Web: SEC Discovers That Unbridled Naked Short Selling Might Actually Be, Er, Not So Good….

Web

SEC Discovers That Unbridled Naked Short Selling Might Actually Be, Er, Not So Good….

Bob O’Brien

Sanity Check via Wayback, 15 July 2008

What we are seeing is the US markets relentlessly melting down, as even the bulge bracket firms, and the “too big to fail” entities, are victimized by unbridled, unconstrained naked short selling. Exactly as used to be the case in the 1920’s. Exactly in the manner that resulted in the SEC being formed, and the uptick rule (discarded just a few short months back as an anachronism), and requirements for timely clearing and delivery. All of which the SEC has basically ignored, very deliberately.

Access archived page.

Web: Patrick Byrne Covers Up Ownership of ‘Deep Capture’ Smear Site

Web

Patrick Byrne Covers Up Ownership of ‘Deep Capture’ Smear Site

Gary Weiss

gary-weiss.com, 19 June 2008

A couple of months ago I described how Overstock.com’s terminally wacky CEO Patrick Byrne has thrown caution (and any lingering sanity) to the winds and was openly sponsoring attacks on journalists and other critics, on a smear site that he owned and was operated on Overstock servers, “Deep Capture.”

This was a change from Byrne’s previous tactic of claiming that smears and attacks were by people who just coincidentally happened to be his employees. The word for this is “astroturfing,” and it is a particularly sleazy method of concealing corporate (and sometimes government) involvement in dirty tricks campaigns.

Read full post.

Web: Counterfeiting Stock (Primer)

Web

Counterfeiting Stock

Illegal naked shorting and stock manipulation are two of Wall Street’s deep, dark secrets. These practices have been around for decades and have resulted in trillions of dollars being fleeced from the American public by Wall Street. In the process, many emerging companies have been put out of business. This report will explain the magnitude of this problem, how it happens, why it has been covered up and how short sellers attack a company. It will also show how all of the participants; the short hedge funds, the prime brokers and the Depository Trust Clearing Corp. (DTCC) — make unconscionable profits while the fleecing of the small American investor continues unabated.

Who Profits from this Illicit Activity?

The short answer is everyone who participates. Specifically:

  1. The shorts — They win over ninety percent of the time. Their return on investment is enormous because they don’t put any capital up when they sell short — they get cash from the sale delivered to their account. As long as the stock price remains under their short sale price, it is all profit on no investment.
  2. The prime brokers — The shorts need the prime brokers to aid in counterfeiting shares, which is the cornerstone of the fraud. Not only do the prime brokers get sales commissions and interest on margin accounts, they charge the shorts “interest” on borrowed shares. This can be as high as five percent per week. The prime brokers allegedly make eight to ten billion dollars a year from their short stock lend program. The prime brokers also actively short the victim companies, making large trading profits.
  3. The DTC — A significant amount of the counterfeiting occurs at the DTC level. They charge the shorts “interest” on borrowed shares, whether it is a legitimate stock borrow or counterfeit shares, as is the case in a vast majority of shares of a company under attack. The amount of profit that the DTC receives is unknown because it is a private company owned by the prime brokers

Read full primer online.

PDF (14 Pages): Counterfeiting Stock (Primer)

Web: SEC To Be Investigated By GAO

Web

SEC To Be Investigated By GAO

Bob O’Brien

Bloomberg cited by Sanity Check via Wayback, 26 October 2006

Well, for those who felt that the SEC would continually get away with murder, operating like a fiefdom above accountability to anyone, free to ignore the basics of due process, the rule of law, responsible regulation, etc….News Flash!

The SEC is going to be subjected to the scrutiny of the GAO.

Access archived page.

Web: Lies, Invention, Journalists, and the SEC

Web

Lies, Invention, Journalists, and the SEC

Bob O’Brien

Yahoo as cited by Sanity Check via Wayback, 21 August 2006

The subject matter, Mark Cuban’s ill-conceived stock bashing website that’s nothing more than a foil to slam his short positions, is the ostensible topic. I haven’t even bothered commenting on the site, as it’s pretty obvious to most upright bipeds what is being done there.

But this article is astounding – I literally thought that the guy who emailed me the link was making it up.

Access archived page.

