💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 2922.gmi captured on 2023-09-08 at 18:24:18. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2023-01-29)

➡️ Next capture (2024-05-10)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

A tip too far?

2011-03-03 11:01:01

Insider trading

Mar 2nd 2011, 10:46 by The Economist online

HEDGE funds are often fatefully named. Long-Term Capital Management, a hedge

fund that had to be bailed out in 1998, had a notoriously short lifespan. More

recently the Galleon Group, a large hedge fund named after an old-fashioned

sort of sailing ship, has dramatically sunk. The boss of the fund, Raj

Rajaratnam, and 21 other people have been charged in a sweeping insider-trading

case that has allegedly led to at least $85m in illicit profits.

On March 1st, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) brought charges

against Rajat Gupta (pictured), the former boss of McKinsey, a consultancy. He

is the highest profile corporate executive to be ensnared in the case so far,

having served as a former board-member of Goldman Sachs, a bank, and, until

yesterday, Procter & Gamble, a giant consumer-goods firm.

Mr Gupta was an investor in Galleon and a friend of Mr Rajaratnam, which is why

he tipped him off, on multiple occasions, according to the SEC. For example,

after Mr Gupta found out about Warren Buffett s $5 billion investment in

Goldman Sachs in 2008, he supposedly called Mr Rajaratnam, who bought 175,000

shares in Goldman. All told, Galleon raked in around $15m and avoided losses of

around $3m thanks to Mr Gupta s tips, the SEC alleges.

Mr Gupta fiercely denies the charges and vows to fight them. But the

allegations will permanently tarnish his reputation, and may cause fallout at

the companies he worked. McKinsey, for example, prides itself on advising

bosses discreetly, and rarely even divulges its clients identities. This case

against a former boss won t be good for business. Goldman Sachs, already having

settled a lawsuit with the SEC last year for allegedly duping clients into

buying mortgage-backed securities without enough information, doesn t need to

give investors another excuse to question how information flows on Wall Street.

Mr Rajaratnam, who claims innocence despite the guilty pleas some of his

colleagues have already put forward, is set to face trial on March 8th. With

his day in court so soon, the timing of the SEC s charges against Mr Gupta

probably aren t coincidental. The SEC may be trying to scare Mr Rajaratnam into

a settlement while also bringing down the ultimate corporate insider. It s one

thing to topple a hedge fund manager, but it s quite another to bring down a

major figure in corporate America.