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To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (9710)8/31/2006 12:36:00 PM
From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12465
 
Re: 8/25/06 - [GLKCE/GLLC] Forbes: Naked Horror

Forbes.com
Financial Services
Naked Horror
Liz MOYER, 08.25.06, 5:25 PM ET

Suspicious trading last year in shares of Global Links, a small Nevada real estate holding company, was far more intense than previously thought.

New data from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reveals trade settlement fails in early February 2005 that were 27 times greater than the total number of shares Global Links (other-otc: GLLC - news - people ) had issued at the time. The data show suspicious trading in Global Links far earlier and to a far larger degree than any previously released by the SEC.

The data was obtained this week by a Freedom of Information Act request from David Patch, an outspoken critic of the SEC and an active participant in the drive for reform of market regulations and enforcement.

It was posted on anti-naked-short-selling blogs Thursday night, igniting a fresh round of calls for a special prosecutor to investigate claims of market manipulation by aggressive short-sellers. This comes as the SEC is working to close loopholes and otherwise strengthen its trading regulations.

An SEC spokesman had no comment on the data, which showed Global Links trade fails totaling 27.3 million shares on Feb. 4, coinciding with the first day that Feb. 1 trades should have settled. They were 23 million the next day and tapered off from there.

Data released to Patch earlier this month had shown trade fails of 10 million shares starting in mid-April, a time when 4 million shares of Global Links were issued and outstanding.

Questionable trading activity was not lost on Global Links Chief Executive Frank Dobrucki, who told shareholders in March 2005 that he believed there was fraud occurring. Without the reverse split and the events that came after it, "we may never have discovered how blatantly our stock was being abused."

Global Links owns a development in Arizona and office property in Las Vegas. Dobrucki says, "We have millions of dollars in real estate assets. We are not going to fall apart."

The broader issue is so-called naked short-selling. Normally, a trader looking to sell a stock short must borrow or at least identify a share to borrow before making the sale trade. But naked short-sellers don't borrow the shares, and manipulative naked short-sellers use the tactic to drive a stock into the ground.

Stock transactions are supposed to settle within three days, and if the shares fail to be delivered to the buyer, that failure is reported to the SEC and to the national stock markets, which keep track of repeated trade failures. Large and persistent failed trades in a stock can be a sign that something is amiss.

The Global Links matter came up briefly in a Senate Banking Committee hearing in March 2005, when Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah, told then SEC Chairman William Donaldson that his constituents, among them Internet retailer Overstock.com (nasdaq: OSTK - news - people ), had complained that a new regulation designed to curb abusive trading was not working.

That regulation, called Reg SHO, went into effect in January 2005 and was supposed to impose strict close-out requirements on stocks that showed consistent and frequent settlement failures over a specific period of time. But even the SEC has admitted that companies have remained on the SHO list for far longer than the rule was intended, an indication it has been less than effective.

Current SEC Chairman Christopher Cox acknowledged this practice in July when he put out for comment proposed amendments to Reg SHO. Large and persistent failures can be "indicative of manipulative short-selling," the SEC said. Well more than 120 public comment letters are now posted on the SEC Web site.

Reformers like Patch have demanded that regulators and market operators do their jobs of enforcing existing rules and have expressed exasperation about seemingly lax oversight. They point to a July enforcement action by the New York Stock Exchange's regulation division against four brokers, including Daiwa Securities, Goldman Sachs (nyse: GS - news - people ), Citigroup (nyse: C - news - people ) and Credit Suisse, for failing to have adequate Reg SHO Compliance in place.

"Regulation SHO is an important federal securities rule meant to protect the market and investors from short-sale abuses," said Susan L. Merrill, chief of enforcement, NYSE Regulation in a press release. "As these cases demonstrate, firms that fail to enact effective procedures and systems by the compliance date threaten to undermine the important policies served by this rule."

Despite the tough talk, the collective fines imposed were $1.25 million.

Other "large and persistent" failures have been reported in shares of Overstock.com, Netflix (nasdaq: NFLX - news - people ), Martha Stewart Omnimedia (nyse: MSO - news - people ) and Novastar Financial (nyse: NFI - news - people ), all of which have been on Reg SHO lists practically since the beginning. Global Links calculates that it's been on the list for 556 days as of the end of last week.

Global Links was caught off guard by the events that transpired in February 2005 when it implemented a one-for-350 reverse split of its stock, the result of which would reduce its float from 350 million shares to 1.1 million. The stock was trading at 10 cents pre-reverse split. The goal was to get a new stock with a $35 price.

That is not what happened.

The reverse split went into effect Feb. 1. In the first four days of trading, more than 143 million shares traded hands. This is despite the fact that the stock was trading under a new ticker and a new trade tracking number, and despite the fact that it had only 1.1 million shares issued. The Depository Trust & Clearing Corp., which handles the lion's share of U.S. stock settlement, had just 929,277 shares available for trading.

Global Links stock, which in theory should have risen, dropped to .08 cents from 10 cents within hours. "It became very clear that we had no control of the volume or price of our stock in anyway," said Global Links' Dobrucki, in a March 15, 2005, letter to shareholders. "Outside forces were now manipulating our stock."

Stockholders reported they could not obtain delivery of shares they had bought. One such individual, Robert Simpson, a Michigan businessman who had inadvertently purchased 100% of the common stock outstanding in February, has yet to receive any of the shares he purchased.

Some have said it is all a simple matter of broker error. Accounts showing 350,000 old shares of Global Links should have been adjusted by the broker to show 350 of the new shares, but some have said that didn't happen.

