CFTC Studies High Frequency Trading

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) will hold a meeting of its Technology Advisory Committee on Thursday, March 29, 2012, in Washington, DC.

The meeting will focus on three significant issues facing the futures and swaps industries as the Commission continues to finalize rules under the Dodd-Frank Act:

(1) automated and high frequency trading (HFT): exchange oversight and definitions;
(2) final recommendations from the Subcommittee on Data Standardization; and
(3) credit limit checks: market structure and technology issues.

This meeting serves as the inaugural meeting of the new Subcommittee on Automated and High Frequency Trading, which will focus on developing recommendations regarding the definition of high frequency trading (“HFT”) in the context of the larger universe of automated trading.

Read the full press release here, including details on how to participate. Audio of the meeting will be available via listen-only conference call. Additionally, a video recording of the meeting will be published through a link on the CFTC’s website.

Home Prices Increase in South Florida

The median home sale price jumped to $235,000 in Palm Beach County in February 2013, up 27% from a median price of $185,00 for the same time period last year. Home prices in Broward County are also increasing, as shown in the chart below.

The news is especially good for sellers of upscale Palm Beach County homes, with an average sales price of $761,754 in February 2013 compared with less than half that amount – $307,806 – in February of 2012.

South Florida Home Prices

As reported by the Sun-Sentinel.

Data from Florida REALTORS® indicates the average number of days a home sits on the market is dropping, due in part to a decrease in the number of homes that are actively listed for sale.

The single family home inventory in Palm Beach County now stands at 5.8 months, down 47% from 11 months in February 2012.

All of this is good news for home sellers, who are finding a higher number of motivated home buyers. Some buyers are reportedly bringing their checkbook when they view a property, ready to put down an immediate deposit on the home of their dreams. Sellers are receiving an average of 91.4% of their original listing price on recent home sales, up from 88.4% last year.

Fort Lauderdale Foreclosure Defense Attorney

Choosing the best approach to protecting yourself and your family from a mortgage foreclosure involves many legal considerations. Contact Fort Lauderdale mortgage foreclosure attorney Marcy Resnik to discuss how you can defend your legal rights in a foreclosure. You can contact Ms. Resnik online or call her at 954-321-0176.

FINRA Fines Citigroup Unit for Excessive Markups

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) announced this week that it fined Citi International Financial Services LLC, a subsidiary of Citigroup, Inc., $600,000 and ordered more than $648,000 in restitution and interest to more than 3,600 customers for charging excessive markups and markdowns on corporate and agency bond transactions, and for related supervisory violations.

According to a FINRA release:

Thomas Gira, Executive Vice President, FINRA Market Regulation, said, “FINRA is committed to ensuring that customers who purchase and sell securities, including corporate and agency bonds, receive fair prices. The markups and markdowns charged by Citi International were outside of appropriate standards for fair pricing in debt transactions, and FINRA will continue to identify and address transactions that violate fair pricing standards, regardless of whether a markup or markdown is above or below 5 percent.”

FINRA found that from July 2007 through September 2010, Citi International charged excessive corporate and agency bond markups and markdowns. The markups and markdowns ranged from 2.73 percent to over 10 percent, and were excessive given market conditions, the cost of executing the transactions and the value of the services rendered to the customers, among other factors. In addition, from April 2009 through June 2009, Citi International failed to use reasonable diligence to buy or sell corporate bonds so that the resulting price to its customers was as favorable as possible under prevailing market conditions.

During the relevant period, Citi International’s supervisory system regarding fixed income transactions contained significant deficiencies regarding, among other things, the review of markups and markdowns below 5 percent and utilization of a pricing grid for markups and markdowns that was based on the par value of the bonds, instead of the actual value of the bonds. Citi International was also ordered to revise its written supervisory procedures regarding supervisory review of markups and markdowns, and best execution in fixed income transactions with its customers.

In concluding this settlement, Citi International neither admitted nor denied the charges.

