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In
the matter of Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc. and Bear, Stearns Securities
Corp. |
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The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced a
settled enforcement action against Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc. (BS&Co.)
and Bear, Stearns Securities Corp. (BSSC) (collectively, Bear Stearns),
charging Bear Stearns with securities fraud for facilitating unlawful late
trading and deceptive market timing of mutual funds by its customers and ... More... $250,000,000 (3/29/2006 - NY ) Date: 3/29/2006 Case Style: In the matter of Bear, Stearns
& Co., Inc. and Bear Stearns Securities Corp. Case Number: 3-12238 Judge: Unknown Court: Securities and Exchange
Commission, New York County, New York Plaintiff's
Attorney: Mark K. Schonfeld
Director, Northeast Regional Office (212) 336-1020 Andrew M. Calamari
Associate Regional Director (212) 336-0042 Doria G. Bachenheimer
Assistant Regional Director (212) 336-0024 Defendant's
Attorney:
Unknown Description: The Securities and
Exchange Commission today announced a settled enforcement action against
Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc. (BS&Co.) and Bear, Stearns Securities Corp.
(BSSC) (collectively, Bear Stearns), charging Bear Stearns with securities
fraud for facilitating unlawful late trading and deceptive market timing of
mutual funds by its customers and customers of its introducing brokers. The
Commission issued an Order finding that from 1999 through September 2003,
Bear Stearns provided technology, advice and deceptive devices that enabled
its market timing customers and introducing brokers to late trade and to
evade detection by mutual funds. Pursuant to the Order,
Bear Stearns will pay $250 million, consisting of $160 million in
disgorgement and a $90 million penalty. The money will be paid into a Fair
Fund to be distributed to the harmed mutual funds and mutual fund
shareholders. Bear Stearns will also undertake significant reforms to improve
its compliance structure. Simultaneously, NYSE Regulation, Inc. censured and
fined Bear Stearns, and imposed compliance with these undertakings. The fine
imposed by the NYSE will be deemed satisfied by the payment of the $250
million pursuant to the Commission's Order. Linda Chatman Thomsen,
SEC Enforcement Division Director, said, "For years, Bear Stearns helped
favored hedge fund customers evade the systems and rules designed to protect
long-term mutual fund investors from the harm of market timing and late
trading. As a result, market timers profited while long term investors lost.
This settlement will not only deprive Bear Stearns of the gains it reaped by
its conduct, but also require Bear Stearns to put in place procedures to
prevent similar misconduct from recurring." Mark K. Schonfeld,
Director of the Northeast Regional Office, said, "Bear Stearns was the
hub that connected the many spokes of market timing and late trading - hedge
funds, brokers and the mutual funds. Tape-recorded phone calls of its
employees make plain the two roles played by Bear Stearns that were
fundamental to mutual fund trading abuses. Bear Stearns made it possible for
hedge funds and brokers to submit orders long after the 4:00 p.m. cut-off.
Bear Stearns made it easier for the hedge funds and the brokers to engage in
market timing, and harder for the mutual funds to detect and stop it." Bear Stearns' Timing
Desk BS&Co. is an
introducing broker dealer whose customers buy and sell securities. BSSC is a
clearing firm for BS&Co., other introducing broker dealers and prime
brokerage customers (i.e., hedge funds that clear trades directly through
BSSC). From 1999 through September 2003, Bear Stearns facilitated late
trading and deceptive market timing of mutual funds by its customers and
customers of BSSC's introducing broker dealers. BSSC cleared all these
unlawful mutual fund trades through its Mutual Fund Operations Department
(MFOD). In 1999, BSSC
established a "timing desk" to manage the increasing flow of market
timing trades through BSSC. The timing desk assisted customers to enter late
trades and even to cancel unprofitable trades the following day. The timing
desk also advised customers and brokers on how to evade the blocks and
restrictions imposed by the mutual funds and how to negotiate BSSC's own
blocking system. Some market timers expressed their appreciation for this
assistance by giving timing desk employees gifts such as spa gift
certificates, event tickets and meals. Late Trading Bear Stearns
facilitated late trading. At BS&Co., certain brokers actively facilitated
late trading by knowingly processing a large number of late trades for
certain of their market timing customers. In some cases, BS&Co. brokers
and MFOD employees falsified order tickets by recording that orders which
were actually received after 4:00 p.m. had been received at 3:59 p.m. or 4:00
p.m. In a tape-recorded telephone call, an MFOD supervisor advised a
BS&Co. broker: Because you're sending
trades down some days after what's considered a legitimate time, 4 o'clock
New York time, we want, we want to make sure that you know that we need to
populate a time prior to 4:00 p.m. New York time. What I'd like for you to
do, we're going to populate either 4:00 p.m. or 3:59. … [Y]ou know,
obviously, you should have them before 4 … Obviously, we aren't going to
receive it most of the time before four, but it has to be written - the
written time has to be before 4:00 p.m. New York time, so that if the
auditors come to us, and, you know, they want to see something, we have that
you took, you took the trade before 4:00 p.m. On the clearing side,
BSSC gave introducing brokers and prime brokerage customers with mutual fund
trading business direct access to its mutual fund order entry system. This
system permitted users to enter orders until 5:45 p.m. and processed all
trades, regardless of when they were actually received, as if they had been
received before 4:00 p.m. The effect, in the case of prime brokerage
customers, was to put the order entry system directly in the hands of the
ultimate customer who then used the system to trade at will without an
intermediary broker. Thus, using the platform provided to them by Bear
Stearns, certain prime brokerage customers had the ability to - and did -
