Article: Steve Cohen On Tape: The Scorecard

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Steve Cohen On Tape: The Scorecard

BESS LEVIN, 06 November 2013

Several years back, SAC Capital manager Steve Cohen sat for two days of deposition as part of a lawsuit filed by Canadian insurer Fairfax Financial filed against a group of hedge funds that included SAC. At one point, Cohen was questioned about insider trading, his fund’s policy on insider trading, and his personal views on insider trading, as reported by Reuters at the time the transcripts were unsealed. Continue reading “Article: Steve Cohen On Tape: The Scorecard”

Article: Exclusive: Watch Billionaire Steven Cohen Stumble Over Insider Trading Rules

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Exclusive: Watch Billionaire Steven Cohen Stumble Over Insider Trading Rules

Rain Media and PBS FRONTLINE have obtained a never-before-published video in which hedge fund titan Steven A. Cohen.

Whose firm this week pleaded guilty to securities fraud, describes federal securities laws as “vague,” and asks for an explanation of the basic Securities and Exchange Commission rule that prohibits insider trading.

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Article: An insider-trading conviction condemns Steve Cohen to becoming the 59th-richest American

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An insider-trading conviction condemns Steve Cohen to becoming the 59th-richest American

US federal prosecutors threw the book today at SAC Capital Advisors, forcing the hedge fund to plead guilty to insider trading and pay a total of $1.8 billion to the government, the largest penalty ever for the offense.

The case revolved around allegations that SAC portfolio managers repeatedly obtained inside information about major firms and used it to beat the markets. US Attorney Preet Bharara, the lead prosecutor, presented it as a major victory against insider trading by punishing an entire firm for a culture of corruption.

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Article: SAC Capital Pleads Guilty to Decade-Long Insider Trading Conspiracy

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SAC Capital Pleads Guilty to Decade-Long Insider Trading Conspiracy

ANTOINE GARA, 04 November 2013

Steven A. Cohen’s hedge fund SAC Capital Advisors agreed to plead guilty to federal charges that it violated insider trading laws and will pay a record $1.8 billion in fines and restitution.

In July, a grand jury indicted SAC Capital and its affiliates for one count of wire fraud and four counts of securities fraud, in an insider trading conspiracy U.S. prosecutors alleged lasted over a decade and led to hundreds of millions of dollars in illegal profits and avoided losses. Continue reading “Article: SAC Capital Pleads Guilty to Decade-Long Insider Trading Conspiracy”

Article: Steven A. Cohen’s SAC Capital Advisors hit with record insider trading penalty

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Steven A. Cohen’s SAC Capital Advisors hit with record insider trading penalty

TOM INCANTALUPO, 04 November 2013

Billionaire Steven A. Cohen, whose hedge fund SAC Capital Advisors has agreed to pay a record penalty for insider trading, is a native Long Islander known as a high-rolling art collector and philanthropist as well as a savvy investor.

Cohen wasn’t personally charged by federal officials. Continue reading “Article: Steven A. Cohen’s SAC Capital Advisors hit with record insider trading penalty”

Article: HSBC dragged into forex probe, reveals profits jump

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HSBC dragged into forex probe, reveals profits jump

AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE, 04 November 2013

LONDON: A worldwide probe into suspected rigging of foreign exchange deals has reached Europe’s biggest bank HSBC, the bank revealed when it also announced a jump in quarterly profits.
The London-based bank said in its earnings statement that British regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority, is conducting investigations alongside several other global agencies into a number of firms, including HSBC, “relating to trading on the foreign exchange market”.

HSBC said it was “cooperating with the investigations which are at an early stage”.

It comes as the British bank announced a 28-percent increase in net profit to $3.2 billion (2.37 billion euros) during the three months to the end to September on major cost-cutting and lower bad debt charges.

HSBC had posted profit after tax of $2.5 billion in the third quarter of 2012.

“Revenue was stable in the third quarter (of 2013), influenced by the mixed global macroeconomic picture,” HSBC chief executive Stuart Gulliver said in a statement.
“Our home markets of the UK and Hong Kong contributed more than half of the group’s underlying profit before tax.”