Contact Fort Lauderdale securities litigation attorney Howard N. Kahn, Esq. if you or someone you know invested in corporate or agency bond transactions sold by the Citi International Financial Services unit of Citigroup, Inc. In addition to being an experienced securities litigation attorney, Mr. Kahn also serves as a FINRA arbitrator for individual investors, brokers, and brokerage firms. You can reach him at 954-321-0176 or online.

Rengan Rajaratnam Charged in Galleon Insider Trading

The SEC today charged Rajarengan “Rengan” Rajaratnam for his role in the massive insider trading scheme spearheaded by his older brother Raj Rajaratnam and hedge fund advisory firm Galleon Management.

The SEC alleges that from 2006 to 2008, Rengan Rajaratnam repeatedly received inside information from his brother and reaped more than $3 million in illicit gains for himself and hedge funds that he managed at Galleon and Sedna Capital Management, a hedge fund advisory firm that he co-founded. In addition to illegally trading on inside tips, Rengan Rajaratnam was an active participant in his brother’s scheme to cultivate highly placed sources and extract confidential information for an unfair advantage over other traders.

“Our complaint against Rengan Rajaratnam tells a sad tale of a man who followed his brother down an illegal path of greed to its inevitable conclusion,” said George S. Canellos, Acting Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement.

Sanjay Wadhwa, Senior Associate Director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office, added, “Rengan Rajaratnam profited handsomely from his brother’s insider trading activities, and he may have believed he wouldn’t have to pay a price for his involvement. But now he is learning the true cost of his participation in the most expansive insider trading scheme ever perpetrated.”

In a parallel action, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York today announced criminal charges against Rengan Rajaratnam.

According to the SEC’s complaint filed in federal court in Manhattan, Rengan Rajaratnam repeatedly received valuable insider tips from his brother that he used for illegal trading in the securities of Polycom, Hilton Hotels, Clearwire Corporation, Akamai Technologies, and AMD. For example, in July 2007, he made substantial profits trading Hilton stock in his personal account based on a timely insider trading tip from Raj Rajaratnam that Hilton was about to be taken private. Rengan Rajaratnam quickly loaded up on Hilton stock, and the price of Hilton shares jumped more than 25 percent after the news became public. Rengan Rajaratnam cashed in his recently acquired position for an illicit profit of more than $675,000.

According to the SEC’s complaint, after Raj Rajaratnam tipped him about an upcoming transaction involving Clearwire Corporation in March 2008, Rengan Rajaratnam complained to his brother that certain nonpublic information they had used to begin accumulating a position in Clearwire stock was about to be reported by the media before they could establish a larger position. Rengan Rajaratnam nevertheless profited by more than $100,000 in his personal brokerage account and more than $230,000 for Galleon hedge funds based on trades in Clearwire securities.

The SEC’s complaint charges Rengan Rajaratnam with violations of Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5. The complaint seeks a final judgment permanently enjoining Rajaratnam from future violations of these provisions of the federal securities laws, ordering him to disgorge his ill-gotten gains plus prejudgment interest, and ordering him to pay financial penalties.

The SEC has now charged 33 defendants in its Galleon-related enforcement actions, which have exposed widespread and repeated insider trading at numerous hedge funds and by other traders, investment professionals, and corporate insiders located throughout the country. The insider trading occurred in the securities of more than 15 companies for illicit gains totaling more than $96 million.

Fort Lauderdale Securities Litigation and Arbitration Attorney

Contact Fort Lauderdale securities litigation and arbitration attorney Howard N. Kahn, Esq. if you or someone you know has a securities or broker dispute. He is an experienced securities litigation and arbitration attorney, and is available to assist individual investors, brokers, and brokerage firms involved in securities matters. You can reach him at 954-321-0176 or online.

Craig Berkman of Florida Charged in Facebook Securities Fraud

Craig Berkman, a former Oregon gubernatorial candidate who now lives in Florida, allegedly raised at least $13.2 million from 120 investors by selling membership interests in limited liability companies that he controlled.

The SEC charges that Berkman defrauded investors by claiming special access to pre-IPO stock in Facebook, LinkedIn, Groupon, and Zynga. Instead of purchasing shares on investors’ behalf as promised, Berkman misused their investments to make Ponzi-like payments to earlier investors, fund personal expenses, and pay off claims against him in a bankruptcy case.

