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 Scandal at the heart of the City
 
motzu
125 posts
5th
Joined
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Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 08 Mar 06 4:23 AM Modified By motzu  on 6/25/2007 3:40:31 AM)

 

Scandal at the heart of the City

GLG Partners, Europe’s third-biggest hedge fund with $11.5bn under management, and its co-owner Philippe Jabre stand accused of insider dealing. Guilty or not, the case has focused attention on the hedge-fund industry and its relationship with investment banks. By Peter Koenig and Louise Armitstead

The Sunday Times

January 22, 2006

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,9063-2003433,00.html

 

Philippe Jabre, one of the best known and most successful hedge-fund managers in London, cut a vulnerable figure in Canary Wharf 12 days ago.

 

A knee injury sustained slipping on ice while getting out of a car in Beirut over Christmas forced the tall Lebanese-born Frenchman to hobble on crutches towards the glass doors of the Financial Services Authority.

 

Inside, despite his being flanked by his lawyers, Jabre’s position seemed even more precarious.

 

Nearly two years after the City regulator began investigating allegations of insider trading against him and his firm, GLG Partners, a London-based powerhouse, it was now the job of the FSA’s regulatory decisions committee (RDC) to hear the evidence before making a decision.

 

The case presented by the FSA’s investigators over the next two days centred on Jabre’s trading in the run-up to a $2.9 billion (£1.6 billion) sale of stock by Japan’s Sumitomo Mitsui bank in March 2003.

 

The FSA’s investigators accused Jabre of receiving details of the stock sale from a banker at Goldman Sachs in London in advance of public disclosure. They alleged that Jabre illegally traded on this information to make about $5m for GLG.

 

City hedge funds and investment bankers are gripped by the drama. Hanging in the balance is the fate of GLG, Europe’s third-largest hedge fund with $11.5 billion under management. More dramatically, Jabre, co-owner and star trader of the fund with a personal fortune estimated at £180m — his assets include a ski chalet in Courchevel, France — could face a lifetime ban from working in the City if found in breach of FSA regulations.

 

Hedge-fund managers, bankers and regulators further afield are watching, too. The allegations and evidence produced against Jabre and GLG look like part of a general malaise in the City rather than the transgressions of a single fund. If this is the case, the reputation of Britain’s financial capital would suffer.

 

The sums involved could be huge. Last year’s insider-trading scandal, which led to the conviction of Daily Mirror City Slicker journalist James Hipwell, involved tens of thousands of pounds. If there is a magic circle of City hedge-fund traders and investment bankers operating within the wider investor and investment-banking community, it could involve millions of pounds.

 

City hedge funds and the investment-bank units serving them generate about £20 billion annually in profits. If 5% comes from trafficking in information unavailable to other investors, the figure might be as high as £1 billion.

 

“The scandal could be the 21st- century London equivalent to what happened on Wall Street in the 1980s, when men like Ivan Boesky and Michael Milken traded tips on pending company mergers and acquisitions,” said one American banker.

 

The lawyers present at the RDC hearing were divided into four teams. In addition to those representing the FSA, Jabre and GLG, there was one representing Goldman Sachs, even though it was not a target of the investigation, and no charges of wrongdoing have been brought against the investment bank.

 

Despite being in the clear, the evidence that Goldman Sachs London banker John Rustum gave Jabre details of the Sumitomo Mitsui deal in a phone call on February 24, 2003 — several weeks before those details were made public — could cause the Wall Street institution serious embarrassment.

 

This weekend the FSA was still deliberating on the case. Those in the know fear that Jabre will have an uphill battle clearing himself and may have to part company with GLG.

 

The Jabre-GLG affair is also a test for the regulator. Since its establishment by Gordon Brown in 1997, it has done little to prove it is capable of standing up to the world’s big hedge funds, banks and their lawyers.

 

In a speech last autumn FSA managing director Hector Sants signalled that it planned to put things right. “Some hedge funds are testing the bounds of acceptable market practice concerning insider trading and market manipulation,” he said.

 

The FSA declined to comment. So did Jabre, GLG, and Goldman Sachs. Nevertheless, in interviews over the past nine months, hedge-fund managers, investment bankers, lawyers and regulators have created the impression that the regulator’s ruling on the Jabre-GLG affair will be a watershed for all concerned.

 

PHILIPPE JABRE was born into a prominent Maronite Christian family in Lebanon on May 23, 1960. “His family owns land near Mt Lebanon,” said George Asseily, a Lebanese banker. “They owned a brewing business which they recently sold to Heineken.”

 

After studying at the American University of Beirut, Jabre earned an MBA from Columbia University in New York, trained at JP Morgan, then went to work for Banque Nationale de Paris in London. There he became an expert in trading an arcane species of bonds — bonds convertible into shares.

 

“Philippe was a star and a popular one,” said Neil Tunley, now an executive at the financial firm Charles River Development, who worked for him at BNP.

 

Jabre joined GLG as a partner two years after the hedge-fund group was founded in 1995. The firm was part of the first wave set up after the industry’s founding fathers, including George Soros and Warren Buffett, blazed a trail from the 1960s to the 1980s.

 

GLG’s three original partners are Noam Gottesman, 44, an Israeli-American whose family built a commodities business in Amsterdam, Pierre Lagrange, 43, a Belgian, and Jonathan Green, 42, a British broker trained at James Capel.

 

All three worked at Goldman Sachs in London from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s as brokers for private clients in Europe and the Middle East. In 1995, the three decamped after getting backing from rival Lehman Brothers to start their own business. “They left Friday. They were in business Monday. It was a long time before Goldman would do business with them,” said a former colleague.

 

Eventually, tensions abated. Goldman became one of GLG’s prime brokers. It did not hurt that Green is a personal friend and business partner of Michael Sherwood, the London-based co-chief executive of Goldman. Green and Sherwood are co- investors in Sepura, a digital-radio company, and Bane Corp, through which they lease private aircraft.

 

Like most hedge-fund businesses, GLG is based offshore and discloses no meaningful figures about sales, earnings or net value. And, as with most, it makes its money investing other people’s capital and charging clients an annual administration fee of 1%-2% of funds under management, then taking 20% of the profits it generates.