engage in unchecked late trading. BSSC also knowingly facilitated late
trading by certain introducing broker dealers. In fact, BSSC assured at least
two of its introducing brokers with significant market timing business that
Bear Stearns would be able to accommodate their late trades. In some cases, BSSC
employees touted BSSC's abilities to assist timers - including the fact that
BSSC's mutual fund order entry system permitted entry of orders after 4:00
p.m. - to potential market timing customers. In a tape-recorded telephone
conversation, an MFOD supervisor stated to a well-known market timing broker
who was being recruited by BS&Co., "Well, just to let you know -
just to get you aboard - we probably do the best clearance there is on the
Street on market timing…." Then, in response to a direct question by the
broker about the cut-off time for trades, the MFOD supervisor responded,
"You have plenty of time to do trades . . . pretty much a quarter to
six, 5:45 to enter a trade." Deceptive Market Timing
Bear Stearns also helped
its market timing customers evade detection by mutual funds that did not want
market timing business. Upon detecting market timing trades, mutual funds
often blocked further trading by market timers by reference to the available
identifying information accompanying the trade, such as the account number,
registered representative (RR) number or branch code. To evade these blocks,
BS&Co. helped its market timing customers hide their identities from
mutual funds by, for example, assigning multiple account numbers to customers
so that the mutual funds could not identify them as customers whose trades
the mutual funds had previously blocked, or by assigning multiple RR numbers
to registered representatives at BS&Co. to conceal the identity of the
traders. BSSC likewise
facilitated deceptive market timing by its prime brokerage customers and
customers of its introducing brokers by providing them with deceptive
devices, such as multiple account and RR numbers and alternative branch
codes, to help them avoid detection by mutual funds. In an email, a BSSC
manager explained the strategy: many of the funds don't
want market timers and Bear Stearns simply relays the message to the
customer. some ways in which we
have "addressed" this to keep the customer happy is to change the
rr number on the trades or to open additional acct numbers in the family
since the mf companies target certain office ranges and rr #'s and classify
them as timers. Between 1999 and 2003,
BSSC received thousands of letters or emails from mutual funds complaining
about abusive trading or requesting that timing be stopped. In response to
these complaints and stop notices, BSSC developed a system that was supposed
to stop unwanted market timing. BSSC touted the blocking system to mutual
funds. In reality, however, the system was designed to stop only the specific
account that had been identified by a particular mutual fund as an unwanted
market timer from trading in that fund. Thus, this system permitted the same
timer to continue timing the same mutual fund simply by opening new accounts.
Bear Stearns then assisted with the opening of the new accounts that were
necessary for these customers to continue their unwanted mutual fund trading.
Only if a mutual fund threatened to terminate its dealer agreement with Bear
Stearns would Bear Stearns put a stop to all market timing in that mutual
fund. As a result of this
conduct, the Order finds that: (1) BSSC willfully violated, willfully aided
and abetted, and caused violations of Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of
1933; (2) BS&Co. willfully violated, willfully aided and abetted, and
caused violations of Section 17(a) of the Securities Act and Section 10(b) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder; (3) BS&Co.
and BSSC willfully violated, willfully aided and abetted, and caused
violations of Section 15(c) of the Exchange Act and Rule 15c1-2 thereunder;
(4) BSSC willfully violated Rule 22c-1(a) as adopted under Section 22(c) of
the Investment Company Act of 1940; (5) BS&Co. willfully aided and
abetted, and caused BSSC's violations of Rule 22c-1(a) as adopted under
Section 22(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940; and (6) BS&Co. and
BSSC willfully violated, willfully aided and abetted, and caused violations
of Section 17(a) of the Exchange Act and Rule 17a-3(a)(6) thereunder. Pursuant to the Order,
in which Bear Stearns neither admits nor denies the findings, Bear Stearns
will pay $250 million consisting of $160 million in disgorgement and a $90
million civil penalty. The money will be paid into a Fair Fund to be
distributed according to a plan to be developed by an independent
distribution consultant. Bear Stearns has agreed to significant remedial
undertakings designed to improve its compliance structure. The remedial
actions include the retention of an independent compliance consultant to
conduct a comprehensive review of BSSC's policies and procedures related to
compliance and supervision in the areas of prime brokerage and correspondent
clearing, and a review of BS&Co.'s policies and procedures in the area of
mutual fund transactions. BSSC has agreed to maintain a Director of
Compliance and establish an Internal Compliance Controls Committee, both of
whom will report to a committee of The Bear Stearns Companies Board of Directors.
BSSC will also provide training and education to its employees designed to
minimize the possibility of future violations of the federal securities laws
or New York Stock Exchange and NASD rules. Finally, Bear Stearns will
establish a Compliance Hotline where employees can anonymously obtain answers
to questions or report conduct that may be a cause for concern. The Order censures
BS&Co. and BSSC and directs them to cease and desist from committing or
causing violations or future violations of the preceding provisions of the
federal securities laws. In determining to
accept the settlement, the Commission considered the remedial acts undertaken
by Bear Stearns and the cooperation afforded the Commission staff. The Commission's
investigation is continuing. The Commission
acknowledges the assistance provided by the New York Stock Exchange. Outcome: Settled for $250 million. Plaintiff's
Experts:
Unknown Defendant's
Experts:
Unknown Comments: None |
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