| October 20, 2000 
 Heard on the Street
 Legal, Illegal Activity Line
 On Internet Grows Blurry
 
 By RUTH SIMON and MICHAEL SCHROEDER
 Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
 
 On Aug. 18, a none-too-subtle -- but all too familiar -- message appeared
 on the Silicon Investor Web site touting shares of Internet Business's
 International Inc., a small money-losing company whose stock symbol is
 IBUI:
 
 "The FEMPS 'Play of the Day' is IBUI here at .21 ... A fa$t 50%'er to .30
 by Tuesday ... Its FAST and EAAAAAAAAAAAAAAASY
 MONEEEEE!!!"
 
 Nothing newsworthy happened to the company that day. But the stock
 spiked nonetheless, climbing from 19 cents to 41 cents a share on sharply
 higher trading volume, before falling back.
 
 So far the posting, by someone using the screen name Tracy Moore,
 appears to have passed unnoticed by regulators. But similar online postings
 led the Securities and Exchange Commission on Sept. 20 to charge
 teenager Jonathan G. Lebed with fraud.
 
 Telling the difference between what's legal and what's not has always been
 tricky, and it's getting more complicated in the Internet age, where opinion
 and fact and hype are combined in a volatile mixture. The Internet
 "amplifies the fuzziness because there is so much chitchat," says Alan
 Bromberg, a professor of securities law at Southern Methodist University
 in Dallas. "You've got anonymity and glibness and mixed motives, and all
 the uncertainty that goes with it."
 
 Why is it, a lot of investors wonder, that the same sort of advice that's
 commonplace on Wall Street is sometimes considered problematic on the
 message boards? Analysts at Wall Street firms, for instance, issue "buy"
 recommendations on a stock, sometimes along with specific target prices,
 at the same time other arms of the firm sell shares in the company. And
 why do regulators sometimes turn a blind eye to specific Internet chat
 rooms that actively seek to run up stocks by posting hundreds of rapid-fire
 messages urging investors to buy, and then advise their fee-paying
 members to sell and get out before the stock falls?
 
 One thing is obvious to almost everyone who
 studies the stock market, and especially to
 those who visit Web sites for individual
 investors: There's plenty of hype that seems to
 cross the line. "There are a lot of cases where
 a suit could have been brought and just
 wasn't," says Howard M. Friedman, director
 of the Cybersecurities Law Institute at the
 University of Toledo. Due to limited
 resources, he says, regulators "have to be
 selective."
 
 When the SEC snags stock manipulators,
 charges are generally brought under a fraud
 statute enacted by Congress in 1934 in part to
 rein in questionable activities like those that
 helped trigger the 1929 market crash. The law
 makes it illegal "to use or employ, in connection with the purchase or sale
 of a security ... any manipulative or deceptive device ..."
 
 Securities lawyers note that there's plenty of activity that looks
 manipulative, but isn't illegal. Some Internet messages aren't a problem
 simply because no one believes them. Web postings that tout a stock as
 the "best buy" or "THE stock to hold now" aren't against the law if they
 truly reflect an investor's beliefs.
 
 Defining "deceptive" can be tricky. "It's all about whether these false
 postings in any way contain enough information that a reasonable person
 would rely on, or if it's just puffing," says Georgetown University law Prof.
 Donald Langevoort. A complication is proving intent. It isn't easy to
 produce evidence showing that someone who hypes a stock was aware
 that his action would deceive investors.
 
 But many messages, like one on Aug. 18 touting Internet Business's
 International, seem intended to pump up the price of the stock. That
 posting was one of scores made on the Silicon Investor Web site by
 someone using the name Tracy Moore. Tracy Moore didn't respond to
 repeated messages sent via Silicon Investor.
 
 The underlying strategy, however, seems apparent from a Tracy Moore
 posting on May 21, 1999: "ALERT! 'The FRONTRUN WITH THE
 FEMPSTERS' contest ... After HUGE WINS with HTSF and JAWZ,
 FEMPSters are looking to set up another 'unofficial' Shareholder Cartel at
 another stock. ... Anyone who has a recommendation can Private
 Message me and, if we select that stock, can 'frontrun with the FEMPsters'
 before the 'Unofficial' Cartel is officially announced ..."
 
 Richard Walker, the SEC's director of enforcement, says the messages
 look like the kind of thing the SEC might want to look into.
 