 

In the late 1990s GLG consistently earned double-digit returns for clients — partly on the back of Jabre’s Market Neutral fund. The fund, which is listed on the Dublin exchange, took hedged positions in convertible bonds.

 

Then in 2000 the three original partners plus Jabre formed a new company. The four men bought out all but 20% of the Cayman Islands-based parent firm and stuck the stakes in their personal offshore trusts.

 

The dotcom bust was bad for average investors. It was bad for most pension funds which got stuck holding shares in technology, phone and media companies — but it was good for hedge funds which beat the sinking stock and bond-market indexes.

 

Over the past five years the hedge-fund community has grown from fewer than 1,000 to 8,000 firms. Funds under management have doubled to £1,100 billion.

 

In November 2002 Vivendi Universal, the French media giant, was financially overstretched and desperately in need of cash. It employed the London arm of Germany’s Deutsche Bank to manage a sale of convertible bonds. Following industry practice, Deutsche canvassed hedge funds and other investors to get a sense of what size of a Vivendi convertible-bond issue would be digestible at what price. In the course of these conversations, a Deutsche banker spoke to Jabre and his counterparts at several other hedge funds.

 

The deal was successful. Vivendi has recovered from its financial emergency. But in the three days before the convertible-bond sale was launched Vivendi shares fell 14% as investors sold stock ahead of a dilution of their value as a result of new securities coming onto the market.

 

The French financial regulator AMF began investigating this fall in Vivendi’s share price. In January 2005 it issued a so-called notice of grievance against GLG and several other hedge funds. Its investigation continues.

 

TWO months later, more or less the same thing happened with GLG, Sumitomo, and the managers of the Japanese bank’s March 2003 stock sale. In addition to Goldman, the lead manager, Sumitomo also hired JP Morgan and Daiwa Europe to help out with the sale.

 

In the 1980s Sumitomo was a financial juggernaut. In 1986, when Goldman Sachs needed capital to expand, Sumitomo provided it, buying a 12% stake in the Wall Street firm. Then the Japanese economy imploded. Property values crashed and businesses defaulted. Sumitomo and most Japanese banks were stuck with billions in bad loans.

 

In the 1990s Japanese banks came under increasing government pressure to clean up their balance sheets. The government set a deadline for problems to be solved by March 31, 2003.

 

To meet this deadline, Sumitomo merged with another troubled Japanese bank and restructured. In January 2003 Goldman Sachs took a stake, buying $1.3 billion of the Japanese bank’s preferred stock convertible into ordinary stock.

 

Rumour in the City was that Sumitomo was planning a second sale of preferred stock convertible into common stock — this one on the open market. The talk resulted from soundings being taken by Goldman, JP Morgan and Daiwa Europe. Bankers at the three firms were speaking to London hedge funds to gauge interest in the deal.

 

The FSA has rules regarding such conversations. If a discussion between a hedge-fund manager and investment banker is vague enough, it is allowed. If, for instance, an investment banker tells a hedge-fund manager, “a large multinational corporate is thinking of doing something in the next few months. What would be your appetite?” that would not stop the hedge-fund manager from trading.

 

Hedge-fund managers could then try to guess which company was about to sell stocks or bonds and position themselves accordingly. If, on the other hand, an investment banker tells a hedge-fund manager, “Sumitomo is planning a $2.9 billion sale of preferred stock in March” that is privileged information. Passing on such information is not in itself illegal, but it cannot be acted on. In the City it is called “taking an investor over the wall”. Once taken “over the wall”, hedge-fund managers are not allowed to trade in the securities of a company about to do a deal. It is the February 24, 2003 conversation between GLG’s Jabre and Goldman’s London banker John Rustum about Sumitomo three weeks before the sale of its stock became public knowledge that is at the heart of the FSA investigation into GLG and its star trader. Making its case against Jabre and GLG, the FSA has reviewed transcripts of taped conversations. It has matched the time of these conversations with the time Jabre traded in Sumitomo securities. Buy and sell orders are recorded on electronic trading platforms and by tickets written by investors and brokers. In the February 24, 2003 conversation, the FSA’s investigators allege that Rustum supplied details on the forthcoming Sumitomo stock sale. Rustum then said to Jabre: “You’re over the wall,” meaning he could not trade Sumitomo securities until the sale was announced. FSA investigators told the regulator’s panel that Jabre replied: “I already have a position in Sumitomo.” The regulator’s investigators said Jabre then asked Rustum if he could adjust his pre-existing position in Sumitomo securities, and Rustum replied: “I’ll get back to you on that.” Lawyers for Jabre argued that GLG’s star trader took this to mean he had not been “taken over the wall” after all. So, when he dealt further in Sumitomo securities, he was not breaking the law. The FSA’s lawyers argued that, whatever the vagueness on Rustum’s part, Jabre was “over the wall”.

 

ON JANUARY 9 Jabre took leave from GLG, citing his knee injury and the need to marshal his defences against the FSA. Sources close to the regulator say the FSA’s regulatory decisions committee will issue its decision by the end of the month. The star hedge- fund trader could face a record fine and a bar from working in the City or he could be cleared. The FSA is also considering its decision about GLG. This may depend on how the firm itself deals with Jabre. There is speculation that GLG wants him to resign and sell his stake in the firm. Jabre’s friends are already rallying round. They believe he is a victim of the FSA’s desire to claim a high- profile scalp, and that his partners at GLG are willing to distance themselves from him to protect the firm. “Philippe has been made a scapegoat,” said the Lebanese banker Asseily. How the FSA handles the announcement of its finding will go a long way toward establishing the credibility of its investigation and the regulator’s reputation. It may also give an indication of whether the FSA sees the affair as a one-off or the first round in an ongoing effort to lift the lid on suspicions of insider trading among a circle of hedge-fund managers and investment bankers.

 

Inside trader scandals that made the headlines

 

THE GUINNESS AFFAIR

 

Guinness’s battle to take over rival Distillers in 1986 eventually erupted into what is still regarded as the best-known City scandal, writes James Scoltock.