 

Web: NY Press Dead Silent on SEC Cover-Up, Except For Forbes’ Liz Moyer

Web

NY Press Dead Silent on SEC Cover-Up, Except For Forbes’ Liz Moyer

Bob O’Brien

Sanity Check, 21 August 2006

Maybe if we don’t talk about the SEC cover-up, it never happened?

That seems to be the way our venerated NY press corps is treating the FOIA data on Global Links – the topic of the last two blogs, and of a Forbes article on Friday.

This is playing out like the Dan Rather incident, but times ten. Bloggers and a few mainstream pubs get it and break the story, while the media circles its wagons and goes into denial mode.

Anyone surprised? Note that there is nothing from the WSJ, nothing from the NY Times, nothing from Barron’s, nothing from the NY Sun, nothing from TheStreet.com or Marketwatch, nothing from CNBC, nor Bloomberg, nor AP, nor Reuters…not even from the Post.

Access archived page.

Web: Arne Alsin’s Article on Fails-To-Deliver

Web

Arne Alsin’s Article on Fails-To-Deliver

Bud Burrell, Arne Alsin

RealMoney cited by Sanity Check via Wayback, 17 April 2006

There is a systemic problem in the equity market, but the magnitude of the problem is impossible to gauge because the parties involved refuse to answer a simple question: Why?

My mutual fund purchased five blocks of stock in Overstock (OSTK:Nasdaq) during the first quarter. There was a failure to deliver shares in four out of the five purchases, with delays for delivery lasting as long as three weeks. Nobody can tell me why shares were not delivered within the requisite three-day settlement period — the so-called T+3 requirement.

Access archived page.

Web: The Geese Are Beginning to Be Slaughtered

Web

The Geese Are Beginning to Be Slaughtered

Bud Burrell, Chris Clair

HedgeWorld cited by Sanity Check via Wayback, 12 April 2006

U.S. defined benefit pension plans have been upping their allocations to alternative investments, including hedge funds, in recent years, helping boost hedge fund assets to above the $1 trillion mark.

But defined benefit plans, particularly in the corporate world, are facing big problems. They are almost universally underfunded, they face a future with more retirees than ever thanks to longer life expectancies and younger retirement ages, and those retirees are receiving better benefits than in the past. A number of companies, including IBM Corp., Verizon Communications Inc., Motorola Inc., and Lockheed Martin Corp., have announced they are freezing their defined benefit plans, the first step toward eliminating them altogether.

Access archived page.

Web: Suit Against Prime Brokers for Phony Stock Borrow Charges Filed

Web

Suit Against Prime Brokers for Phony Stock Borrow Charges Filed

Bud Burrell, Chad Bray

Dow Jones Newswires cited by Sanity Check via Wayback, 12 April 2006

An antitrust lawsuit was filed Wednesday against the securities industry’s largest brokerage firms over fees charged as a result of “naked short selling.”

The lawsuit filed in federal court in Manhattan by Electronic Trading Group LLC alleges that the major broker-dealers charged unearned fees, commissions or interest on short sales where those broker-dealers failed to borrow or deliver the stock to back a short position.

Access archived page.

Web: The Coming Sentencing of Anthony Elgindy, What he is and what he deserves.

Web

The Coming Sentencing of Anthony Elgindy, What he is and what he deserves.

Bud Burrell

Sanity Check via Wayback, 9 April 2006

On May 2nd, Anthony Elgindy is to be sentenced for his activities as a short selling syndicate operator. Over the course of several years, he attacked a couple of thousand companies, in the process putting many of them out of business. If he had been a killer or rapist, his crimes would have been collectively viewed as being “serial” in nature.

We continue to forget that Elgindy is a previously convicted felon for insurance fraud. He has now been convicted of six counts of another form of financial fraud. These counts clearly demonstrate that he engaged in operation of a criminal syndicate to manipulate markets for securities by counterfeiting (a Class B Federal Felony) those same securities, a Class A felony according to the US CJS (Criminal Code) for syndicalism, an act of insurrection and sedition, treason to its core.

Access archived page.

Web: Criminals, Prosecutors, Financial Manipulators, and Their Incestuous Relationships

Web

Criminals, Prosecutors, Financial Manipulators, and Their Incestuous Relationships.