 Other activities that perplex some investors occur in cyber-sites like
 trading-places.net, an Internet chat room run by Trading Places Inc. in
 Niles, Ill. The company often issues more than 100 "alerts" each day.
 Messages proclaiming "A MONSTER CALL!!!" or "PULLBACK
 ALERT" encourage investors to jump into selected stocks, then take
 profits before the prices of those stocks fall.
 
 Chris Rea, the company's founder and chief executive whose message
 board was the subject of an earlier Wall Street Journal story, says his
 actions can't be compared with Mr. Lebed's because the owners of
 Trading Places don't profit directly from the alerts.
 
 But Mr. Rea acknowledges that Trading Places alerts can "drive the stock
 up. ... If we do manipulate a stock, it's for the benefit of the trader that's ...
 buying and selling the stock," he says. Trading Places was the subject of an
 SEC "inquiry" last year, but Mr. Rea says he hasn't heard from federal
 regulators since last fall. The SEC determined "neither I nor any owners in
 this company had any trading accounts" and thus weren't directly profiting
 from the alerts, he says. But the owners of Trading Places do profit
 indirectly from the $299.95 a month fee it receives from customers for its
 service.
 
 The SEC's Mr. Walker declined to comment specifically about Trading
 Places. He says that the SEC sees "throughout the Internet chatter about
 how this is a good stock and this is a good buy, that type of thing. Absent
 some kind of manipulative conduct, it isn't illegal."
 
 Mr. Walker adds that this is "very different from a person with an intent to
 influence the purchase and selling of securities on a completely artificial
 basis with no reference to fundamentals -- that's what we're looking for."
 
 The SEC has filed a complaint against stock-trading guru Yun Soo Oh
 Park, better known to cyber investors as "Tokyo Joe," charging him with
 defrauding subscribers to his Web site. The SEC alleges he engaged in
 illegal touting and lying about his performance record. Mr. Park has denied
 wrongdoing. "One of the main issues in this case is, does someone who
 goes on the Internet purporting to give investment advice ... have a duty to
 anyone," says his lawyer, Ira Lee Sorkin.
 
 It isn't only the actions of individuals on message boards that raise
 eyebrows. Analysts at Wall Street firms sometimes issue buy
 recommendations on stocks at the same time the firm is selling the same
 stock. On June 5, for instance, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysts Jamie
 Friedman and Thomas Berquist reiterated their rating of FreeMarkets Inc.
 as a "trading buy," one of three terms Goldman applies to stocks it
 considers a buy. FreeMarkets shares climbed $4.25 a share to $54.75 the
 day the report was issued.
 
 Just two days later, Goldman filed documents with the SEC indicating that
 it intended to sell part of its stake in FreeMarkets on or about June 7,
 when a lock-up barring insider sales of the stock expired. Goldman filed to
 sell additional FreeMarkets shares July 31, six days after it reiterated its
 "trading buy" rating.
 
 "Investment research and our principal investment activities act
 independently of each other," says a Goldman spokeswoman. "Each
 adheres to strict firmwide and business-specific guidelines and prohibitions
 surrounding market transactions."
 
 Mr. Walker says the SEC hasn't brought any cases in which firms
 fraudulently traded based on advanced knowledge of analysts' reports. He
 says firms must maintain "Chinese walls" to prevent traders from acting on
 an analyst's call before it is made public. But he adds that proving that an
 analyst and a firm acted "in concert ... would be very difficult."
 
 Securities-law experts agree it is tough to prove "intent" in such situations,
 but that doesn't mean there aren't conflicts of interest. "Analysts don't work
 in total isolation," says Mr. Bromberg.
 
 Perhaps fortunately for regulators, many people just cave and agree to
 disgorge their profits when confronted with an allegation of manipulation.
 
 Former SEC associate enforcement chief Bruce Hiler says the SEC could
 have a potential problem proving in court that Internet posters have a duty
 to readers of their messages and that saying something false necessarily
 constitutes market manipulation. "Somewhere down the line [regulators]
 will be tested," he says.
 
 A defendant who fought a case might be able to win in court, lawyers say,
 both because of the murky nature of what constitutes manipulation and
 because securities laws weren't designed for the world of the Internet. "The
 law focuses on the impact of the reasonable person," Prof. Langevoort
 says, "while the SEC is living in a world of day-traders and five-minute
 pops. That probably doesn't conform to the courts' image of reason and
 rationality in the world of investments."
 
 Write to Ruth Simon at ruth.simon@wsj.com and Michael Schroeder at
 mike.schroeder@wsj.com
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