Guinness, led by its chief executive, Ernest Saunders, and its City advisers mounted a share-support scheme to improve the value of its bid. Leading City players, including Gerald Ronson of the Heron property group, were offered success fees and indemnities against losses.

Ronson was jailed along with Saunders, who was released after seemingly contracting Alzheimer’s — from which he later recovered. The others convicted were broker Anthony Parnes and financier Jack Lyons, who was stripped of his knighthood.

 

 

THE DEN OF THIEVES

 

In America in the 1980s Ivan Boesky pioneered the idea of betting on the outcomes of bids for companies and cleaning up when the right stocks were bought ahead of deal announcements. Bankers at Kidder Peabody and Shearson Lehman were drawn in. So was Michael Milken and his firm, Drexel Burnham Lambert, because many of the takeovers were financed with the junk bonds Milken pioneered. The prosecutors proved that Boesky and Milken were often betting right because they were getting inside information from the investment bankers involved in the deals.

 

MARTHA STEWART

 

The US home-decorating mogul Martha Stewart shocked America when she was charged with insider trading after selling her stake in ImClone, the biotech company, following a tip-off that the shares would crash because federal approval for a cancer drug would be delayed.

Eventually Stewart was found guilty of altering evidence, having made it appear that she had sold her stock legitimately rather than as a result of inside information. Stewart spent five months in prison and also a five-month home-confinement term.

 

THE CITY SLICKERS

 

Daily Mirror journalists James Hipwell and Anil Bhoyrul were brought to the paper by Piers Morgan to liven up the business coverage, but by February 2000 had been sacked for gross misconduct. The two journalists and day trader Terry Shepherd were prosecuted for using their column to manipulate the stock market. The Department of Trade and Industry investigated the Slickers affair until 2004, and then launched prosecutions for share ramping. In all Hipwell, Bhoyrul and Shepherd made £42,000 between them. All three were found guilty, Last week Bhoyrul was given 180 hours community service and Shepherd was jailed for three months. Hipwell may also face prison.

Additional reporting by Patrick Masters and J Padmapriya

 

 

motzu
125 posts
5th
Joined
1/29/2006

Re: Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 08 Mar 06 4:26 AM Modified By motzu  on 6/25/2007 3:42:34 AM)

GLG Star Jabre Takes Leave Amid Inquiry

 
 
By ANITA RAGHAVAN
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
January 10, 2006; Page C1

 

Philippe Jabre, one of the world's top hedge-fund traders, has taken a leave of absence from giant hedge fund GLG Partners LP amid a regulatory investigation into his activities, according to people familiar with the situation.

 

The move comes as a regulatory case involving Mr. Jabre and his firm approaches a significant juncture. European regulators, as part of a two-year investigation of GLG, are examining whether Mr. Jabre improperly used nonpublic information on coming convertible-bond deals to trade on behalf of the hedge fund, people familiar with the matter said.

 

This week, lawyers for Mr. Jabre and GLG, along with staff attorneys at Britain's Financial Services Authority, are slated to meet to present their respective cases to the adjudicating body of the FSA, the Regulatory Decision Committee.

 

The meeting is important because it represents the first time Mr. Jabre and GLG will make a formal oral case to the adjudicating body as to why the agency shouldn't take any action against the firm or its star trader, these people say. The committee has considerable latitude; it can give the green light to bring the case or it can throw it out. It also can send back the case to the enforcement staff for more evidence or seek more information from GLG and Mr. Jabre. GLG currently manages about $11.5 billion.

 

A spokeswoman for the FSA, which is the British equivalent of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, declined to comment.

 

In a conversation in recent days with GLG co-founder Noam Gottesman, Mr. Jabre said he was requesting a leave of absence to recuperate from a serious accident he had over the holidays and to focus on his regulatory problems, the people familiar with the matter said. Mr. Jabre slipped on ice at a ski resort in Lebanon, breaking his leg and immobilizing him for an expected three months, these people said. The leave is effective this week.

 

The development comes amid closer scrutiny of hedge funds world-wide, as these lightly regulated investment pools wield ever more market clout. Hedge-fund assets total nearly $1 trillion, double that of five years ago, and account for the bulk of daily activity in some segments of the securities markets.

 

In recent years, some regulators have become concerned that hedge funds, which dole out hundreds of millions of dollars in trading commissions each year, may be exploiting their market clout to get an edge in ferreting out nonpublic information and trading on it.

 

That concern has been intensified because hedge funds recently have had a tougher time generating blockbuster returns. As more hedge funds have opened, unique investment opportunities have dwindled.

 

Even though the Dow Jones Industrial Average topped 11000 yesterday for the first time since June 2001, many hedge funds troll for investments in more diverse markets world-wide, such as bonds, currencies and derivatives.

 

At issue in the investigation of GLG and Mr. Jabre is activity during "premarketing" of securities issues, when financial firms sound out potential investors about their appetite for a bond or stock offering before the sale of such securities. Such premarketing is viewed by securities firms as a legitimate way to gauge demand for corporate securities, but the FSA forbids funds from trading on information that isn't public.

 

The FSA investigation centers on a $2.9 billion convertible-bond issue offered by Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group of Japan in 2003, people familiar with the matter said. Mr. Jabre received details of the coming convertible-bond issue from the deal's manager, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., a person familiar with the situation said. It is unclear whether Mr. Jabre made any trades tied to the Sumitomo news on behalf of his fund.

 

Mr. Jabre is a top player at GLG, managing a number of its hot funds, including its flagship GLG Market Neutral Fund. That portfolio seeks to take advantage of pricing anomalies between securities and create returns that aren't closely correlated with global stock markets.

 

Assets of the Market Neutral Fund had swollen to a peak of more than $4 billion in 2003. Between 1998 and 2004, the fund produced average annual returns, after fees, of 23.1% compared with 5.29% for the Morgan Stanley Capital International World Index. The performance refers to Class Z shares, which carry lower fees than other classes of the fund's shares.

