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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Snowshoe who wrote (47757)9/28/2002 5:02:17 PM
From: Ilaine  Respond to of 281500
 
Interesting twist on those terrorist options - they may have expired without being exercised. Anyway, they were worth millions, not billions. Could be a best-selling book here for someone willing to do the research.

>> Suspiciously timed bets against airlines expire today

By Greg Farrell, USA TODAY

The Securities and Exchange Commission is stepping up its investigation of
suspicious trading activity related to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Thursday, the SEC distributed a watch list to all U.S. brokerage houses
consisting of names supplied by the FBI and other law enforcement groups. It
wants securities dealers to determine if they've done business with any
individuals or groups on the list.

The "control list" highlights the difficulty that the SEC has been having in its
probe to find a possible link between known accomplices of Osama bin
Laden and investors who profited last month by shorting the stocks of airlines,
hotels and financial services companies. So far, no connection has been
established.

Although the SEC is investigating unusual activity in a basket of 38 stocks, the
large number of "puts" purchased in American and United airlines just days
before the attacks, which crashed American and United jets, has drawn the
most attention. A put is essentially a bet that an underlying stock's price will
fall.

But while the puts appeared suspicious, they haven't yielded any conclusive
evidence of a plot. Today, those puts expire. Here's what investigators know
about them:

• An institutional investor purchased 2,000 United puts on Sept. 6 through
Deutsche Bank Alex. Brown. The puts remain open, suggesting that they
were used to hedge an underlying stock position.

• The puts in American Airlines were bought on the afternoon of Sept. 10
through National Financial Services, a division of Fidelity. Of 1,535 puts
traded that day, 453 remain open.

Prior to September, brokers in Chicago and New York noticed other unusual
put trading. On Aug. 6, an investor bought 810 February puts in United
stock. On July 12 and Aug. 3, investors bought more than 1,000 February
puts in American. The February puts represented a bet that the stock of the
two airlines would dip below $30 per share by the third Friday of February
2002.

The Sept. 11 attacks knocked the stocks from about $30 to $18 when the
market reopened Sept. 17.

The October puts in both stocks, purchased for just over $500,000, were
suddenly worth $4 million.

Although institutional buyers may have decided that airline stocks were
headed down, Chicago options traders are skeptical: If you're going to short
the sector, you buy puts in the big three airlines, American, United and Delta.
But there was no comparable activity in Delta stock.

On the options exchange, where brokers are super-sensitive to any suggestion
of insider trading, skepticism abounds.

"It smells. It does not make sense to me," says one Chicago options trader.<<
usatoday.com



To: Snowshoe who wrote (47757)9/28/2002 5:43:01 PM
From: Dave Gore  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Ya, pretty funny (not)! You do know what SELLING naked calls means, right,a s opposed to buying them?