Pat Donahoo, the manager of marketing services for Global Links, said Friday, "The process of issuing the new symbol on Feb. 1, 2005, worked just as it should. If the brokers tried to trade the stock on the old symbol, they would not have been able to. It was no longer an active trading symbol."

Donahoo adds, "When we saw the trading taking place in February of 2005, all we could do is stand back and watch the parade march down the street in total disbelief."

forbes.com



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (9710)8/31/2006 12:50:50 PM
From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12465
 
Re: 8/18/06 - [GLKCE/GLLC] Forbes: Failed Trades

Financial Services
Failed Trades
Liz Moyer, 08.18.06, 5:50 PM ET

A simple Freedom of Information Act request has reignited debate over the influence of naked short-selling in the stock markets.

Late Thursday and all day Friday, bloggers and posters in investment Web site chat rooms were furiously debating the merits of information dug up by David Patch, a now-familiar character in the blogosphere who stands firmly in the anti-naked-short-selling camp.

On Thursday, Patch got word back from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on his request for information regarding failed trade data on Global Links, a Las Vegas real estate holding company that has been the target of frenzied trading activity over the last year and a half, and whose shares now trade at just fractions of a penny.

The data says on April 18, 2005, and the next day, fails in trades of Global Links stock totaled 10 million each. This compares with roughly 4 million shares in total outstanding common stock reported by the company at the end of March 2005.

So there was well over twice as many failed trades each day as there were actual common shares issued.

How can this be? Global Links is a very tiny company, but it is one example of an intensifying debate that is going on in the markets and at the SEC about possible market manipulation.

For the last year and a half, there has been a growing chorus of folks, like Patch, who argue that naked short-sellers pose a systemic risk to the markets by creating counterfeit shares that pressure stocks of targeted companies even lower and force some companies out of business (not to mention destroying the investment savings of shareholders.)

They even contend that this activity is orchestrated, involving the collusion of hedge funds, broker dealers and in some cases journalists, all under the not-so-watchful eye of market regulators.

Their detractors--blogger and former BusinessWeek editor Gary Weiss mockingly calls them the "Baloney Brigade"--say they are distorting or misinterpreting the data. Or, at worst, they are scam artists bent on the opposite form of stock fraud--the "pump and dump."

To back up for a minute, short-selling is when the trader borrows the shares and sells them, hoping they'll fall and he can buy them back at a lower price and pocket the difference when he goes to close out his loan.

But sometimes stock is hard to borrow. Trades still take place, however, though traders never managed to borrow the shares before selling them, resulting in the shares not being delivered to the buyer. These are known as fails-to-deliver. It's also called naked short-selling. Some of it's accidental, and some of it is an intentional form of manipulation.

The SEC, concerned about possible manipulative short-selling activity, instituted Regulation SHO in January 2005. It was supposed to curb abusive trading by imposing strict close-out rules in stocks that had high degrees of failed trades within certain parameters. But Reg SHO has proved to be less than effective, as the SEC itself noted last month in proposing amendments to tighten loopholes.

Since January 2005, several companies have been on the SHO list for well over 13 days, some for hundreds of days, including Overstock.com (nasdaq: OSTK - news - people ), Netflix (nasdaq: NFLX - news - people ), Krispy Kreme (nyse: KKD - news - people ), and Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia (nyse: MSO - news - people ). Even the SEC admits this isn't how it's supposed to work.

"Large and persistent fails to deliver," it says in its proposed amendment to SHO, "can be indicative of manipulative naked short-selling."

The SEC's own reporting on the issue doesn't even capture the whole problem. The agency uses data from the Continuous Net Settlement system at the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp., the New York clearinghouse that acts as the financial industry's go-to place for settling securities transactions.

The DTCC says fails-to-deliver equate to about $3 billion, if you divide in half the $6 billion figure it reported at the end of 2005 (it later explained it was double-counting delivered and received shares). The company, which reports fail data to the stock exchanges but won't release the data to the public, says it has no way of knowing how many transactions settle ex-clearing, meaning outside its walls, in special arrangements from broker to broker.

"We don't know the underlying reasons for why trades fail. All we do is process the data and provide the information" to the markets, says a DTCC spokesman.

Asked for the percentage of fails (among failures the DTCC tracks) in all stock trades settled, including ex-clearing, he says, "If you don't know the size of the whole market, how can you tell what percentage you have?"

Executives at Global Links think they have more like 20 million to 30 million failed trades in their stock, which might suggest ex-clearing trades in their stock are two to three times as great as at the DTCC. "It's something that we're still researching," says Patrick Donahoo, manager of marketing services.

The whole saga started in February 2005, when Global Links, then trading at 10 cents a share, initiated a 1-for-350 reverse share split, reducing its common stock outstanding from 350 million shares to about 1.1 million and narrowing substantially the number of shares available to be borrowed. After the reverse split, a Michigan businessman named Robert Simpson filed a notice with the SEC saying he had acquired 100% of Global Links' outstanding common stock.

Donahoo says there is no evidence that Simpson ever got his shares, even though he filed papers with the SEC documenting the purchase. Attempts to reach Simpson were unsuccessful.

According to the SEC data, the fails in Global Links stock dropped to just under 10 million a day after two days and gradually tapered off, but were still a lofty 5.97 million at the end of December 2005. A month after the reverse split, the company issued another 2.9 million shares previously authorized by the board, and those shares may have alleviated some of the fails.

Shares of Global Links, which trade over the counter, rose 2.22% Friday, but were still a half-penny each. Some 270,000 shares traded. "We're still operating, and our doors are open for business," Donahoo said. "But it's definitely taken our focus off what we're doing here."

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