 

Last year, amid a weak market in convertible bonds -- securities that are exchangeable into a fixed number of shares of common stock at a set price -- assets fell to between $1.5 billion and $2 billion, say people familiar with the situation.

 

For the year ended Dec. 31, 2005, the fund is expected to have gained between 5% and 6%, net of fees, these people say.

 

Write to Anita Raghavan at anita.raghavan@wsj.com1

 

motzu
125 posts
5th
Joined
1/29/2006

Re: Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 08 Mar 06 4:29 AM Modified By motzu  on 6/25/2007 3:44:59 AM)

An unbeaten risk-taker
By Stephen Schurr
Published: March 3 2006 19:44 | Last updated: March 3 2006 19:44

http://news.ft.com/cms/s/e7c68278-aae8-11da-8a68-0000779e2340.html 

 

Even for the most extra­ordinary skier, neither acumen nor experience can prepare oneself for the mortal threat of an avalanche. Philippe Jabre learnt this last year.

 

Last February, Mr Jabre, then the star trader for London hedge fund GLG Partners, was skiing in Courchevel with his wife Zaza, a client and two guides when a huge mass of snow rapidly descended upon them. When the avalanche hit, his wife was submerged. Mr Jabre and his companions spent 23 minutes trying to find her and dig her out, with the odds of her survival dwindling by the minute. Miraculously, she survived, capping her recovery in January with a return to the slopes at the French ski resort where they own a home.

 

Mr Jabre also faced down two powerful forces in his professional life in 2005 that threatened to submerge him. The first was a near-cataclysm in the credit market that put his GLG Market Neutral fund down 18 per cent through May. The fund posted a remarkable recovery, capped by a double-digit return in December that put it up 5.47 per cent for the year.

 

The second was the UK Financial Services Authority’s investigation into his February 2003 trades in Japan’s Sumitomo after he received information about a coming convertible-bond deal from Goldman Sachs. It was the most high-profile regulatory probe in the history of the London hedge-fund community.

 

The latter reached its conclusion this week, with the FSA’s Regulatory Decisions Committee deciding to fine Mr Jabre and his former firm GLG £750,000 (€1.09m) apiece, determining that the trader and, in turn, his firm violated market conduct and committed market abuse.

 

The fine against Mr Jabre, born 45 years ago to a prominent Lebanese Catholic family, was the largest ever meted out to an individual. Despite the penalty, the RDC ruling marked the third time Mr Jabre evaded a dreadful fate. The judicial panel decided that Mr Jabre did not deliberately commit market abuse, ruling that he did not violate the FSA’s Principle 1 governing market integrity. Against the FSA regulators’ recommendation, the RDC opted not to ban or suspend Mr Jabre.

 

That he emerged with his licence intact can be seen as miraculous in some regards. When the two-year investigation came to light last year, it seemed to many in London’s hedge fund set a clear-cut case that would end with Mr Jabre’s head on a platter. As the investigation wore on, the details became less clear, as is often the case regarding the nebulous terrain of information exchanges between investment banks and hedge funds.

 

The decision ensures that Mr Jabre, for two decades a prominent fixture in London’s investment community, will have a third act – the first being the spectacular success, the second his near-demise under regulatory scrutiny and the third his potential return to running money. The course of the third act may not go smoothly. He will not be returning to GLG and he must re-register to run money if he plans to start a new fund – meaning the FSA once again holds the key to his future.

 

Mr Jabre was not available for comment. But several prominent individuals in the London hedge fund community said that whatever the outcome, the third act will be as closely followed as the first two because of his stature.

 

“Philippe is a hedge fund legend,” said a manager at a London fund that operates some strategies similar to GLG. “He is a born money-maker, and there are very few of those out there, even in the hedge fund world.”

 

Mr Jabre’s personality, according to those who know him well, is that of the quintessential hedge fund manager, only more so. The price of a ticket to this world is an extreme degree of competitiveness, high intelligence and innovative thinking. Mr Jabre established a reputation at a young age in the London investing community as both a risk taker and a brilliant trader. He earned an MBA from New York’s Columbia University in 1982, trained at JPMorgan and soon made his way to BAii, a division of BNP, the French Bank. In his 16 years there, he specialised in the budding market for convertible arbitrage, a strategy that involved buying a company’s convertible bonds and selling short the company’s stock.

 

Mr Jabre acquired a reputation among critics for operating aggressively. In 1997, he joined GLG Partners, a hot two-year-old hedge fund started by former Goldman Sachs bankers Noam Gottesman, Pierre LaGrange and Jonathan Green. It was developing a reputation as a player in the burgeoning London hedge fund industry, in part on the strength of its access to new offerings, and Mr Jabre’s convertible arbitrage brought a new dimension. “It’s ironic now, given the investigation, but one of GLG’s big moves toward legitimising themselves as a firm was getting Philippe,” said one hedge fund manager who was active in the 1990s.

 

Mr Jabre’s Market Neutral fund grew to more than $4bn at its peak, returning 23.1 per cent returns on average after fees between 1998 and 2005. According to individuals familiar with his investing style, Mr Jabre’s ability to beat the benchmark by 18 percentage points a year on average was his push to move away from convertible arbitrage and toward more opportunistic trading across various asset classes.

 

GLG helped Mr Jabre, who has four children, become a rich man, with his personal fortune estimated at £180m-£200m, enabling him to concentrate on charitable efforts, including a focus on Lebanese causes.

 

However, the two-year FSA investigation caused an irreparable strain in the relationship between GLG’s senior ranks and Mr Jabre. Individuals familiar with the firm say GLG came to view Mr Jabre as someone who took unnecessary risks. One individual described the rift as akin to “a rock group that becomes huge, where their success leads to their eventual break-up”.

 

While Mr Jabre officially remains on leave, individuals say he will not return to GLG. Mr Jabre will almost certainly look to raise money for his own firm. Some individuals say the FSA could decide to block any attempt by him to set up a new fund in London. But other hedge fund industry participants, however, say the FSA would grant him approval since the RDC did not suspend him.

