboration between BATS and high-frequency trading firms could hinder competition.
Nasdaq represents one of the most prominent cases.
On the day of Facebook’s debut, its finance team, led by David A. Ebersman, stood on Morgan Stanley’s trading floor surrounded by scores of traders sporting white baseball caps stamped with “Facebook.” While the mood was initially festive, he was growing anxious.
The chief financial officer turned to the bankers: “Why aren’t we starting?” Nearby, a trader clutched phones to his ears, one with a call to another bank, the other to Nasdaq.
At about 11 a.m., Nasdaq said trading would begin in five minutes. After nothing happened, Nasdaq officials phoned S.E.C. trading experts to explain that everything was under control, according to a person briefed on the call.
Nasdaq’s computers were programmed to accept last-second modifications to orders of Facebook shares. When these trades kept piling in, the system reset the price over and over again. Some orders were not executed — or were placed at prices other than the opening bid of $42. Many traders, who usually receive confirmations in seconds, had no idea how many shares they held. “We were flying blind,” said one person at a market-making firm.
The S.E.C. is examining why Nasdaq lacked an action plan for navigating such a crisis, including plans to abort the I.P.O., and whether it failed to follow federal guidelines in running system tests. Nasdaq did run some 400 tests ahead of the Facebook I.P.O., and the company used the system in question for more than five years. Mr. Greifeld has publicly blamed “design flaws” in the system.
Ultimately, Nasdaq overrode the system manually, switching to a backup server. That move, too, has drawn scrutiny. Exchanges must follow their own strict trading procedures. In this case, Nasdaq changed its procedure on the fly without amending its rules. While the exchange may not have followed the letter of the law, a person close to Nasdaq said that the company had previously used the backup system with approval from regulators.
The exchange declined to comment.
Shares started trading at 11:30 a.m., sending brief applause through Morgan Stanley’s trading floor. The Facebook team, which had been hoping for a 5 to 10 percent jump from the offering price of $38, was relieved when it rose. The team headed to Teterboro Airport to fly back to California.
Then at 1:50 p.m., a second wave of confusion ripped through Wall Street. Traders saw an unexpected sell order of roughly 11 million shares. Some wondered whether a big hedge fund had dumped shares. Investors, on the fence about buying, backed off. Others sold. Within minutes, Facebook slipped $2, to roughly $40.
There was no mystery hedge fund seller. As Nasdaq started processing trades backed up in the system, those shares were dumped on the market, according to people with knowledge of the matter. About the same time, some Facebook shares that had ended up in an account at Nasdaq were also sold without warning. The move may have violated Nasdaq’s own rules, which do not explicitly allow the exchange to take a position in the shares of an I.P.O., according to one of the people.
While some analysts have pinned Facebook’s woes on Nasdaq, others have blamed the company and its bankers for being too aggressive on the size and price of the offering.
Facebook shares ended that first day at $38.23, roughly where they started.
Two days later, Mr. Greifeld called the I.P.O. “quite successful” over all and said that technical issues had not affected the price.
Facebook’s management team, which was beginning to grasp the extent of the problems, was livid. Some wondered why Nasdaq had made little effort to keep them apprised on Friday and kept them out of decision-making.
Mr. Greifeld called a senior executive, asking how the exchange could get back into its good graces. The executive erupted. “Bob,” the executive said, “You don’t understand what a hole you’re in.”
Nasdaq soon aggravated the trading woes. The exchange informed traders it might offer “financial accommodation” for claims filed on Monday. Some investors dumped shares, to prove a loss.
In the first hour of Monday trading, Facebook plunged from $38 to less than $34, swiftly wiping out billions of dollars in market value.
As Facebook Seeks Answers, S.E.C. Investigates Exchanges – NYTimes.com.
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House, Senate lawmakers launch inquiries into Facebook’s IPO debacle – The Hill’s On The Money
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Facebook, Government, Wall Street on May 24, 2012

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House, Senate lawmakers launch inquiries into Facebook’s IPO debacle
By Peter Schroeder - 05/23/12 08:30 PM ET
It has taken just six days for the razzle-dazzle of Facebook’s $104 billion market debut to turn into a nightmare of congressional inquiries.