Bud Burrell

Sanity Check via Wayback, 3 April 2006

After the great hoopla of the the Bermuda Short Sting Case, which produced a conviction rate of about 88% of indictees, the silence from the Government on related collateral indictments in pending cases, some more than four years old, is literally deafening.

The Government’s various agencies really have an “NIH” (Not Invented Here) attitude towards grass root developed cases coming up to them not as a direct result of their own investigative initiative. I am aware of case after case taken to various agencies of the Government with substantive evidence attached, which were ignored, black-holed, or thrown back at the victims.

Access archived page.

Web: Comprehensive and Controversial Summary of the History of Central Banking Globally

Web

Comprehensive and Controversial Summary of the History of Central Banking Globally

Bud Burrell, Rodney E. Young

Sanity Check via Wayback, 20 March 2006

The success of the central banking scheme developed into a far-reaching plan described by President Clinton’s mentor, Georgetown Professor Carroll Quigley, “to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the system was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world’s central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank….sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the levels of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world.”

Access archived page.

Web: How Have Brokers, Custodians and Some Exchanges Decided to Compete with their Clients for Investment Returns?

Web

How Have Brokers, Custodians and Some Exchanges Decided to Compete with their Clients for Investment Returns?

Bud Burrell

Sanity Check via Wayback, 20 March 2006

In the original concept of our brokerage, exchange, custody and settlement systems, there was never any confusion about whose assets were the basis of their activities as agents. The assets were those of the clients, who came to the broker and related parties necessary to the transaction to act as an “honest agent” in the purchase and sale of securities. Today, this entire relationship is blurred by conflicts of interest, and outright conversion of assets.

Access archived page.

Web: Hedge Fund Shells Out in Shorting Probe

Web

Hedge Fund Shells Out in Shorting Probe

Bud Burrell, Matthew Goldstein

TheStreet cited by Sanity Check via Wayback, 14 March 2006

A New York hedge fund manager will pay $16 million to settle allegations arising out of a two-year-old investigation into manipulative trading in the market for private placements by small-cap companies.

The penalty agreed to by Jeffrey Thorp is the largest settlement assessed to date by the Securities and Exchange Commission in the investigation into trading abuses in the $18 billion-a-year market for PIPEs, or private investment in public equity.

Access archived page.

Web: The Golden Rule of Professional Shorting: Never Short a Company Without an Inside Rat

Web

The Golden Rule of Professional Shorting: Never Short a Company Without an Inside Rat

Bud  Burrell

Sanity Check via Wayback, 9 March  2006

There is one genuinely “Golden Rule” for professional short seller/raiders.

You never short a stock without an insider to leak manageable information to you. That insider might be an officer, director, control person, investor, analyst, inside legal counsel, outside legal counsel, or even a lowly disgruntled non-executive employee.

In working on some hundred plus companies directly since 1995, I have never once seen this rule broken. Many times the CEO’s of these companies have resisted this idea, but in NO INSTANCE have I seen even one exception to this rule when they were finally forced to look in on their own operations.

There is a process for looking for raider attacks on companies, but many are flawed strategically, because they are only looking out, and not in. I have been challenged by a number of clients on this, but when they would spend the money to use competent investigators, they always found the connection of an insider to the raiders. Moreover, they found the miscreant in ways admissable in Court, in phone records, emails, and more. This is not dissimilar to what Overstock’s investigator found outside the Company.

If you want a broadly known example, simply look at the Nabisco deal and KKR. The number three operating guy at RJR/Nabisco told them where all the bodies were buried, and ended up running the operations of the Company for them when they won the takeover battle.

Officers and Directors have a duty to insure that sensitive inside information about their company is not being leaked to anyone, unless it is someone doing so for ethical reasons. I have seen more than once the use of such informants by the SEC, NASD, and others. This is a more complex issue if discovered. No matter what, such a person must be quarantined until appropriate third party investigation can determine the foundation for such actions. Many times it is based on weak premises, but not always. You only have to look at Enron, Worldcomm, Global Crossing and more to see good outcomes from such behavior.

For your consideration.

Access archived page.

THE DOLLAR HAS NO INTRINSIC VALUE : DO YOUR ASSETS?