 

And no one is questioning Mr Jabre’s continued ability to attract investors. Said one hedge fund manager: “Somebody was asking me the other day whether he could raise money if he starts running his own hedge fund. My God, he’ll almost be killed in the rush.”

 

 

 

motzu
125 posts
5th
Joined
1/29/2006

Re: Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 08 Mar 06 4:37 AM Modified By motzu  on 6/25/2007 3:46:53 AM)

UK's FSA to fine hedge fund GLG, trader -source
Wed Mar 1, 2006 1:14 PM ET

 

http://today.reuters.com/investing/financeArticle.aspx?type=governmentFilingsNews&storyID=URI:urn:newsml:reuters.com:20060301:MTFH72852_2006-03-01_18-15-27_L01611128:1

By Alistair MacDonald

 

LONDON, March 1 (Reuters) - Europe's largest hedge fund, GLG, and one of its former senior traders are set to be fined for charges related to market abuse and violating market conduct in their roles in a February 2003 convertible bond issue, a source familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

 

The fines come as Britain's market watchdog, the Financial Services Authority, is more aggressively going after market abuse by hedge funds, such as market distortion and inappropriate use of insider information.

 

The FSA's regulatory Decisions Committee is set to find Philippe Jabre guilty of market abuse and violating market conduct, according to the source.

 

GLG will be found responsible in its role as Jabre's employer for not properly monitoring him.

 

The process, however, is at an early stage, with the participants having received a "decision notice" but not a final notice.

 

The Financial Times reported that they had been fined 750,000 pounds ($1.3 million) each and that Jabre would be allowed to continue trading.

 

This is more than double the highest fine the FSA has ever levied against an individual and the first time Europe's most powerful regulator has fined a hedge fund manager.

 

A source familiar with the matter said the FSA had been considering a heavier fine but decided against it.

 

GLG may take some comfort from the fact that the FSA usually fines individuals less than the companies they work for.

 

GLG and the FSA declined to comment. Jabre could not immediately be reached for comment.

 

OTHER INVESTIGATIONS

 

The case centred on whether Jabre traded on information given to him by Goldman Sachs <GS.N> on a forthcoming convertible deal by Japan's Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group <8316.T>.

 

It is common practice for banks to sound out demand for a security with selected funds, usually under the condition that the funds adhere to confidentiality agreements.

 

GLG, which has around $11 billion under management, still faces investigations by French and Spanish regulators for alleged actions relating to three other convertible bond issues.

 

Hedge fund managers said the FSA fine could damage the reputation of GLG, which was once in talks, according to sources familiar with the matter, on selling an equity stake to U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers <LEH.N>.

 

Since the investigations began GLG has talked to investors and partners in an effort to reassure them.

 

France's largest hedge fund Lxyor told Reuters that it has reviewed its relationship with GLG recently and is currently comfortable with the fund's compliance and risk supervision.

 

GLG has not decided whether to appeal against the decision, the first source said.

 

Market sources said Jabre has been talking to investors about setting up another fund.

 

The fines come at a sensitive time for the hedge-fund industry, which is under scrutiny by market watchdogs across Europe.

 

A number of alternative asset management firms are preparing to list their shares publicly.

 

Switzerland's Partners Group has appointed banks for a listing which could value the firm at up to $1.5 billion, and a number of London-based funds, including Charlemagne Capital, are readying themselves to go public. 

 

motzu
125 posts
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Joined
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Re: Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 29 Mar 06 1:37 AM Modified By motzu  on 6/25/2007 3:28:07 AM)

Hedge fund star to fight FSA fine
By Melanie Feisst (Filed: 28/03/2006)

 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2006/03/28/cnjabre28.xml&menuId=242&sSheet=/money/2006/03/28/ixcitytop.html 

 

High-profile hedge fund trader Philippe Jabre will appeal against a $750,000 fine from the Financial Services Authority for alleged insider trading, despite his employer GLG Partners deciding not to do the same.

The shock decision comes 28 days after the City watchdog handed down what was seen as the minimum penalty for GLG's former star trader.

The penalty surprised many in the hedge fund community, who expected him to be fined between £4m and £5m and be banned from trading.

In a two-line statement yesterday, Mr Jabre said he had "filed a notice of appeal with the Financial Services and Markets Tribunal" - an independent body with the power to overturn FSA decisions. He added: "No further comment will be made at this stage."

A spokesman for GLG - one of the largest hedge funds in Europe - said it would not be appealing, but would not comment further.

The proceedings, which could be heard as late as next year, will be held in public, giving Mr Jabre's peers the first chance to hear full details of the two-year-old case.

The FSA's argument centres on a phone call between a Goldman Sachs banker and Mr Jabre in early 2003, in which the banker canvassed support for the up-coming issue of convertible bonds by Japan's Sumitomo Mitsui bank. Mr Jabre traded in Sumitomo instruments after the conversation, but he is expected to argue that was not as a result of being taken "over the wall" by the banker, but part of an existing trading pattern.

Evidence presented by the FSA's Regulatory Decisions Committee showed both Mr Jabre and GLG were responsible for market abuse and violating market conduct, the FSA claimed.

It released its first summary - a decision notice - in February, where it also said GLG was "vicariously liable'' for not properly monitoring trades. The FSA abandoned arguments against GLG's systems and controls, but fined the group $750,000 because it said GLG should have known what he was doing.

Friends said the situation between Mr Jabre and his employers remained tense. He quit as a director in January and was on an indefinite leave of absence. The pair are expected to part ways.

GLG, which hired Emmanuel "Manny" Roman from Goldman Sachs in June last year to strengthen its back end and risk management systems, has grown its funds under management to £13bn in the past six months.

Mr Jabre, who remained in London to lodge the appeal, is expected to return to hedge fund trading, but that will be delayed by a non-compete clause with GLG. The FSA declined to comment.

 

motzu
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Re: Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 06 Aug 06 7:45 AM Modified By motzu  on 6/25/2007 3:53:19 AM)

FSA closes GLG insider trading case

http://www.risknews.net/public/showPage.html?page=340005 

 

1 August - The UK’s Financial Services Authority today said it has fined hedge fund manager GLG Partners (GLG) and Mr Philippe Jabre, a former managing director of the firm, £750,000 each for market abuse, in a ruling that closes the high-profile insider trading case.

