Raz, John Stark....hero or goat ?
The SEC swoops down on internet stock scams
Wall Street's top cop throws the spotlight on securities frauds proliferating on the Web
By Andrew Marks
moneydaily.com
Investors applauded Wednesday as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, in 23 separate actions, charged 44 individuals and companies with committing securities fraud over the Internet.
The action is the most comprehensive the SEC has taken since it began policing cyberspace in 1995. The agency, says John Stark, head of the SEC's internet enforcement unit, is now pursuing "a well-defined and programmatic approach to addressing internet fraud. We are specifically going after the online newsletters, people who tout stocks, especially poorly followed and thinly traded micro caps, on message board postings, and in so-called investing websites."
"The fact that a cop is on the beat should make the internet a safer place for people to invest and to seek investing advice," said Lawrence Greenberg, general counsel for the Motley Fool (http://www.motleyfool.com). "The internet has suffered from a bit of a lawless, Wild West environment that's allowed people to do this kind of thing all too easily."
Stark's unit, created in July, has been fielding an average of 120 complaints per day from consumers.
Richard Walker, SEC director of enforcement, said those charged had touted 235 microcap companies: "Not only did they lie about their own independence, some of them lied about the companies they featured, then took advantage of any quick spike in price to sell their shares for a fast and easy profit."
The charges covered several phony practices, most of them familiar cons used elsewhere before the Web became popular:
1) Spamming: Some of the accused allegedly sent out mass emailings recommending stocks, without disclosing that companies were paying them to tout the shares.
2) Pumping and Dumping: Masquerading as independent experts, some of the accused allegedly recommended stocks on public message boards such as the top-rated (and legitimate) Silicon Investor site to generate demand, and then sold the stocks as eager investors bid up the price.
3) Touting: Some of those fingered by the SEC allegedly shilled for companies by recommending their stocks for a fee, a relationship they did not disclose to their readers.
4) Scalping: Scalpers allegedly bought a stock, then recommended it through Internet newsletters and investment sites without disclosing their ownership position, then sold the shares as the price rose.
One company that allegedly did all this and more: The Future Superstock (http://www.futuresuperstock.com), an internet newsletter and companion web site with more than 100,000 subscribers.
The SEC alleges that FSS and Jeffrey Bruss, its director and sole shareholder, recommended 25 microcap stocks while failing to adequately disclose receiving more than $1.6 million in cash and stocks from the companies recommended. "Bruss went way beyond that, though, "says Tom Melton, the SEC's trial attorney in the case against FSS. "He also sold into the stocks he touted; he falsely claimed that he had performed independent due diligence on the companies; he made false claims about the performance of his recommended stocks. He's the poster child for the SEC's fight against internet fraud."
Melton offered Keystone Energy Services (OTC ISSUE: KESE) as one example of Bruss' practices. Bruss, says the SEC, was paid by Keystone to profile the stock as FSS' "Stock Pick of the Month" in October, 1997. At the time, it was trading at $5. When he reviewed the stock's performance in June of 1998, he ignored the fact that it was trading at less than $1, noting only that it had reached a high of $12.875. "And that was an intra-day high; it's closing high was $9," Melton notes.
Stark attributes the proliferation of internet securities fraud to two simultaneous developments: The greatest bull market to date, which has drawn legions of new and unsophisticated investors into the market, coupled with the rapid growth of the Internet as an information source. The scams themselves, Stark adds, are nothing new. Most of the SEC charges, after all, were based on Section 17(b) of the Securities Act of 1933. What's new is that the con men have found a new medium in which to play.
Indeed, the proliferation of investing sites, online newsletters and discussion forums has transformed the way many people gather information when mulling investments. On one hand, the legitimate news and information sites give the small investor ready access to the kind of detailed, expert information that was once the domain of brokerage houses and their biggest clients. The Motley Fool and Silicon Investor (http://www.siliconinvestor.com), for example, have become essential investment resources for many individuals, allowing them to get in on huge success stories like Netscape (NASDAQ: NSCP), America Online (NYSE: AOL), and Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN).
Con artists fed on this investment hunger, pretending to be ordinary investors in some discussion groups, or masquerading as independent experts with their own websites.
Most of the frauds identified by the SEC concern shares of small firms listed on the NASD OTC Bulletin Board (OTCBB), a National Association of Securities Dealers quotation service for "unlisted securities" that are not actually traded over the counter or on any of the three major U.S. stock exchanges. The OTCBB lists about 7,000 securities of small corporations, some with little or no operating business. There are no requirements for listing, although the NASD has proposed minimum qualifying standards.
Even as the SEC was gearing up to expand enforcement efforts on the Web, some self-appointed detectives were already peering down dark alleys and publishing warnings about questionable advice and suspect websites.
One such vigilante website, The Stock Detective (http://www.stockdetective.com), previously had fingered twelve of the companies cited in the SEC complaints on its bad guy roster, "The List." A common factor that draws the Stock Detective's attention is something that any prudent investor should look for in evaluating financial advice: a personal stake in the performance of the stocks recommended.
While the sheer availability of free financial information on the Web is a boon, investors need to be sure they are taking their advice from trusted sources. And if the deal seems too good to be true, it probably is. |