The SEC’s Enforcement Division also charged John B. Kern of Charleston, S.C., for his participation in the fraud as legal counsel to some of Berkman’s companies. When investors in Berkman’s phony Facebook fund began questioning what happened to their money after Facebook’s IPO occurred, Kern falsely assured them that their money was used to purchase pre-IPO Facebook stock being held for them by unnamed counterparties.

“Berkman blatantly capitalized on the market fervor preceding highly anticipated IPOs of Facebook and other social media companies to fleece investors whose cash flow he treated like an ATM to fund his own living expenses and pay court-ordered claims to victims of his past misdeeds,” said Andrew M. Calamari, Director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office.

Sanjay Wadhwa, Senior Associate Director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office, added, “Lawyers and others who help shady operators commit fraud in the securities markets will be held accountable for their supporting roles. Kern was duty-bound to look out for investors’ best interests, but instead he was actively colluding with Berkman to prevent investors from discovering the fraud.”

In a parallel action, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York today announced criminal charges against Berkman.

According to the SEC’s order instituting administrative proceedings, Berkman raised at least $13.2 million from 120 investors by selling membership interests in limited liability companies that he controlled. Berkman defrauded investors in three different sets of offerings. He falsely told the first set of investors he would use their money to acquire pre-IPO shares of several social media companies. He misled the second set of investors into believing that their money would be used to purchase pre-IPO shares of Facebook or acquire a company that held pre-IPO Facebook shares. In the third offering, Berkman falsely told investors that he would use their money to fund various new large-scale technology ventures.

The SEC’s Enforcement Division alleges that Berkman misappropriated virtually all investor funds that he raised. He did use $600,000 to purchase a small interest in an unrelated fund that had acquired pre-IPO Facebook stock, however that purchase did not provide any company affiliated with Berkman with ownership of Facebook shares. One of Berkman’s companies nevertheless used a forged letter about that investment to falsely represent to investors that it owned nearly a half-million shares of Facebook stock. Upon discovering the forgery, the fund informed Berkman that it was immediately terminating and liquidating his company’s interest, leaving it without even an indirect interest in Facebook shares.

The SEC’s order details a recidivist history for Berkman. The Oregon Division of Finance and Securities issued a cease-and-desist order and $50,000 fine against Berkman in 2001 for offering and selling convertible promissory notes without a brokerage license to Oregon residents. In June 2008, an Oregon jury found Berkman liable in a private action for breach of fiduciary duty, conversion of investor funds, and misrepresentation to investors arising from Berkman’s involvement with a series of purported venture capital funds known as Synectic Ventures. The court entered a $28 million judgment against Berkman. In March 2009, Synectic filed an involuntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition against Berkman in Florida for his unpaid debts arising from the 2008 court judgment. The parties to the bankruptcy proceeding reached a settlement with Berkman.

According to the SEC’s order, instead of using his own money to satisfy these past claims, Berkman spent more than $5.4 million in funds from investors in his pre-IPO offerings to make the payments in the bankruptcy settlement. Berkman also made $4.8 million in Ponzi-like payments to earlier investors in the pre-IPO scheme, falsely telling some of them that they had made money on their investment when in reality he never purchased shares for them. Berkman used approximately $1.6 million of investor money to make large cash withdrawals and pay his own dining and travel expenses.

According to the SEC’s order, three months after Facebook’s IPO transpired, Kern wrote and signed a memorandum addressed to concerned investors in Berkman’s purported Facebook fund. Kern’s memorandum stated that a counterparty has “repeatedly affirmed that it has the requisite [Facebook] shares and reconfirmed to us that we have the securities interests to which we subscribed.” Kern knew this statement was false because the “counterparty” had told Kern that it was terminating Berkman’s company’s interest in the fund because of the forged letter. Kern received nearly $300,000 out of the offering proceeds.

The SEC’s order alleges that Berkman and his affiliated entities committed and caused violations of the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws, and that Kern caused and aided and abetted the violations. The administrative proceedings will determine whether a cease-and-desist order should be issued and what, if any, remedial action or financial sanctions are appropriate and in the public interest.

