Showing posts with label SEC charges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SEC charges. Show all posts
3.15.2012
Bay Area "Hedge Fund" Charged With Fraud
Founder of "purported hedge fund" Market Neutral Trading LLC Charged by SEC with Fraud.
James Michael Murray, a Bay Area "hedge fund manager" operating Market Neutral Trading LLC has been charged by the SEC with defrauding investors. According to the SEC, James Michael Murray used an "independent auditor" that was in fact merely a shell company he created.
Murray, a Larkspur, California native, also reportedly invented fictional professionals on the "audit" company website. On wednesday, The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of California also filed criminal charges against James Michael Murray. It's not clear if Market Neutral Trading LLC, based in San Francisco, actually conducted legitimate trading.
12.05.2011
SEC Uses Risk Analystics to Charge Hedge Funds
The SEC has announced several lawsuits against hedge fund managers including LeadDog Capital Markets, Solaris Management, and Millennium Global Investments.
According to the SEC enforcement chief Robert Khuzami, these civil charges are a result of using " risk analytics and unconventional methods to help achieve the holy grail of securities law enforcement—early detection and prevention. This approach, especially in the absence of a tip or complaint, minimizes both the number of victims and the amount of loss while increasing the chance of recovering funds and charging the perpetrators."
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According to the SEC enforcement chief Robert Khuzami, these civil charges are a result of using " risk analytics and unconventional methods to help achieve the holy grail of securities law enforcement—early detection and prevention. This approach, especially in the absence of a tip or complaint, minimizes both the number of victims and the amount of loss while increasing the chance of recovering funds and charging the perpetrators."
Read More
7.25.2009
Long Island Hedge Fund Subpoenaed by SEC
NIR Group, the Long Island hedge fund firm run by Corey Ribotsky, 38, is the focus of an SEC investigation focusing on the performance valuations of its hedge funds. Also under investigation are communications NIR made to investors.
The SEC has said that Mr. Ribotsky also lied about the returns and the holding of an assortment of funds. People familiar with the matter said Corey Ribotsky and NIR Group have defrauded their investors, after poor performance over recent months.
The SEC also requested that NIR provide yearly, monthly and quarterly fund performance returns from January 2004 till the present and all documents related to NIR's internal performance calculation process.
NIR Group was founded by Mr. Ribotsky in 1998 and focuses on small/micro cap companies.
You can go to Corey Ribotsky's personal website here.
Or visit NIR Group
The SEC has said that Mr. Ribotsky also lied about the returns and the holding of an assortment of funds. People familiar with the matter said Corey Ribotsky and NIR Group have defrauded their investors, after poor performance over recent months.
The SEC also requested that NIR provide yearly, monthly and quarterly fund performance returns from January 2004 till the present and all documents related to NIR's internal performance calculation process.
NIR Group was founded by Mr. Ribotsky in 1998 and focuses on small/micro cap companies.
You can go to Corey Ribotsky's personal website here.
Or visit NIR Group
4.08.2009
"Chinese Warren Buffett" Sued by SEC for Ponzi Scheme
Hedge Fund Manager, Weizhen Tang, 50, of WinWin Capital Management, has been sued by the SEC for running what authorities are calling a Ponzi Scheme. According to authorities, Tang managed about $75 million in assets (barely 1/10 of 1% of Maddoff's fund) and didn't reveal losses of over $15 million in 2007 to investors.
A federal court judge in Dallas agreed to freeze assets and appoint a receiver to recover clients’ money, the SEC said. The agency wants him to forfeit profits and pay unspecified fines.

More interestingly, Tang supposedly referred to himself as the "Chinese Warren Buffett", a claim he denies using until others started calling him by that name.
A federal court judge in Dallas agreed to freeze assets and appoint a receiver to recover clients’ money, the SEC said. The agency wants him to forfeit profits and pay unspecified fines.

More interestingly, Tang supposedly referred to himself as the "Chinese Warren Buffett", a claim he denies using until others started calling him by that name.
For years, Weizhen Tang was considered an investment guru in much of the Chinese community in North America. He could supposedly generate a 1-per-cent weekly return.
But Mr. Tang's reputation was dealt a stunning setback during the week of Jan. 26, 2009. That was when he held a public demonstration of his investment strategy in his Toronto office and couldn't match the reported results of his funds.
"Unfortunately the public demo failed," Mr. Tang wrote in an e-mail to investors a few days after the event. "I apologize. I don't want to find any excuses. I need more hard work."
By 2009, Oversea Chinese and WinWin had attracted more than 200 investors who invested roughly $75-million (U.S.) in total, according to court filings. The minimum investment was $150,000 (Canadian) in Oversea Chinese and $250,000 (U.S.) in WinWin. Mr. Tang did not charge a fee on the first 6 per cent of profit, but he took a 25-per-cent cut of any additional profit, according to court filings.1.07.2009
Hedge Fund, Pequot Capital Said to be Facing Insider Trading Charges

Bloomberg is reporting that Pequot Capital, a New York based hedge fund, is facing insider trading charges by the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) related to positions in Microsoft in 2006.
Pequot Capital was founded by Arthur J. Samberg, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. The fund began trading in 1986. The firm has US offices and employees in the California, Connecticut, and New York, as well as an international presence in London.
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