 

Jabre last week withdrew his appeal against the record fine for market abuse against an individual. His lawyers had questioned if the FSA’s Financial Services and Markets Tribunal had jurisdiction in Japan, where the trades took place.

 

Jabre was 'wall crossed' by Goldman Sachs International as part of the pre-marketing of a new issue of convertible preference shares in Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (SMFG) in February 2003.

 

The FSA said he was given confidential information and agreed to be restricted from dealing SMFG securities until the issue was announced. However, Jabre breached this restriction by short-selling around $16 million of SMFG ordinary shares in Tokyo, the FSA said. When the new issue was announced, Jabre made a substantial profit for the GLG Market Neutral Fund (see: FSA slaps £750,000 fine on GLG and its former trader).

 

“Jabre traded on information he had received as a result of the position he enjoyed as a leading hedge fund manager," said Margaret Cole, director of enforcement at the FSA. "The stability and fair operation of the markets through legitimate pre-marketing activities is jeopardised if those who are wall-crossed do not respect the restrictions imposed on them. GLG is also responsible for Jabre's market abuse. Firms are accountable for the behaviour of their employees, particularly if they are at a senior level.”

Joe Morgan

 

 

FSA slaps £750,000 fine on GLG and its former trader

 

http://www.risknews.net/public/showPage.html?page=319015 

 

3 March - The UK's Financial Services Authority (FSA) hit London-based hedge fund, GLG, and its former senior trader, Philippe Jabre, with a fine of £750,000 each on Wednesday for market abuse.

 

The decision comes more than two years after the original incident, when Goldman Sachs approached Jabre during its pre-marketing phase of a convertible bond issue for Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group. A Goldman Sachs employee, John Rustum, passed ‘inside information’ to Jabre, who claims he didn’t realise the information was such, said a party close to the situation. Jabre then used the information to make a profit. "[It was] a complicated call, which led to a misunderstanding. Goldman Sachs has admitted this [to the FSA] in writing," said the source. Rustum no longer works for Goldman Sachs and couldn’t be contacted for comment. A Goldman Sachs spokesman says the dealer does not comment on “regulatory matters”, but an official at the US bank said its staff made it “very clear” to Jabre that he was “an insider”.

 

The FSA's Regulatory Decisions Committee does not publicise its findings; if, in the next 28 days, either party decides to launch an appeal, then the appeal will be heard publicly. Neither Jabre nor GLG has yet decided whether to launch an appeal and any appeal would need to be co-ordinated between the two parties, the source said. GLG and the FSA both refused to comment publicly on the matter.

 

According to the person close to the decision, although fined, Jabre was not suspended nor barred from involvement in the financial sector. This was because he was found not to have intended to break FSA rules. His offence was ‘a misunderstanding in hindsight’. But it is "unlikely" that Jabre will stay with GLG.

 

The ruling represents the first successful case the FSA has brought against a hedge fund for market abuse. Convertible bonds represent a lucrative arbitrage opportunity for hedge funds, which can profit from going long on the bond and short on the issuer's equity. The FSA realises this and is stepping up its monitoring of potential insider trades.

 

"We receive all the trading information, so we can see any price moves of interest,” said an FSA spokesman “We have now been given more resources, and we are investing in a new IT system to monitor market conduct."

 

In particular, the spokesman adds: "We are doing some proactive work on pre-marketing of convertible bonds: we are talking to institutions that were involved in recent convertible issues."

 

However, people close to the decision said it was less than complete victory for the FSA: "It could have reached this decision a year ago, but the enforcement team was convinced it was an issue of integrity and wanted [Jabre's] head - now this is a setback for them," the source said. GLG manages $6.6 billion in assets. Jabre has reputedly amassed a personal wealth of around $200 million.

Alexander Campbell

 

 

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Re: Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 20 Jan 07 10:29 AM Modified By motzu  on 6/25/2007 3:54:50 AM)

Jabre's scalp uncovers sharp practices

By Chris Hughes, FT.com site
Published: Aug 01, 2006

 

When the bear market was at its worst, many struggling companies had no choice but turn to hedge funds to raise capital and bail them out.

 

Few would have imagined that a star hedge-fund manager who participated in these rescue refinancings would later become the Financial Services Authority&apos;s first scalp in its mission to stamp out sharp practice in the hedge fund industry.

 

The UK regulator on Tuesday formally found Philippe Jabre, former managing partner of GLG Partners, guilty of market abuse after trading on inside information relating to a fundraising more than three years ago.

 

While the ruling only rubber stamps an earlier judgment that Mr Jabre appealed unsuccessfully, the accompanying reasoning sheds light on the special treatment that hedge funds receive from investment banks &#8211; and the potential for abuse.

 

In February 2003, Goldman Sachs was appointed to raise up to $3bn for Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, the Japanese bank. Before launching the issue &#8211; codenamed "Project Shoot" &#8211; Goldman called potential investors.

 

Mr Jabre was on the list. GLG is among a handful of hedge fund experts in trading convertible bonds, the instrument that SMFG planned to issue. Convertibles were then a popular financing tool for companies. They pay a coupon like ordinary bonds, but can later be converted into equity.

 

It was &#8211; and remains &#8211; common for investment banks to tell potential investors about forthcoming securities issues. That helps the pricing. The proviso is that the investor must agree to keep the sensitive information secret &#8211; and not trade on it. For their trouble, investors sometimes receive a chunky allocation.

 

Goldman telephoned Mr Jabre one evening six days before the issue was made public. The firm had a script for such calls, that involved asking the investor to agree to the necessary confidentiality and trading restrictions before proceeding with questions about the issue.

 

In his dealings with the regulator, Mr Jabre disputed he was read the script in its entirety. But he had agreed to be "wall-crossed" &#8211; jargon for being made an insider &#8211; and to restrictions on trading. He was then told certain key details of the forthcoming SMFG bond issue. Later, Mr Jabre asked the salesman, understood to be John Rustum, a Goldman managing director, if participating in the earlier call restricted his existing trading strategies relating to SMFG. The Goldman salesman took this request to his compliance department via e-mail.

