OTC popularity proves double-edge VSE sword
The Vancouver Sun
David Baines, Sun Business Reporter Vancouver Sun The cleanup of the Vancouver Stock Exchange has herded the paper pushers from one neighbourhood to another.
Scoundrel stock promoters from Vancouver have shifted their business to the OTC bulletin board in the U.S., a penny-stock forum that resembles the VSE in the late 1980s, when Forbes magazine branded it "The Scam Capital of the World."
John Kaiser, a stock analyst based in San Francisco, says the bulletin board has been a magnet for Howe Street promoters and U.S. promoters who previously brought their dirty deals to Vancouver.
"The bad guys are now doing OTC deals," Kaiser said in an interview.
The shift in venue has a double-edge for B.C. investors. While the VSE is now a safer place to do business, local investors are now turning to bulletin-board stocks, which are largely unregulated and beyond the purview of local regulators.
It also has a double edge for the VSE. While the exchange is slowly rehabilitating its image, the emigration of schlocky stocks to the bulletin board has robbed it of an important, albeit nefarious, segment of its business.
Last year, VSE trading volume slumped 26 per cent to 5.3 billion shares while trading value dropped 58 per cent to $3.8 billion. The VSE index has crashed from a high of 1,352 in 1997 to its current level of 400.
Bulletin-board business, meanwhile, is booming. Since 1995, annual trading volume has nearly tripled to 29 billion shares.
Trading value increased o $44.5 billion in 1997 from $32 billion in 1995 (1998 results are skewed by the removal of American Depository Receipts from the quotation service).
There are now about 6,500 companies quoted on the bulletin board, compared with only about 1,250 on the VSE.
Analysts attribute much of the VSE's woes to a general disaffection for exploration stocks and slumping metal prices.
Some VSE members -- noting the flight of speculative business to the bulletin board -- also believe it's the result of too much regulation, and they want the clock wound back to recapture some of the more speculative, and lucrative, elements of the VSE.
"In my opinion, the VSE is over-regulated," says Max Meier, president of Pacific International Securities. "People buy junior stocks because they go up and down.
"If you try and control every little upward move, they will find other places to do business."
The cleansing up of the VSE started in earnest in 1995, when Michael Johnson was appointed president and given a mandate to improve the quality of its listed companies.
In ensuing months, Johnson's staff ran interference with scurrilous promoters and forced their shoddier promotions off the exchange.
Many moved to new playgrounds. One venue has been the Alberta Stock Exchange, which boasts a relatively quick and easy listing process for junior companies and is less diligent in supervising its listed companies.
Another has been the OTC bulletin board, which has no listing requirements or surveillance staff to monitor the companies' activities.
Until this week, the only rule was that any company quoted on the bulletin board must have a market maker (a brokerage firm that ensures there is an offer to buy or sell the company's stock).
On Tuesday, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announced that any new companies quoted on the board must be registered, which means they must file financial and other salient information on corporate affairs on a regular basis. Existing companies will be be given time to comply.
Although this will give investors a better opportunity to assess a company's viability, B.C. regulators are still nervous about bulletin board stocks.
"We're very concerned about B.C. residents investing on the bulletin board," says Gerry Halischuk, compliance director for the B.C. Securities Commission. "It's a much riskier market than the VSE due to its lack of regulation."
Halischuk said many OTC stocks lack liquidity; that is, sufficient trading volume to enable investors to get in or out of the stock at the quoted price.
"Your liquidity on the OTC depends on solely on your market maker. If he loses interest, there goes your market."
Halischuk said the VSE trading system, unlike the OTC quotation system, offers investors the opportunity to see all the bids and asks, and asses the market for the stock.
"On the OTC, the price is established by market maker," he said. "If you buy a stock at one dollar, that may not be a free-market price.
"It could simply be the market maker's price, which makes it so much easier to manipulate the stock."
He said there are also no rules on how much stock must be in the hands of the public, which makes it easier for insiders to corner the stock and artificially boost the share price.
Also, there are no rules on how many options may be granted to insiders, and no requirement to obtain regulatory approval before entering into non arm's-length transactions.
"You can look at any of the policies that govern issuer and insider behavior on the VSE, and they don't apply on the bulletin board," said Halischuk.
With so little regulation, the bulletin board has long been a refuge for VSE issues that get into hot water with B.C. regulators.
In 1986, CHoPP Computer -- which became the first VSE stock to break the $100-per-share mark -- became embroiled in controversy and quietly delisted from the VSE. Ever since, CHoPP chair Don Hutton, a disaccredited chartered accountant, has been touting the company's stock on the bulletin board.
In recent years, the exodus to the OTC has accelerated as the VSE and B.C. Securities Commission tighten regulations.
In 1995, Langley-based Thermo Tech Technologies, which found itself in the media spotlight after it grossly exaggerated the financial potential of its composting technology, delisted from the VSE and turned to the bulletin board.
In 1997, VSE-listed Sungold Gaming International found new currency on the bulletin board after VSE officials, skeptical it had the financial capacity or management expertise to build a $160-million racetrack in Richmond, forced it off the exchange.
The flight of these companies has taken business away from the VSE. For example, Vancouver promoter Dan Scammell traded 140,000 shares of CHoPP last year through local brokerage firm Jones Gable & Company. Rather than executing that trade through the VSE, Jones Gable directed it through a U.S. brokerage firm.
Statistics on how much OTC board business Vancouver brokerage firms are doing are not available. Some industry sources estimate it may account for up to half the total commission revenue generated by some of the VSE's smaller broker-members.