Republican and Democratic lawmakers on Wednesday began to look into the debacle of what was supposed to be the social networking company’s crowning achievement.
Lawmakers want to know whether institutional investors got a sneak peek at an updated analysis, written just before the initial public offering, that gave a more pessimistic assessment of Facebook’s future revenues. It’s that analysis that might have caused the hotly anticipated stock to tumble out of the gate, losing more than a quarter of its value in its first two days on the open market.
“Effective capital markets require transparency and accountability, not one set of rules for insiders and another for the rest of us,” said Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), who heads the Senate Banking Committee’s subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Protection and called on the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to investigate.
Both the House Financial Services Committee and Senate Banking Committee say they will look into the issue, with lawmakers in both parties raising questions about what happened.
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said it “caught his ear” when he heard about reports of the sneak peek, and said it was up to regulators to get to the bottom of it.
“If that’s true, that’s just one more bit of evidence that the integrity of the research is being compromised,” he said. “It’s supposed to be for everybody, not for traders who are going to benefit from it before anybody else knows about it.”
The controversy is a second punch for the investment-bank industry in the past two weeks. Lawmakers are also scrutinizing botched trades at JPMorgan Chase that have led to at least $2 billion in losses for the bank, which severely tarnished its reputation in Washington. K Street lobbyists for the banking industry worry the errors could lead regulatory agencies writing rules under the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill to tighten the screws.
For Facebook, the IPO has made for an embarrassing coming-out party for one of Silicon Valley’s most promising companies. While the company’s stock did rise Wednesday to $32 per share, it remains well under its initial opening price of $38.
Morgan Stanley, the IPO’s chief underwriter, is under scrutiny over whether it released an analysis reducing revenue forecasts for the company to select clients just before the IPO. Large institutional investors might have tempered their enthusiasm for the stock after learning of the downgrade, but the information did not make it out to retail investors before the stock went public.
Scorned investors filed a proposed class-action suit Wednesday in federal court against Facebook, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and other underwriters of the IPO. The plaintiffs argued investors had lost more than $2.5 billion since the company went public and were not informed of the trim in revenue expectations.
The state of Massachusetts is also scrutinizing Morgan Stanley, issuing a subpoena for documents tied to the IPO. The bank has defended its actions, saying it followed the same procedures with Facebook that it has with other IPOs.
The stock exchange listing the company’s stock has also come under scrutiny. The Nasdaq OMX Group has been sued by investors after the exchange struggled to process orders in the first minutes of public trading, which was delayed roughly half an hour. Media reports indicated Wednesday that Facebook was even considering jumping to the New York Stock Exchange, although a spokesman for that exchange denied those reports, according to Bloomberg.
Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Johnson (D-S.D.) said his staff is holding bipartisan staff briefings with Facebook, regulators and other stakeholders. “Once these briefings have concluded and the staff reports back to me, I will determine if a Senate Banking Committee hearing is necessary,” he said.
A spokeswoman for the House Financial Services Committee said its staff was being similarly briefed. While no hearing has been scheduled on the IPO, she added that the topic was likely to be raised at other hearings.
Overall, the Capitol Hill response to Facebook’s woes has been muted compared to the reaction to losses at JPMorgan.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) used the JPMorgan mistake to push for the removal of its head, Jamie Dimon, from the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and to call for the nation’s biggest banks to be broken up.
On Wednesday, he said he had yet to study the issues surrounding Facebook.
Similarly, Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) was calling for hearings on JPMorgan’s losses just hours after they were announced. But when it comes to Facebook, he said he has been “more of a bystander.”
For him, the key difference is that JPMorgan’s struggles will affect the writing of Dodd-Frank’s regulatory rules.
“I’ve obviously been more focused on the JPMorgan issue. Not because of JPMorgan, but because we have regulation that it’s going to affect,” he told The Hill.
“I think it’s really good for us to understand things like [Facebook], but I don’t really personally have any opinion,” he added.