Fort Lauderdale Securities Litigation and Arbitration Attorney

Contact Fort Lauderdale securities litigation and arbitration attorney Howard N. Kahn, Esq. if you or someone you know has a securities or broker dispute. He is an experienced securities litigation and arbitration attorney, and is available to assist individual investors, brokers, and brokerage firms involved in securities matters. You can reach him at 954-321-0176 or online.

How to Avoid Florida Foreclosure Scams

Fort Lauderdale homeowners facing foreclosure should be aware of important court deadlines that can help them protect their legal rights. Be on guard against foreclosure rescue scams that promise to stop the foreclosure process for a fee.

No one can guarantee that you will be approved for a loan modification, or that you will be able to reverse the foreclosure process. Watch this FTC video for tips on avoiding foreclosure rescue scams.

Be cautious of mortgage foreclosure services that:

  • Make any guarantee
  • Ask for money upfront
  • Tell you to make your mortgage payment to them

If you are at risk of losing your home to foreclosure, there is action you can take. Contact Fort Lauderdale mortgage foreclosure attorney Marcy Resnik to discuss how you can defend your legal rights in a foreclosure. You can contact Ms. Resnik online or call her at 954-321-0176.

Savings Protect Homeowners from Foreclosures, FINRA Reports

Households without emergency savings, or rainy day funds, were three times more likely than households with emergency savings to make a late mortgage payment—and almost twice as likely to be involved in a foreclosure. These differences exist even after controlling for other factors that can impact mortgage payment behavior—like income, education and geographic region, according to a report recently released by the FINRA Investor Education Foundation.

The new study, Softening the Blow: Income Shocks, Mortgage Payments and Emergency Savings (PDF 140 KB) is based on data from the 2009 National Financial Capability Study, an online survey of more than 28,000 respondents (approximately 500 per state, plus D.C.).

Softening the Blow found that minorities and households with dependent children are more vulnerable to income shocks. Among households that experienced an income shock:

  • Minorities were 52 percent more likely to make late mortgage payments relative to non-minorities; and
  • Dependents in the household increased the likelihood of late mortgage payments by 48 percent.

“The Great Recession and the housing downturn devastated the finances of families across the country,” said FINRA Foundation President Gerri Walsh. “Data collected during this period, when many family budgets were stretched past the breaking point, suggest that having a rainy day fund can make the difference between being able to stay in your house and making late mortgage payments and facing foreclosure. That’s an important lesson for all Americans, especially as the economy continues to recover.”

The FINRA Foundation’s new study shows the extent to which lower-income Americans were especially unable to withstand an income shock during the Great Recession. Among households experiencing an income shock, those with incomes below $50,000 were 43 percent more likely to make late mortgage payments relative to their more affluent counterparts.

The sample used in this study was weighted to match the adult U.S. population (age 18 and up) on age by gender, ethnicity, education and census division. Data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2008 American Community Survey were used to construct the weights. However, as in all survey research, there are possible sources of error – such as coverage, non-response and measurement error – that could affect the results. The full data set and methodology are available at www.usfinancialcapability.org.

Fort Lauderdale Foreclosure Defense Attorney

Choosing the best approach to protecting yourself and your family from a mortgage foreclosure involves many legal considerations. Contact Fort Lauderdale mortgage foreclosure attorney Marcy Resnik to discuss how you can defend your legal rights in a foreclosure. You can contact Ms. Resnik online or call her at 954-321-0176.

Business Opportunity Fraud: Warning Signs

Investors are wise to be aware of business opportunity fraud. A former con artist advises “fast no’s and slow yes’s” when being asked to invest in a business opportunity. Watch this video to see how get-rich-quick schemes frequently proliferate during an economic downturn. 

Warning signs of business opportunity fraud are promises that sound too good to be true, including:

  • You can earn lots of money
  • I’ll show you how to build your business
  • You will be able to work from home

The FTC recommends that prospective investors always ask for a written disclosure document before paying any money. If the sponsoring organization makes claims of high revenue levels, you can also request an “earnings claim” document.

