Article: SEC accuses Cohen of missing insider trading red flags

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SEC accuses Cohen of missing insider trading red flags

gcrawford, 18 December 2013

Steven A. Cohen, the billionaire founder of hedge-fund firm SAC Capital Advisors LP, was accused by U.S. regulators of failing to supervise two employees facing criminal charges that they illegally traded stocks based on confidential information.

Cohen received highly suspicious information that should have caused any reasonable hedge-fund manager to investigate the basis for trades made by Mathew Martoma and Michael Steinberg, the SEC said in an administrative proceeding filed today. Cohen ignored red flags and allowed illegal trades that earned profits and avoided losses of more than $275 million, the SEC said.

“Hedge-fund managers are responsible for exercising appropriate supervision over their employees to ensure that their firms comply with the securities laws,” Andrew Ceresney, co-director of the SEC’s enforcement division, said in a statement. “After learning about red flags indicating potential insider trading by his employees, Steven Cohen allegedly failed to follow up to prevent violations of the law.”

The SEC is seeking to bar Cohen from overseeing investor funds, in addition to the more than $615 million his firm has already agreed to pay for the alleged insider trading, the SEC said. The $15 billion hedge-fund firm, based in Stamford, Connecticut, and its founder have moved to the center of the U.S. multiyear investigation of insider trading on Wall Street since former portfolio manager Martoma was charged in November in what prosecutors called the biggest insider-trading scheme in history.

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