While Grassley is interested in the matter, he said that regulators should be able to “deal with it” and that more legislating from Congress is not necessary.
SEC Chairwoman Mary Schapiro said Tuesday that regulators were looking into “issues” surrounding the stock offering, but declined to elaborate further.
“I think there is a lot of reason to have confidence in our markets and in the integrity of how they operate, but there are issues that we need to look at specifically with respect to Facebook,” she told reporters.
House, Senate lawmakers launch inquiries into Facebook’s IPO debacle – The Hill’s On The Money.
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Lawmakers to probe Facebook IPO – The Hill’s Hillicon Valley
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Banking, Facebook, Finance, Government, Legal, Wall Street on May 23, 2012
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Lawmakers to probe Facebook IPO
By Peter Schroeder - 05/23/12 12:48 PM ET
Banking committees on both sides of Capitol Hill are beginning to take a look at just what went wrong when Facebook took its stock public.
Both the Senate Banking Committee and the House Financial Services Committee said Wednesday that they were looking into the issue, although both stopped short of promising probing investigations or hearings on the matter.
“The Banking Committee is seeking to learn more about issues raised in the news regarding Facebook’s IPO by conducting staff briefings with Facebook, regulators and other stakeholders,” said committee spokesman Sean Oblack.
A spokesman for Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), the ranking committee Republican, said his staff was also in talks with regulators and “market participants” as a matter of “due diligence.”
The relevant House committee is also taking a look at the matter.
“The Financial Services Committee is gathering information and facts about the issues surrounding Facebook’s IPO. Our staff is receiving briefings. While no hearings specifically focused on this IPO are planned at this time, the committee will have hearings over the coming weeks where this topic is likely to be raised,” said Marisol Garibay, spokesperson for the panel.
Facebook’s Friday stock offering was one of the most highly anticipated in the market’s history, but after a number of problems, it has attracted lawsuits, subpoenas and attention from regulators.
Securities and Exchange Commission Chairwoman Mary Schapiro said Tuesday, after testifying before the Banking Committee, that regulators were looking into “issues” surrounding the stock offering.
“I think there is a lot of reason to have confidence in our markets and in the integrity of how they operate, but there are issues that we need to look at specifically with respect to Facebook,” she told reporters.
Reuters originally reported that analysts at Morgan Stanley had informed some clients that they were trimming revenue expectations for Facebook just days before the stock went public, which led some to believe it contributed to the company’s bleak offering. The stock has lost nearly 25 percent of its value since it first began trading among the public at $42, although it was up 2.3 percent in the middle of Wednesday’s trading.
The news spurred scorned investors to file a proposed class action suit Wednesday in federal court against Facebook, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and other underwriters. The plaintiffs argued investors had lost more than $2.5 billion since the company went public and were not informed of the trim in revenue expectations.
The state of Massachusetts is also scrutinizing Morgan Stanley, issuing a subpoena for documents tied to the IPO. The bank has defended its actions, saying it followed the same procedures with Facebook that it has with other IPOs.
The stock exchange listing the company’s stock has also come under scrutiny. The Nasdaq OMX Group has also been sued by investors after the exchange struggled to process orders in the first minutes of public trading, which was delayed roughly half an hour.
Lawmakers to probe Facebook IPO – The Hill’s Hillicon Valley.
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Facebook, banks sued over pre-IPO analyst calls | Reuters
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Facebook on May 23, 2012
Facebook, banks sued over pre-IPO analyst calls
Wed May 23, 2012 11:02am EDT
(Reuters) – Facebook Inc and banks including Morgan Stanley were sued by the social networking leader’s shareholders, who claimed the defendants hid Facebook’s weakened growth forecasts ahead of its $16 billion initial public offering.
The defendants, who also include Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg, were accused of concealing from investors during the IPO marketing process “a severe and pronounced reduction” in revenue growth forecasts, resulting from increased use of its app or website through mobile devices. Facebook went public last week.
The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan on Wednesday, according to a law firm for the plaintiffs. A day earlier, a similar lawsuit by a different investor was filed in a California state court, according to a law firm involved in that case.