Contact Fort Lauderdale securities litigation attorney Howard N. Kahn, Esq. if you or someone you know has been the victim of business opportunity fraud or securities fraud. Mr. Kahn is an experienced fraud and litigation attorney. He is also a FINRA arbitrator in securities disputes among individual investors, brokers, and brokerage firms. You can reach him at 954-321-0176 or online.

Facebook Pre-IPO Share Sales Draw SEC Scrutiny

Managers of private investment funds established solely to acquire the shares of Facebook and other Silicon Valley firms were charged by the Securities and Exchange Commission with misleading investors and pocketing undisclosed fees and commissions. The SEC alleges that the fund managers collectively raised more than $70 million from investors.

Separately, the SEC charged SharesPost, an online service that matches buyers and sellers of pre-IPO stock, with engaging in securities transactions without registering as a broker-dealer.

The charges stem from the SEC’s yearlong investigation of the fast-growing business of trading pre-IPO shares on the secondary market.

“While we applaud innovation in the capital markets, new platforms and products must obey the rules and ensure the basic fairness and disclosure that are the hallmarks of sound financial regulation,” said Robert Khuzami, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement.

“Fund managers must fully disclose their compensation and material conflicts of interest.  Investors deserve better than the kind of undisclosed self-dealing present in these cases,” said Robert Kaplan, Co-Chief of the SEC Enforcement Division’s Asset Management Unit.

Contact Fort Lauderdale securities litigation attorney Howard N. Kahn, Esq. if you or someone you know has been the victim of securities fraud. Mr. Kahn is an experienced securities fraud and litigation attorney. He is also a FINRA arbitrator in securities disputes among individual investors, brokers, and brokerage firms. You can reach him at 954-321-0176 or online.

SEC Charges Thornburg Mortgage with Fraud

The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged the senior-most executives at formerly one of the nation’s largest mortgage companies with hiding the company’s deteriorating financial condition at the onset of the financial crisis. The plan backfired and the company lost 90 percent of its value in two weeks.

The SEC alleges that Thornburg Mortgage Inc. chief executive officer Larry Goldstone, chief financial officer Clarence Simmons, and chief accounting officer Jane Starrett schemed to fraudulently overstate the company’s income by more than $400 million and falsely record a profit rather than an actual loss for the fourth quarter in its 2007 annual report. Behind the scenes, Thornburg was facing a severe liquidity crisis and was unable to make on-time payments for substantial margin calls it received from its lenders in the weeks leading up to the filing of its annual report on Feb. 28, 2008.

According to the SEC’s complaint filed in federal court in New Mexico, even though Thornburg was violating lending agreements by failing to make on-time payments, the executives were unwilling to disclose the severity of their liquidity crisis to investors and Thornburg’s auditor.

For example, in a February 25 e-mail from Starrett to Goldstone and Simmons, she said, “We have purposefully not told [our auditor] about the margins calls.” Goldstone, Simmons, and Starrett scrambled to satisfy all outstanding margin calls and then timed the filing of the annual report to occur just hours later in order to precede additional margin calls and avoid full disclosure. As Goldstone had earlier stated to Simmons and Starrett in an e-mail, “We don’t want to disclose our current circumstance until it is resolved.” The intention was “to keep the current situation quiet while we deal with it.”

The SEC alleges that the executives’ plan to never disclose the delayed margin call payments fell through when they were unable to raise cash quickly enough to meet more margin calls received soon after filing the annual report. When Thornburg began to default on this new round of margin calls, it was forced to disclose its problems in 8-K filings with the SEC. By the time the company filed an amended annual report on March 11, its stock price had collapsed by more than 90 percent. Thornburg never fully recovered and filed for bankruptcy on May 1, 2009.

Contact Fort Lauderdale securities fraud attorney Howard N. Kahn, Esq. if you or someone you know has been the victim of securities fraud or commercial mortgage fraud. Mr. Kahn is an experienced mortgage fraud and securities litigation attorney. He works with commercial lenders, borrowers, and investors in cases involving mortgage fraud or securities litigation. You can contact him at 954-321-0176 or online.