 

"Spoke to Philippe Jabre at GLG on Shoot," the message says. "He has already borrowed Shoot stock along with the stocks of the other 3 big Japanese banks and has orders out with multiple brokers to borrow more if available of all four stocks. Does his wall crossing preclude him from putting out any new orders to borrow Shoot stock or does he have any problem having any preexisting orders getting filled? I told him I would get back to him."

 

The compliance department replied that Mr Jabre could not "put out any new orders or trade the name at all".

 

What followed is unclear. The salesman told compliance he had spoken to Mr Jabre, "and he understands". But Mr Jabre disputes he was told he could not put out new orders or trade. He says he was told he could "maintain his existing trading pattern".

 

Mr Jabre then short-sold nearly 5,000 SMFG shares, worth $16m, in eight successive trades. Short-selling involves selling borrowed shares so as to profit from any fall in a share price.

 

When the issue was launched, Mr Jabre shorted a further 11,000 shares. This made a small profit of $500,000 in the short-term. Come the pricing three days later, SMFG had dropped 22 per cent as other hedge funds sold the stock.

 

However, the trade lost as much as $30m, when the price of the $205m of convertibles that Mr Jabre subsequently received in the issue collapsed. It was months before the trade recovered those losses &#8211; and more &#8211; according to a person familiar with the situation.

 

Mr Jabre argued that his trading was legitimate because he had not been told that any issue was definitely coming. Moreover, he was told he could maintain his "existing trading pattern". This included one short trade on SMFG and a large borrowed position of Japanese bank stocks that he could have potentially sold short.

 

The FSA rejected these defences. It said Mr Jabre&apos;s trading in SMFG between the Goldman call and the issue&apos;s launch was based on what "a regular market user" would have recognised as inside information. 

 

 

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Re: Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 20 Jan 07 10:32 AM

Jabre fined £750,000 by City regulator

By Barney Jopson, Financial Correspondent, FT.com site
Published: Jul 28, 2006

The City regulator on Tuesday said that it had fined GLG Partners, the hedge fund manager, and Philippe Jabre, a former managing director at the firm, £750,000 each for market abuse.

Mr Jabre&apos;s fine - officially stated for the first time on Tuesday - is the largest the Financial Services Authority has ever issued against an individual.

The move follows Mr Jabre&apos;s withdrawal of his appeal against a fine last Thursday. The decision had signalled an apparent victory for the Financial Services Authority in its most high-profile abuse case to date.

It marked the end of a drawn-out legal saga sparked by allegations of wrongdoing over a convertible bond trade that Mr Jabre made in SMFG, the Japanese bank, in February 2003.

Mr Jabre was found guilty of violating market conduct by the FSA in March after a two-year investigation. But the manager was not found to have violated the FSA's Principle 1, which governs ethical conduct and whether he knowingly committed market abuse.

"Mr Jabre traded on information he had received as a result of the position he enjoyed as a leading hedge fund manager," said Margaret Cole, the FSA&apos;s director of enforcement, on Tuesday.

"The stability and fair operation of the markets through legitimate pre-marketing activities is jeopardised if those who are wall-crossed do not respect the restrictions imposed on them."

She added: "GLG is also responsible for Mr Jabre&apos;s market abuse. Firms are accountable for the behaviour of their employees, particularly if they are at a senior level."

It was not yet clear what implications the end of the appeal would have for Mr Jabre's ability to trade in the UK. A statement from Mr Jabre said he was pleased "that his approvals were not withdrawn".

But he is not currently authorised by the FSA, and the regulator had said in previous legal statements that he was "not a fit and proper person to perform functions in relation to a regulated activity carried on by an authorised person".

The FSA was seeking to use the tribunal as a means to ban Mr Jabre entirely.

Mr Jabre had been preparing for an appeal before the Financial Services and Markets Tribunal, which adjudicates on challenges to FSA penalties. His statement said he now wished to put the matter behind him.

"Although Mr Jabre disagrees with the FSA's decision, he considers he had a fair hearing before the [FSA's] Regulatory Decisions Committee and he accepts its decision. He is pleased that the serious allegations of deliberate market abuse and breach of Principle 1 were rejected by the FSA's Regulatory Decisions Committee," it said.

It had been reported that Mr Jabre planned to raise money for a London-based fund once the FSA matter was resolved.

"We note the tribunal's comprehensive rejection of Mr Jabre's arguments," an FSA spokesman said.

Mr Jabre's decision was announced last Thursday night soon after the tribunal said it had rejected arguments made by his lawyers at a preliminary hearing on the appeal earlier this month.

GLG was also fined £750,000 and censured in March, but it decided not to appeal.

motzu
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Re: Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 20 Jan 07 10:34 AM

Jabre's back

By CHRIS HUGHES, Financial Times
Published: Dec 21, 2006

There was never any doubting Philippe Jabre's ability to raise a new hedge fund despite being found guilty of market abuse earlier this year.

Now it is obvious why. Mr Jabre appears to have sufficient indications of interest to make him confident of raising $2.5bn in his first year. Most hedge fund start-ups would be over the moon if they ended up with $1bn.

The world's super-rich will place their cash with whoever they believe will earn them the best return, never mind if that person has been disciplined by UK financial regulators.

So Mr Jabre looks set for a successful start. But he must still prove that after the distractions of the market abuse case, he retains the magic touch when it comes to investment performance.

 

motzu
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Re: Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 20 Jan 07 10:35 AM

Jabre opens new fund in Geneva

By James Mackintosh, Hedge Funds Correspondent, FT.com site
Published: Dec 21, 2006

Philippe Jabre, the former GLG star trader given a record fine by UK regulators, has recruited a team of 20 for a Geneva-based hedge fund that opens to investors today and aims to raise $2.5bn (£1.3bn).