Gulliver added: “Hong Kong continues to benefit from its close economic relationship with mainland China. We remain well positioned to capitalise on improving economic conditions in these markets.”

HSBC said it would continue to focus on reducing its cost base after savings of $400 million over the third quarter and total cuts since the start of 2011 of $4.5 billion.

“This is well in excess of the target we set out to achieve by the end of 2013. We re-invested part of these savings in risk and compliance, increasing headcount by 1,600 since December 2012,” Gulliver said.

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Article: SAC to pay $1.8 billion to settle insider trading charges

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SAC to pay $1.8 billion to settle insider trading charges

Reuters, 04 November 2013

Billionaire investor Steven A. Cohen’s days as a hedge fund manager may be finished with an agreement by his SAC Capital Advisors to plead guilty to criminal charges of insider trading and pay a record $1.8 billion in fines and forfeitures.

But Cohen, one of Wall Street’s best known traders, has not been personally charged with any crime and will likely continue managing some $9 billion of his own money through a family office once his hedge fund’s plea deal is cleared by the courts. Continue reading “Article: SAC to pay $1.8 billion to settle insider trading charges”

Article: Steven Cohen May Sell Stock in Company Whose Founder Went to Prison For Insider Trading

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Steven Cohen May Sell Stock in Company Whose Founder Went to Prison For Insider Trading

ALEXANDR OLEINIC, 17 October 2013

Steven Cohen, SAC Capital, Insider Trading: According to an update from Reuters Business on Twitter, Steven Cohen‘s hedge fund SAC Capital would like to sell its position in the privately-owned company Kadmon Pharmaceuticals. As the outlet points out, “Kadmon was founded by Sam Waksal, who served a five year prison term for insider stock trading.” Continue reading “Article: Steven Cohen May Sell Stock in Company Whose Founder Went to Prison For Insider Trading”

Article: Former Royal Bank of Scotland trader linked to currency market fixing

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Former Royal Bank of Scotland trader linked to currency market fixing

Jill Treanor, 12 OCtober 2013

Electronic messages that Royal Bank of Scotland handed to the City regulator in connection with potential manipulation of the £3tn-a day currency market are reported to have been sent by the bailed-out bank’s former trader Richard Usher.

The messages are said to be among those handed to the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) by the bank, which is 81% owned by the taxpayer.

Usher, who could not be reached for comment, is now the head of spot trading at JP Morgan in London. He has been listed as a member of a Bank of England committee that polices a voluntary code of group practice for the markets.

The regulatory review by the FCA, which has not yet escalated its inquiries into a formal investigation, implies no wrongdoing by Usher, according to the Bloomberg news agency, which revealed his identity.

The analysis of the electronic messages is the latest move by regulators to test the integrity of benchmarks used to price financial products in the light of the Libor-rigging scandal as well as manipulation of gas prices. The investigation was triggered by reports in the Guardian last year.

The FCA said in June it was looking at foreign exchange markets after Bloomberg reported that traders at some banks were sharing information about their positions through instant messages. These were said to be a way to manipulate an index compiled by WM/Reuters and based on prices of currencies for a 60-second period.

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Article: RBS releases documents over alleged currency manipulation

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RBS releases documents over alleged currency manipulation

Jill Treanor, 09 October 2013

Royal Bank of Scotland has handed the City regulator messages sent by one of its former traders in the latest twist in an investigation into potential manipulation of currency rates.

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) began an investigation into the £3tn-a-day foreign exchange market in June following allegations that traders at major banks had found ways to manipulate a closely followed currency benchmark. Continue reading “Article: RBS releases documents over alleged currency manipulation”

Article: JPMorgan Agrees to $410 Million Fine for Electricity Market Manipulation

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JPMorgan Agrees to $410 Million Fine for Electricity Market Manipulation

ENERGY SOLUTIONS FORUM, 13 August 2013

JPMorgan Chase & Co. has accepted a $410 million penalty to settle accusations of electricity market manipulations in California and the Midwest.