In the New York case, shareholders said research analysts at several underwriters had lowered their business forecasts for Facebook during the IPO process, but that these changes were “selectively disclosed by defendants to certain preferred investors” rather than to the public generally.
“The value of Facebook common stock has declined substantially and plaintiffs and the class have sustained damages as a result,” the complaint said.
Representatives of Facebook and Morgan Stanley did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Facebook shares fell 18.4 percent from their $38 IPO price in the first three days of trading, reducing the value of stock sold in the IPO by more than $2.9 billion.
(Reporting by Dan Levine in San Francisco and Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and Lisa Von Ahn)
Facebook, banks sued over pre-IPO analyst calls | Reuters.
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SEC Hits Groupon – 24/7 Wall St.
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Business on April 4, 2012
SEC Hits Groupon
The hole into which Groupon (NASDAQ: GRPN) has fallen has gotten even deeper. The Wall Street Journal reports that the Securities and Exchange Commission has begun to examine the firm’s first quarterly report as a public company. Groupon has since revised some of the figures from that report, and it admitted its account had a “material weakness.” This caused enough concern to push shares near an all-time low. Some analysts question whether Groupon’s business model is viable long term. The more closely watched problem will be whether Groupon makes further changes to its earnings. The Groupon board says it stands behind management. That may not last if the humiliating string of missteps continues.
Let’s see if the Groupon CEO and CFO keep their jobs
SEC Hit Groupon – 24/7 Wall St..
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Time to Fire Groupon’s CFO – 24/7 Wall St.
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Business on April 3, 2012
Time to Fire Groupon’s CFO
April 2, 2012
Groupon (NASDAQ: GRPN) has been humiliated by several financial mistakes that have rattled investor confidence to the core. The responsibility belongs at someone’s feet, and that someone is Groupon’s chief financial officer, Jason Child. Child has been at Groupon since December 2010, so he has been in charge of the firm’s accounting each time there has been a misstep. The triumvirate who have to make the decision is
composed of CEO Andrew Mason, Chairman Eric Lefkofsky and audit committee chair Ted Lionsis.
The firing of Child would bring Groupon some measure of investor respect, particularly if the company brings in a reputable CFO. It would have to be someone with a track record of handling the finances of a company that has not had any restatements or “material weakness in internal controls,” which was the excuse for the last change in Groupon’s filed financials. Groupon filed another revision to its financials in September that cut revenue in half for 2010 — from $645 million to $313 million. Groupon also revised how it accounted for what it said was “Adjusted Consolidated Segment Operating Income” — a term that was new to investors and the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Child made $350,000 in base salary in 2010. In addition, the value of his stock awards was $9,477,000. In return, investors have received a share price that has fallen from a peak of $31.14 to $17 after the news of the restatement hit. Groupon has lost $8 billion in market cap due to that drop.
It is hard to imagine that any other major company would keep its CFO under similar circumstances. Child should be fired right away.
Douglas A. McIntyre
Time to Fire Groupon’s CFO – 24/7 Wall St..
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S.E.C. Sues 6 Former Top Fannie and Freddie Executives – NYTimes.com
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Banking, Government, Legal, Politics, Social, Society on December 16, 2011
DECEMBER 16, 2011
S.E.C. Sues 6 Former Top Fannie and Freddie Executives
BY AZAM AHMED AND BEN PROTESS

Jacquelyn Martin/Associated PressRobert S. Khuzami, the Securities and Exchange Commission‘s director of enforcement.
The Securities and Exchange Commission has brought civil actions against six former top executives at the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, saying that the executives did not adequately disclose their firms’ exposure to risky mortgages in the run-up to the financial crisis.
The case is one of the most significant federal actions taken against top executives at the center of the housing bust and ensuing financial crisis. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been lightning rods in Washington as symbols of the excessive risk-taking that pushed the country into an economic downturn.
The agency filed complaints on Friday in the United States District Court in Manhattan against three former executives at Fannie Mae – its chief executive, Daniel H. Mudd; chief risk officer, Enrico Dallavecchia; and executive vice president, Thomas A. Lund.
