Archive for January, 2010
Forget the Senate, Ben; THIS is the vote that counts
“The unseemly haste over Bernanke’s reconfirmation had nothing to do with a newly awakened Bear menacing Dow 10k from the high side. Neither was it a reaction to Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (the UK Telegraph’s Angel of Debt) and his comments about the ongoing Greek crisis. No, it was nothing other than fear over what the gnomes at Timmy’s old shop were going to uncork around 4:30 PM EST yesterday afternoon.”
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GDP Mirage – The Last Hurrah
” 4th quarter GDP came in at 5.7%. Discounting revisions (and probably even counting them), that was the last hurrah. Here is the story from two highly respected analysts.”
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The Urbanist Case Against Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
“The Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU), an advocacy group working to reform local development practices, is seizing on House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank’s (D-MA) recent call for a new system of housing finance to replace government-controlled Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.”
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Wisconsin’s Pension Strategy Update: Disaster Looms Over "Free Lunch" Proposal
” Inquiring minds are digging deeper into the State of Wisconsin Investment Board (SWIB) ideas to rescue Wisconsin’s deeply underwater pension plans. The plan is get the investments back on track using leverage starting out at 104% escalating up to 120%. The board even considered 200% leverage at one point.”
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Hedge Funds Charged Under SEC Rule Prohibiting Short-Selling
HedgeCo News – In one case this week, the SEC charged Los Angeles-based AGB Partners LLC and its principals Gregory A. Bied of Boise, Idaho, and Andrew J. Goldberger of Santa Monica, Calif., finding that they netted thousands of dollars in improper profits by shorting in advance of their purchase of stock in a secondary offering.
In the other case, also this week, the SEC charged Los Angeles-based Palmyra Capital Advisors LLC, finding that the firm violated short selling rules and improperly profited in three of its managed hedge funds. Both firms have agreed to settle the SEC’s charges.
These mark the first cases filed under the SEC’s amended Rule 105 of Regulation M, which is designed to prohibit manipulative short selling ahead of follow-on securities offerings.
Rule 105 is intended to prevent abusive short selling and market manipulation by ensuring that offering prices are set by the market forces of supply and demand for the securities in an offering rather than by manipulative activity. The SEC is concerned that short selling ahead of offerings may reduce the proceeds received by public companies and their shareholders by artificially depressing the market price shortly before the company prices its offering. The SEC amended Rule 105 effective October 2007 to prevent this trading practice known as “shorting into the deal.” The revised rule generally prohibits the purchase of offering shares by any person who sold short the same securities within five business days before the pricing of the offering.
The SEC found that AGB Partners violated both the pre- and post-amended Rule 105 to gain illicit profits. According to the SEC’s order, AGB Partners used secondary offering shares in April 2007 to cover a portion of a short position in Boots & Coots International Well Control, Inc. In June 2008, under the amended rule, AGB Partners sold short shares of BGC Partners, Inc. and then purchased BGC Partners shares in the company’s secondary offering.
According to the SEC’s order, AGB Partners used two accounts. The account that was used for short selling consisted solely of Bied’s and Goldberger’s personal funds. The other account, a private investment fund they managed for outside clients, was used for participating in the follow-on offerings. Although amended Rule 105 created an exception to allow otherwise prohibited trades if the trades occur in separate accounts, the SEC’s order found that Goldberger’s and Bied’s close collaboration with the accounts fell outside the separate accounts exception.
In its order against Palmyra, the SEC found that the firm violated Rule 105 in connection with short sales made in advance of a public offering by Capital One Financial Corp., resulting in improper profits of $225,500. Palmyra sold short a total of 50,000 shares of Capital One stock on Sept. 18, 2008, and then received 50,000 shares from Capital One’s secondary offering on Sept. 24, 2008.
In settling the SEC’s charges without admitting or denying the Commission’s findings, AGB Partners, Bied and Goldberger consented to be censured and pay more than $50,000 in disgorgement and penalties. Palmyra Capital consented to be censured and pay more than $330,000 in disgorgement and penalties.
Hedge Fund Manager Salus Alpha Launches UCITS III Commodity Arbitrage Fund
HedgeCo News – UCITS III hedge fund manager Salus Alpha has launched a new Commodity Arbitrage fund which the company believes is an innovation both in the UCITS III and in the hedge fund world.
The investment approach of the Salus Alpha Commodity Arbitrage enables the fund to obtain returns for the investors from both Backwardation (the expiring futures contract is more expensive as the next delivery month) and Contango. The strategy commodity arbitrage tries to profit from price differences on various commodity markets or between related commodities.
The new fund invests indirectly into commodities via index derivatives such as Swaps and Futures. The fund’s portfolio consists of financial indices, e.g. the CAX – Commodity Arbitrage Index listed on the Vienna stock exchange. The Index was launched by Alternative-Index Ltd., a member of the Salus Alpha Group.
By introducing the first world wide daily liquid UCITS III hedge fund, Salus Alpha set the course for a new era of investment funds. Salus Alpha successfully established hedge fund strategies in mutual funds. Not surprisingly now Salus Alpha is the first asset manager to offer an arbitrage strategy as a UCITS III fund with daily liquidity.
Salus Alpha Commodity Arbitrage is listed on different fund platforms in Germany and Austria. Amongst others it can be found on Augsburger Aktienbank, Metzler Fund Xchange, Frankfurter Fondsbank, Fonds Depotbank, Cortal Consors, DAB, Moventum, Capital Bank and direktanlage.at.
Obama Hypocrisy Watch: Obama Rips Lobbyists, Then Gives Them Private Briefings
“The really appalling part is the lobbyists are so deeply embedded in the the operations of government, that the get upset when they are called bad names. Not only are they predictably blind to how corrupting their influence is, but they think their role is legimate, and have lost sight of the fact that the legislators and Executive Branch members that they influence need to have plausible deniabilty, hence need to issue the occasional stern statement about how awful lobbyists are before going back to business as usual. The fact that lobbyists are chafing at this necessary ritual says how disproportionate their role has become.”
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Paulson Says Russia Urged China to Dump Fannie, Freddie Bonds
“Russia urged China to dump its Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bonds in 2008 in a bid to force a bailout of the largest U.S. mortgage-finance companies, former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said.”
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Ackermann, Gruebel, Moynihan Plot Regulatory Response
” Brian Moynihan, Oswald Gruebel and Josef Ackermann, leaders of some of the world’s biggest banks, met during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, to plot how to reassert their influence with regulators and governments.”
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AIG Draws $2.4 Billion From Fed Credit Line, Most Since October
“American International Group Inc., the insurer bailed out by the U.S., increased its borrowing under a Federal Reserve credit line by the most since October to repay debt from an expiring government commercial paper program.”
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