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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Naked Shorting-Hedge Fund & Market Maker manipulation?

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To: shortsinthesand who wrote (3519)7/15/2008 3:01:24 PM
From: rrufff   of 5034
 
Here's a little piece which you should find interesting. No matter how some seem to whine about this, the issues are not going away.

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Hedge Funds Subpoenaed in SEC Probe

By KARA SCANNELL and JENNY STRASBURG
July 15, 2008; Page C3
online.wsj.com

The Securities and Exchange Commission has sent subpoenas to more than 50 hedge-fund advisers as part of its investigation into whether individuals spread false rumors to manipulate shares of two Wall Street firms, a person familiar with the matter said.

The subpoenas, sent as recently as Monday, are seeking trading and communications data related to short-selling and options trading in Bear Stearns Cos. or Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., this person said. Some of the hedge-fund advisers have received subpoenas related to both probes, while others were contacted with respect to only one, this person said. A hedge-fund adviser can operate several different hedge funds.

Among the firms that have received subpoenas are Citadel Investment Group LLC in Chicago and SAC Capital Advisors in Stamford, Conn. The subpoenas relate to trading in securities of the brokers, as well as correspondence between the hedge funds and other parties, according to people familiar with the inquiry. The subpoenas are part of a broad inquiry, and firms that have received subpoenas were told by the SEC that they aren't necessarily the focus of specific allegations.

Representatives for the hedge funds declined to comment, as did the SEC.

Some hedge funds received subpoenas Monday. Other subpoenas were sent within the past few weeks, and several firms already have turned over information to the SEC. The probe is still in its early stages, people familiar with the matter said.

Bear Stearns almost collapsed in March, and the SEC has been investigating whether a combination of false rumors and manipulative short-selling combined to drive down the firm's share price. The probe comes as the SEC and other Wall Street regulators have launched examinations of investment banks and hedge-fund advisers' compliance programs to ensure that they have the right training and policies in place to detect market manipulation that can include rumor mongering.

Monday, Wall Street law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz published a memo calling the new examinations into compliance programs "an important first step." But it said "the SEC needs to undertake additional bold measures to constrain abusive short-selling and rumor-mongering."

Separately, NYSE Regulation Inc., the regulatory unit of stock-exchange parent NYSE Euronext, said it sent a letter1 Monday "to a number of our largest member firms" requesting details on how those securities firms monitor compliance with rules prohibiting circulation of false and misleading rumors that could roil stock prices.

The letter said the review was being conducted jointly with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, a Wall Street self-regulatory agency. The securities firms were asked whether they had conducted internal probes related to unfounded rumors about "the impact of the subprime loan business on certain financial institutions, the use by financial institutions of the Federal Reserve discount window, and/or possible federal government bailout of certain financial institutions."

The securities firms that received Monday's letter were given a July 28 deadline to provide the information, including any disciplinary actions taken against employees linked to false or misleading rumors.

--Aaron Lucchetti contributed to this article.

Write to Kara Scannell at kara.scannell@wsj.com2 and Jenny Strasburg at jenny.strasburg@wsj.com3 URL for this article:
online.wsj.com

Hyperlinks in this Article:
(1) online.wsj.com
(2) mailto:kara.scannell@wsj.com
(3) mailto:jenny.strasburg@wsj.com
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