Freddie Mac’s former chief executive, Richard F. Syron; Patricia Cook, its chief business officer; and its executive vice president, Donald J. Bisenius, were also named in a separate complaint.
“Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac executives told the world that their subprime exposure was substantially smaller than it really was,” Robert Khuzami, the head of enforcement for the S.E.C., said in a statement. “These material misstatements occurred during a time of acute investor interest in financial institutions’ exposure to subprime loans, and misled the market about the amount of risk on the company’s books. All individuals, regardless of their rank or position, will be held accountable for perpetuating half-truths or misrepresentations about matters materially important to the interest of our country’s investors.”
As part of its announcement, the S.E.C. said that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac agreed to settle with regulators and cooperate with its investigation of former executives. The Justice Department has also investigated the two mortgage giants, but no charges have been brought.
The S.E.C.’s cases against the executives will rely heavily on whether the two mortgage companies underreported or misled investors about their ownership of subprime loans and mortgages that required few documents from borrowers in the years leading up to and including the housing bust.
The complaint alleges, for instance, that Fannie Mae executives described subprime loans as those made to individuals “with weaker credit histories” while only reporting one-tenth of the loans that met that criteria in 2007. The S.E.C. complaint contends that Freddie Mac executives falsely proclaimed that certain businesses had virtually no exposure to ultra-risky loans.
But Mr. Mudd, who was C.E.O. of Fannie Mae from 2005 until the government took control of the company in 2008, said that there had been no deception.
“The government reviewed and approved the company’s disclosures during my tenure, and through the present,” he said in a statement. “Now it appears that the government has negotiated a deal to hold the government, and government-appointed executives who have signed the same disclosures since my departure, blameless– so that it can sue individuals it fired years ago.”
“This is a lawsuit that should never have been brought in the United States of America,” he said.
In its statement, lawyers for Mr. Syron called the S.E.C.’s case “fatally flawed” and “without merit.”
“Simply stated, there was no shortage of meaningful disclosures, all of which permitted the reader to assess the degree of risk in Freddie Mac’s guaranteed portfolio,” Thomas C. Green and Mark D. Hopson, partners at Sidley Austin, said in the statement.
Michael M. Levy, a lawyer for Mr. Lund, said his client did not mislead anyone. “During a period of unprecedented disruption in the housing market, nobody worked more diligently or honestly to serve the best interests of both investors and homeowners,” Mr. Levy said. “When the truth comes out at trial, it will be abundantly clear that Mr. Lund — who did not sell a single share of Fannie Mae stock during this entire period — acted appropriately at all times.”
Still, the S.E.C., which has been maligned for failing to detect the crisis or punish its culprits, took pains Friday to underscore its renewed efforts to crack down on wrongdoing at the highest levels of Wall Street and corporate America.
“They are just the latest in a long line of financial related cases,” Mr. Khuzami said, noting that the agency has now filed 38 separate actions stemming from the crisis.
The case against the mortgage giants mirrors an earlier action against one of the nation’s biggest lenders to risky, or subprime, borrowers. Angelo Mozilo, the former chief executive and founder of Countrywide Financial, agreed to pay $22.5 million to settle federal charges along the same lines. The settlement was the largest ever levied against a senior executive of a public company, though Mr. Mozilo, who also agreed to forfeit $45 million in gains, neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing.
The S.E.C. has spent roughly two years interviewing former and current employees of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Earlier this year, the agency sent Wells notices, which warn of potential enforcement actions, to a number of top executives at the two firms. At the time, Mr. Syron, Mr. Mudd, Mr. Bisenius and Mr. Piszel all challenged those potential accusations.
Mr. Mudd and Mr. Syron are the two most prominent subjects of the complaint.
Since August 2009, Mr. Mudd has been chief executive of Fortress Investment Group, the large publicly traded private equity and hedge fund company.
In a statement, Gordon E. Runté of Fortress said: This morning, the S.E.C. filed a civil complaint against Dan Mudd, related to matters associated with his previous employment at Fannie Mae. The complaint does not relate to Fortress, and this matter has not impacted our company or our business operations. We are undertaking a thorough review of the matters addressed in the complaint.”
