SEC Investigates Wall Street's IPO Money Machine
New York, Dec. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Arthur Levitt's complaint that some brokers have charged money managers excessive trading commissions for access to the most profitable initial public offerings faces an uphill legal struggle, some lawyers say.
SEC investigators this week ordered the biggest stock underwriters -- including Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. and Credit Suisse First Boston -- to turn over records of customers who received shares of the best-performing IPOs. The SEC also wants records of inflated commissions the customers paid that may explain why they received the shares. ``They want to apply the magic label of kickback to it,'' said John Coffee, a Columbia University professor who specializes in the securities industry. ``Then they can characterize it either as a commercial bribe or extortion by the underwriter.''
Levitt has shown with new regulations he pushed on corporate disclosure that he is willing to challenge Wall Street practices he regards as unfair to individual investors. Yet he may have difficulty proving that high commissions are being charged in exchange for IPO profits. ``The SEC has a difficult time proving that it's anything more than a good customer getting well treated,'' said Roger D. Blanc, a partner at Willkie Farr & Gallagher. ``You'd have to be able to understand that there was a specific understanding of a specific quid pro quo and I think that's a high burden for the SEC to establish. Every business treats its best customers well.''
Routine
Swapping trading for service is how the business works, money managers and brokerage executives say. Brokerage commissions in 1999 were about $12 billion in the U.S. and have grown about 20 percent annually for the past four years, according to estimates from Greenwich Associates, a Connecticut-based consulting firm.
Money managers say their system of allocating trades pays for services they receive from brokerage firms -- such as when Goldman Sachs sends analysts like Abby Joseph Cohen to meet them -- and for the research reports firms generate.
Fund managers say they try to use their leverage as customers to get the best service. ``Wall Street tries to run as if it's an off-the-shelf business and sometimes it needs customizing,'' said Michael Weiner, a managing director and fund manager at Bank One Investment Advisors in Columbus, Ohio, which oversees $130 billion. ``We don't want to make it an entitlement.'
Speaking to a gathering of Wall Street executives in Boca Raton, Florida, the SEC chief last month set out to break the cycle. He said securities firms overcharge mutual funds with brokerage commissions for shares in the hottest IPOs.
Commissions
They will probably focus on subsequent trading commissions in excess of the traditional nickel a share that would appear to be ``side payments,'' said Coffee.
Fund managers get access to IPOs because of trades they do on behalf of their investors, although that doesn't mean the IPO shares always go into the funds, Levitt said. ``Fund managers are paying their expenses with other people's money,'' Levitt said in the grand ballroom of the Boca Raton Resort Club at the Securities Industry Association's annual meeting. ``This plain fact seems to be lost on some advisers today, particularly where IPO allocations are concerned.''
The average mutual fund company paid $65 million in commissions last year, 58 percent more than three years ago, according to Greenwich Associates.
Stamford, Connecticut-based McLagan Partners Inc., a unit of ASI Solutions Inc. that surveys money managers' trading, provides one of the only checks securities firms have that their clients follow through with promised trade allocations. McLagan keeps a low profile. ``We just don't talk about that study,'' said Brian Dunn, president of McLagan Partners. ``It's a very, very sensitive issue. If any of the participants heard we talked to anyone, at all, they'd pull out.''
While mutual funds said they rarely resort to cutting off a firm, they will to make a point. ``We put one big firm in the penalty box for a year,'' said Alan Brown, chief investment officer for State Street Global Advisors, which manages about $750 billion. ``They immediately noticed when the spigot was turned off.''
Just as money managers can cut off securities firms they don't think are providing enough service, they also can get cut off if firms decided they aren't being paid for their services. That doesn't happen often. ``Most people in this business are very honorable -- they remunerate you for your efforts,'' said Michael Benenson, head of institutional sales at Gerard Klauer Mattison & Co. ``It's sort of a un-written contract.''
Regardless of the SEC's probe, trades will continue to be the way Wall Street gets paid. ``If you're going to receive a service that's valuable, you're going to have to pay for it,'' said Jeff Leerink, chief executive of Leerink Swann & Co., a Boston-based investment banking firm dedicated to health care. ``Everyone understands that the mechanism of payment is trade execution.'' |