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Strategies & Market Trends : Rande Is . . . HOME -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bucky Katt who wrote (48768)3/10/2001 1:00:41 PM
From: prophet_often  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 57584
 
Friday March 9 6:17 PM ET
Report: Amazon.com Chief Probed

SEATTLE (AP) - The Securities and Exchange Commission (news - web sites) is investigating stock sales by Amazon.com chief executive Jeff Bezos just before a negative report on the company was released, The New York Times reported Friday.

The commission would neither confirm nor deny an investigation. The commission typically only makes investigations public when an action is taken, SEC spokeswoman Carol Patterson said.

Amazon spokesman Bill Curry said the Seattle-based Internet retailing giant wasn't aware of any investigation. ``If there proves to be one we're certainly going to be happy to help in any way we can,'' he said.

Bezos filed documents with regulators on Feb. 2 and Feb. 5 stating that he intended to sell 800,000 shares of Amazon stock worth roughly $12.2 million. Curry confirmed that Bezos had sold the shares, which he said represents about one-third of all the shares Bezos has sold.

Prior to that, Amazon executives received an advance copy of a research report compiled by Lehman Brothers that questioned the company's ability to continue operating through 2001.

The report also speculated that Amazon's deteriorating financial situation could subject it to a credit squeeze later this year.

Curry said Amazon executives had seen the report and had attempted to persuade Lehman Brothers that the conclusions were erroneous. Amazon contends that it will finish the year with $900 million in cash.

Curry said the company did not know exactly when the report would be released, and that the sales were not timed to the report's release. He also contends the report did not release new information, since Lehman Brothers' analysts had questioned whether Amazon could survive before.

Under federal regulations, executives such as Bezos can only legally sell stock at certain times. That window closes if executives become privy to information not available in the public that could strongly influence the future of the company and its stock.

To win an insider trading case, the government would have to prove that Bezos acted improperly on information that had a material effect on the company's stock but was not publicly available.

Shares of Amazon were up 56.2 cents, or nearly 5 percent, to close at $12.25 a share Friday on the Nasdaq Stock Market.



To: Bucky Katt who wrote (48768)3/10/2001 1:37:55 PM
From: Rande Is  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 57584
 
Isn't that 2-for-2 big name CEO's getting caught trading on insider trading ahead of a dismal report being made public?

Yesterday Bezos. . . today Ellison. . . who's next?

And it is nice to hear that people are not looking the other way on these fraudulent activities.