According to those familiar with his plans he has taken on Philippe Riachi, head of risk management for Morgan Stanley&apos;s international prime brokerage unit, as his chief operating officer, a move likely to address concerns investors might have about regulatory risk.

Mr Riachi is Mr Jabre&apos;s brother-in-law, and worked at Morgan Stanley for 15 years until he quit to join the new fund.

Mr Jabre has been unable to accept money from investors for his venture, Jabre Capital Partners, until today, due to a non-compete agreement with GLG, the London hedge fund where he was a fund manager.

But competitors who have met him during his gardening leave say many potential investors have approached him.

"I&apos;ve never been for a drink with a hedge fund manager where people were literally throwing money at him," said one. "One guy asked when the fund would be ready, and said he was in for 50 [million]."

Mr Jabre is understood to be hoping to secure $2.5bn for his multi-strategy hedge fund in its first year, with more flowing into long-only convertible and balanced funds also being set up.

All the funds will charge an industry-standard 2 per cent annual fee plus 20 per cent of profits when trading starts in February. At GLG, Mr Jabre received the highest individual fine issued by the Financial Services Authority for trading on confidential information from Goldman Sachs about a 2003 convertible-bond sale. By opening the new fund in Geneva Mr Jabre avoids seeking FSA registration.

He has recruited several former colleagues from GLG, including portfolio manager James Saltissi and risk analyst Daniel Horsley. Others have come from rival hedge funds and from investment banks.

But Mr Jabre is thought to be going out of his way to avoid targeting GLG clients, and has appointed Lehman Brothers, a minority shareholder in GLG, as one of three prime brokers. UBS is lead prime broker, with Morgan Stanley the third.

 

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Re: Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 25 Jun 07 3:32 AM Modified By motzu  on 6/25/2007 3:49:46 AM)

GLG Partners hit by second fine for insider dealing

The Times, June 22, 2007

 

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/banking_and_finance/article1969087.ece 

 

GLG Partners, the £10 billion London-based hedge fund, has been hit with its second insider trading fine from the French financial regulator in six months.

 

The Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) fined the hedge fund €1.5 million (£1 million) – the largest penalty it could levy – for using sensitive information to trade shares in Vivendi, the French media group. The regulator also fined three other London-based hedge funds – UBS O’Connor, Meditor Capital Management and Ferox Capital Management – €4 million for the same offence relating to share trading ahead of a Vivendi bond issue.

 

Deutsche Bank, which arranged the $1 billion bond sale in November 2002 for Vivendi, was fined €750,000 for failing to keep adequate records of phone conversations and destroying potential evidence.

 

GLG, the former home of the disgraced trader Philippe Jabre, was fined €1.2 million by the AMF for a similar insider trading offence in January.

 

A spokesperson for the fund, one of Europe’s largest and most successful, said that it intended to appeal against both fines but declined to comment further. Meditor Capital Management said that it was also planning an appeal against the fine. UBS O’Connor, 100 per cent owned by UBS, said that it was “considering options”, while Ferox Capital Management declined to comment.

 

It is understood that Ferox, run by former world flyfishing champion Jeremy Hermann, is not planning an appeal. Its fine was €1 million, €500,000 less than the other three funds, because its actions were not considered to have been deliberate, the AMF said. Deutsche Bank said it was “too early to say” if it would appeal.

 

Yesterday’s fine followed an AMF investigation into a 14 per cent fall in Vivendi’s share price in the run-up to the convertible bond sale. The investigation, launched at Vivendi’s request, found that all four hedge funds had traded in the media group’s shares prior to the bond issue.

 

News of a convertible bond sale often sends a company’s shares lower. Investors with inside knowledge can lock in gains by selling at higher prices before the bond is announced. Investment banks typically phone investment funds prior to this official announcement to gauge their interest in the offering in a process known as “book building”. Hedge and other investment funds are forbidden from trading on this inside information.

 

GLG, based in Mayfair, is one of Europe’s most successful but controversial hedge funds. The fund and Mr Jabre, its former top trader, were each fined £750,000 by the Financial Services Authority last year.

 

Mr Jabre, whom the authority accused of jeopardising the “stability and fair operation” of financial markets, launched and then dropped an appeal against his penalty. He has since resurfaced at the helm of a $4 billion hedge fund that is registered in Geneva and therefore beyond the FSA’s jurisdiction.

 

motzu
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Re: Scandal at the heart of the City
Posted: 25 Jun 07 3:35 AM Modified By motzu  on 6/25/2007 3:50:35 AM)

Running up the dirty linen

The Times, June 22, 2007

 

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/columnists/article1969151.ece 

 

Now we know why London’s hedge fund managers were so eager to announce the creation of a working party to improve standards this week. Yesterday we learnt that four of their number have been fined for insider-dealing by the French stock market regulator AMF.

 

GLG Partners, Ferox Capital Management, Meditor Capital Management and UBS O’Connor were together hit with penalties totalling €5.5 million for trading on and profiting from inside information given to them ahead of Vivendi’s convertible bond issue announcement in 2002.

 

It was a third offence for GLG, which was fined £750,000 by the Financial Services Authority last year for a not dissimilar bit of cheating involving trading in shares of Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group.

 

Yesterday’s fines will fuel suspicions about the overcosy relationship between some hedge funds and some investment banks, and raise concerns about the damage this does to the standing of the honest majority. Investment banks make so much from the services they provide their hedge fund clients � a business known as prime brokerage � that some may be tempted, or even pressured, to stray, or at least to turn a blind eye to questionable practices.

 

The case also underlines the interconnectedness of different asset classes, for example bonds and equities, and the scope for abuse in one asset class made possible by the traditional book-build method of gauging investor appetite in another.

 

Adding to the recipe for abuse is the multi-divisioned nature of today’s sprawling banks. The conflicts of interest can be managed. The Chinese walls can be policed. It is just very difficult to do so.

 

Market abuse is unlikely to be high on the agenda when the new hedge fund working group under Sir Andrew Large convenes shortly. That is a pity. Manny Roman, GLG’s co-chief executive, one of 13 senior hedge fund managers on the group, seems well placed to enlighten his committee colleagues.