On July 30, 2013, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) issued an order approving stipulation and consent agreement that requires JPMorgan Ventures Energy Corporation (JPMVEC) to settle allegations of electricity market manipulation in California and the Midwest between September 2010 and November 2012. The $410M fine includes $285M in civil penalty (to be paid to the U.S. Treasury) and $125M of disgorged profits ($124M to California ratepayers, and $1M to Midwest ratepayers). The agreement also requires JPMVEC to waive claims for additional payments from California Independent System Operator Corporation (CAISO) and adopt additional compliance measures. JPMVEC, a subsidiary of JPMorgan Chase & Co., accepted the settlement facts without admittance or denial of violations.

FERC initiated investigations in response to multiple referrals by CAISO and Midwest Independent Transmission System Operator, Inc. (MISO) market monitors of manipulative bidding practices during 2011 and 2012. It approved four emergency tariff filings from both independent system operators (ISOs) to make tariff changes effective from the filing date rather than the order date. In November 2012, FERC suspended JPMVEC’s electric market-based rate authority for six months with effect from April 1, 2013 for submitting false information.

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Article: The Other Side of Stevie Cohen’s Market Manipulation

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The Other Side of Stevie Cohen’s Market Manipulation

Smashmouth Investigative Journalism, 02 August 2013

The DOJ showed us they want to turn the world’s most famous hedge fund, SAC Capital, into the most notorious hedge fund when it filed criminal charges against the 1,000 person firm last week. SAC, which stands for Steven A. Cohen its founder, is accused of creating a culture where inside trading was encouraged for over a decade. This means traders who worked under Cohen got non-public material info about a public company and then went long or short the stock–while the rest of main street was clueless. The DOJ filed a long complaint detailing dates and time they think this happen at SAC but the Justice Department missed an element of seediness that happens within the outside hedge funds Stevie Cohen has invested his personal money in. Continue reading “Article: The Other Side of Stevie Cohen’s Market Manipulation”

Article: Steve Cohen: The Feds Get Tough, Sort Of

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Steve Cohen: The Feds Get Tough, Sort Of

MATT TAIBBI, 01 August 2013

He’s Wall Street’s ultimate comic-book villain – with his glowing bald head and marble eyes, he looks a little like Lex Luthor. But maybe the best comparison for famed hedge-fund shark and long-suspected insider-trading ringleader Steve Cohen is the Joker. Earlier this year, when the SEC extracted $616 million from Cohen’s fund in two regulatory settlements, he expressed his deep remorse by buying, within weeks, a $155 million Picasso and a $60 million beach house in the Hamptons, right down the road from his other Hamptons beach house, worth $18 million.

It was a big fat middle finger to the government, flipped by a man who clearly thought he was getting away with a slap on the wrist, the way every other brazen Wall Street crook in the past half-decade has done so far. Continue reading “Article: Steve Cohen: The Feds Get Tough, Sort Of”

Article: Indictment Won’t Stop Steve Cohen from Hosting a Hamptons Tuna Party

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Indictment Won’t Stop Steve Cohen from Hosting a Hamptons Tuna Party

Nitasha Tiku, 29 July 2013

Try as they might, the feds haven’t been able to slow Steve Cohen’s roll.

Force his $14 billion hedge fund, SAC Capital, pay a $616 million settlement for insider trading accusations? He goes out and buys a Picasso and a second Hamptons manse down the road from his first one. Serve SAC Capital a five-count criminal indictment for insider trading? He throws a flashy party at his 9,000 square foot estate on Further Road. Continue reading “Article: Indictment Won’t Stop Steve Cohen from Hosting a Hamptons Tuna Party”

Article: CEO Mocks Steve Cohen In Bizarre Full-Page Wall Street Journal Ad

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CEO Mocks Steve Cohen In Bizarre Full-Page Wall Street Journal Ad

Quartz, 28 July 2013

The background is that Patrick Byrne, chief executive of Overstock.com, is among the most vocal critics of naked short selling, which some investors, including SAC Capital founder Steve Cohen, use to drive down the stock price of companies that they’ve bet against. Byrne once famously called Cohen a “Sith Lord,” referencing a Star Wars villain, for engaging in naked short sales of Overstock.com. Deep Capture, the website referenced in today’s ad, is funded by Byrne. Continue reading “Article: CEO Mocks Steve Cohen In Bizarre Full-Page Wall Street Journal Ad”

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