Mr. Syron is a former president of the American Stock Exchange and currently an adjunct professor and trustee at Boston College.
A lawyer for Mr. Dallavecchia did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Lawyers for Ms. Cook and Mr. Bisenius could not immediately be reached for comment.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were created by Congress to facilitate homeownership. Though they do not loan money to borrowers themselves, they buy mortgages from lenders and resell them in packages to investors, which allows banks and others to issue more loans. By 2005, the two companies began an aggressive push to expand their mandate to include less-fortunate borrowers who were typically excluded, an effort encouraged by lawmakers and lenders. The companies were also looking to reclaim business from Wall Street, which was thriving in the world of subprime mortgages.
But by the middle of 2008, as the housing market was sinking, exposure to subprime and other weak borrowers threatened the two companies. The Bush administration stepped in to rescue the two mortgage giants in September 2008, taking control of them in the process. Since then, the government has loaned the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac more than $100 billion.
That the settlement with the two companies did not include a fine reflects their financially precarious situation. The Obama administration announced plans earlier this year to wind down the two companies.
S.E.C. Sues 6 Former Top Fannie and Freddie Executives – NYTimes.com.
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Judge Blocks Citigroup Settlement With S.E.C. – NYTimes.com
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Banking, Finance, Government, Jobs, Law, Legal, Politics, Social, Society on November 28, 2011
Judge Blocks Citigroup Settlement With S.E.C.
By EDWARD WYATT
Published: November 28, 2011
WASHINGTON — A federal judge in New York on Monday threw out a settlement between the Securities and Exchange Commission and Citigroup over a 2007 mortgage derivatives deal, saying that the S.E.C.’s policy of settling cases by allowing a company to neither admit nor deny the agency’s allegations did not satisfy the law.
The judge, Jed S. Rakoff of United States District Court in Manhattan, ruled that the S.E.C.’s $285 million settlement, announced last month, is “neither fair, nor reasonable, nor adequate, nor in the public interest” because it does not provide the court with evidence on which to judge the settlement.
The ruling could throw the S.E.C.’s enforcement efforts into chaos, because a majority of the fraud cases and other actions that the agency brings against Wall Street firms are settled out of court, most often with a condition that the defendant does not admit that it violated the law while also promising not to deny it.
That condition gives a company or individual an advantage in subsequent civil litigation for damages, because cases in which no facts are established cannot be used in evidence in other cases, like shareholder lawsuits seeking recovery of losses or damages.
The S.E.C.’s policy — “hallowed by history, but not by reason,” Judge Rakoff wrote — creates substantial potential for abuse, the judge said, because “it asks the court to employ its power and assert its authority when it does not know the facts.”
The S.E.C. did not respond immediately to a request for comment on the judge’s decision, which was released Monday morning. A Citigroup spokesman said the company was studying the decision and had no immediate comment.
Citigroup was charged with negligence in its selling to customers a billion-dollar mortgage securities fund, known as Class V Funding III. The S.E.C. alleged that Citigroup picked the securities to be included in the fund without telling investors, claiming that the securities were being chosen by an independent entity. Citigroup then bet against the investments because it believed that they would lose value, the S.E.C. said.
Investors lost $700 million in the fund, according to the S.E.C., while Citigroup gained about $160 million in profits.
The settlement established none of those allegations as fact, thereby making it impossible for the court to properly judge whether the settlement meets the required standard of being fair, adequate and in the public interest.
“An application of judicial power that does not rest on facts is worse than mindless, it is inherently dangerous,” Judge Rakoff wrote in the case, S.E.C. v. Citigroup Global Markets. “In any case like this that touches on the transparency of financial markets whose gyrations have so depressed our economy and debilitated our lives, there is an overriding public interest in knowing the truth.”
The S.E.C. in particular, he added, “has a duty, inherent in its statutory mission, to see that the truth emerges.”
Judge Blocks Citigroup Settlement With S.E.C. – NYTimes.com.
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