Meier said about 40 per cent of his firm's commission revenue comes from trading stocks on U.S. exchanges, including the bulletin board and the more senior Nasdaq market. That compares to 10 per cent five years ago.
"We go where our clients want to go, and obviously in the last few years a lot of clients have gone to the ASE, Canadian Dealing Network and bulletin board," Meier said. "We don't recommend stocks in those markets, but there seem to be a lot of people who want to be involved in them.
"This is not a positive thing. I would prefer if all that business was here. We have much better way of keeping in touch with what a company actually does."
OTC business has been aided by the emergence of a new genre of promoter, the cyberspace tout-for-hire, which has posed new problems for securities regulators.
In late October, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announced its first coast-to-coast operation to combat internet fraud, filing 23 enforcement actions against 44 individuals and companies.
The SEC said the defendants purported to provide unbiased opinions on more than 235 junior companies, most listed on the bulletin board, but failed to disclose they had received more than $6.3 million and nearly two million shares of cheap insider stock.
Aside from this action, there is no indication U.S. regulators are about to declare war on OTC-related malfeasance.
"The problem is that they don't even know what exists," says Kaiser.
"It's not like Vancouver, where the business was concentrated and regulators could shine the light on one spot.
"Bulletin board companies are dispersed all over the country, and they are so small and insignificant in the whole scheme of things that the mainstream media has no reason to pay attention to them."
Kaiser predicted, however, there will be a day of reckoning for bulletin-board stocks.
"My speculation is that when we finally go into a bear market and people have lost their shirts on things like these internet stocks, it will unleash a knee-jerk action, where OTC stocks will be targeted and there will be a massive regulatory clampdown," he said.
"This will actually be beneficial to Canadian companies, provided they don't decide they have to slide back to the OTC way to compete."
To date, U.S. enforcement action against bulletin board companies has been selective and, given the high incidence of illegal behaviour, serendipitous.
In July 1997, the SEC filed a formal complaint against Beverlee Kamerling a.k.a. Beverlee Claydon, who was banned from trading in B.C. in 1988 for securities violations relating to VSE-listed Ultra Glow Cosmetics.
The SEC alleged Kamerling manipulated the share price of United Fire Technology, a Seattle-are bulletin board stock, and provided kickbacks to brokers who recommended the stock to their clients.
The intervention action came too late, however, for several B.C. residents who invested several hundred thousand dollars in the company.
"The marketing is very directed," said Kaiser. "You find your victim, set him up and close on him. It's like the old VSE guys sweet talking wealthy investors."
In November and December, The Sun wrote about three Vancouver investors who lost more than $165,000 US investing in International Indigo in 1997-98.
Indigo is a Seattle-area company purported to be searching for sunken treasure and was being promoted by Kamerling and her then-boyfriend, Nik Markovina. The SEC has taken no action in this case.
Meanwhile, the proliferation of bulletin board stocks has caused new headaches for B.C. regulators.
In March 1997, the commission intervened in American Technology Exploration Corp., a Vancouver-based company that soared to $8.75 US on the basis of a gold property in California that purportedly had more gold than Bre-X claimed to have.
With 150 million shares outstanding, the company's total stock-market value was more than $1.3 billion. However, this value was highly theoretical as stock fluctuated on extremely thin trading volume.
The company's chair was 79-year-old Philip Lieberman, who was already under two suspension orders for similar stock scams.
When the commission learned he was promoting American Technology over the internet, it banned him for life.
Also in 1997, Vancouver promoter Frank Balfour, already under a trading suspension for securities violations, was charged in connection with his promotion of Jackson Tech, a bulletin-board stock he was running out of his Kerrisdale home.
He pleaded guilty to unregistered trading and was sentenced to 30 days of electronic monitoring.
In October 1997, the commission issued a cease-trade order against Abbotsford-based H&R Enterprises, a bulletin-board stock it said had "the appearance of a classic stock manipulation."
The commission alleged that Michael Mitton, who has a history of criminal fraud and is already the subject of a 20-year trading ban, was behind the scheme.
According to commission documents, H&R shares were being traded through Wolverton Securities and Georgia Pacific Securities, two VSE members who, along with Union Securities, are believed to be trading large volumes of bulletin-board stocks.
In March, the VSE imposed a lifetime ban on Union Securities broker David Gilbert for securities violations involving four bulletin-board companies: Remington Financial Group, Performance Nutrition Inc., Omnet Corp. and Members Services Corp.
Union Securities admitted it had failed to properly supervise Gilbert and two other brokers, and agreed to pay a $125,000 fine and $25,000 in investigation costs.
Many Vancouver brokers are ambivalent about the flight of speculative stock business to the bulletin board.
"Being tough on bad actors, that's a good thing. I don't have a problem with that," said Meier.
"Forcing companies to issue news releases, or to say they know nothing [to account for price fluctuations], I've been part of all those changes.
"That to a fair degree, that is the right thing to do, it's just that we've gone too far," he said. "I think the VSE believes that, unless a company's earnings have just increased, the stock shouldn't go up.
"But stocks don't always work like that. Internet stocks, for example --there's no way to justify a stock price of $322 for Amazon.Com on the basis of earnings."
Meier said VSE red tape has also been driving business to other exchanges.
The recently-formed Listed Company Association, led by mining promoter Bruce McLeod, has been working with the VSE to streamline and harmonize rules with other exchanges.
Both Meier and Kaiser believe one answer is to consolidate the VSE, ASE and Canadian Dealing Network (the Toronto Stock Exchange's junior market) into a single venture-capital market.
"We need to create one filing and regulatory system that eliminates inter-provincial competition and covers all companies with the same standards," said Kaiser.
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