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Strategies & Market Trends : Option Granting Practices and exploits -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (160)1/19/2008 10:09:00 PM
From: RockyBalboa  Respond to of 165
 
In Tennis they would say "time". In tech stocks they say what?

Backdating probe had surprises for investigators
SEC team behind stock-options cases think abuses have been corrected

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) - For Marc Fagel's team of government investigators, what began as an accounting and stock market puzzle turned into a major fraud probe that they believe has lifted the veil on the tech industry's shadier side.

Fagel has led a team of about 30 attorneys, accountants and paralegals with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission office in San Francisco, who have combed through millions of e-mails and conducted dozens of interviews in a stock-options backdating scandal.
Their work is now seen as having shed more light on how many tech companies manipulated stock-option grants by filing false financial information and sometimes even doctoring or making up meeting minutes -- even as some other legal experts argue that the agency has overreached by mistaking record-keeping and administration glitches for fraud.
One of the investigation's first major cases ended this week when a federal judge in San Francisco sentenced ex-Brocade

CEO Gregory Reyes to 21 months in prison and ordered him to pay a $15 million fine. See full story.
Reyes is the first CEO to be sentenced to jail time for his role in stock-options backdating. Several other executives have struck plea agreements and paid hefty civil fines.
In an interview last month, Fagel's team talked at length about the investigation, which has led to legal action, including criminal indictments, against top executives from well-known tech firms such as Apple Inc. , Juniper Networks Inc. and Broadcom Corp.
Stock options give employees the right to buy shares in the future at the market price on the date a grant is approved. If the stock rises later, the recipient can cash in the option to take profit. Backdating a grant to a prior date when the price was lower increases the award's value. A company can legally do that, but the transactions have to be reported in public filings.
Fagel described stock-options backdating "just another fraud case," although he said the scandal also turned up some surprises for the agency. Members of the team, who have also worked with the U.S. Justice Department on backdating issues, declined to discuss specific cases or ongoing investigations.
Tipped by the press
When the issues first came up, Faglel said his team didn't exactly know what it was dealing with. The agency was alerted to the issue thanks to the work of academics, analysts and news organizations (particularly the Wall Street Journal, which first broke the story), who described how many companies appeared to be granting stock options at a time when their shares were trading low.
Fagel said the reports talked about "how unusually lucky a lot of companies seem be on the timing of their options grants."
At first, the agency thought the scam involved classic insider trading, which occurs when company executives make trades based on knowledge about their company that has not yet become public.
But Fagel said the SEC eventually came to "an increasing realization that the companies were in fact lying about the timing of the grants."
To prove their cases, the SEC combed through e-mails and documents and interviewed executives and rank-and-file employees at the various companies involved.
A critical part of the scam, said Cary Robnett, the SEC's assistant regional director in San Francisco, was doctoring minutes of meetings to change the date of stock options grants.
"For me, the practice of a lot of people involved in creating bogus minutes, high level people, shocks me," she said.
The SEC team also relied on so-called V-charts, which they prepared to get a visual idea of when stock options were granted in relation to the company's stock. Options granted at the bottom of the "V" -- where the stock was at a low point before shooting up -- typically triggered more suspicions that the company was doing something wrong.
"You see a dramatic picture," said Sheila O'Callaghan, a branch chief with the enforcement arm of the SEC's San Francisco office. "The stock prices were telling us a story."
Surprised by lawyer involvement
The SEC and other agencies have, so far, filed complaints against 10 chief financial officers, nine CEOS and eight attorneys, according to Robnett. The involvement of attorneys caused the most surprise for the team.
"One striking thing is how many lawyers have been sued and how critical a role that lawyers were playing in this fraud," said Michael Dicke, assistant regional director for enforcement at the SEC's office in San Francisco.
These lawyers, who were often the top-ranking legal experts at their respective companies, "had the necessary knowledge that what they were doing was wrong, and they were doing these things. That's surprising and disturbing," Dicke said.
Fagel said many corporate attorneys were "critical to the backdating process" and were "involved in very complex decisions about stock-option grants and what they mean for the company's financial statements."
The most prominent corporate attorney accused of playing a lead role in the options backdating scandal was Nancy Heinen, the former general counsel of Apple Inc. She was accused of filing false paperwork, including bogus board meeting minutes, in connection with an options grant to CEO Steve Jobs.
In a January 2001 e-mail to Jobs, she purportedly suggested a specific date for his options grant, saying, "To avoid any perception that the board was acting inappropriately for insiders prior to Macworld announcements, I suggest we use Jan. 10, the day after your Macworld keynote, at $16.35. That was one of the lowest closes of the month."
"It was somewhat surprising that a general counsel for a large corporation -- a previously respected general counsel -- would do the things that we believe she did," Dicke said.
Heinen has denied the charges and is fighting the case.
"Everything that Nancy Heinen did was fully transparent to the board and to the finance team, and she didn't deceive anybody," said her attorney, Miles Ehrlich.
Another Apple executive, Chief Financial Officer Fred Anderson, settled with the SEC.

marketwatch.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (160)6/24/2008 4:38:45 AM
From: RockyBalboa  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 165
 
Broadcom exec pleads guilty to lying to SEC
Monday June 23, 10:26 pm ET
By Gillian Flaccus, Associated Press Writer
Broadcom co-founder Samueli pleads guilty to lying to SEC about stock option grants

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) -- Broadcom Corp. co-founder Henry Samueli pleaded guilty Monday to lying to the Securities and Exchange Commission as it probed stock option backdating at the chip maker.
Samueli, a billionaire philanthropist and owner of the NHL's Anaheim Ducks, told U.S. District Judge Cormac J. Carney he was guilty of the single felony of making a false statement.

The plea agreement is part of a larger federal criminal probe into stock-option backdating at Broadcom, which was ultimately forced to write down $2.2 billion in profits -- the largest accounting restatement to date because of illegal backdating.

This month, co-founder and former CEO Henry T. Nicholas was indicted on conspiracy, securities fraud and drug charges.

At Samueli's sentencing, set for Aug. 18, Carney is to decide whether he approves the plea agreement Samueli reached with prosecutors. It calls for five years of probation, payment of $12 million to the U.S. Treasury and a fine of $250,000.

Samueli is not required to help prosecutors and will not face prosecution on any stock options backdating allegations, Assistant U.S. Attorney Robb Adkins told the judge. He will not, however, receive immunity from prosecution if called as a defense witness by fellow Broadcom officers indicted in the wide-ranging case, the prosecutor said. Samueli also forfeited his right to appeal.

Samueli, 53, left the court through a side door holding hands with his wife, Susan, and slipped into a waiting minivan. He did not comment, and his attorney, Gordon Greenberg, also declined comment.

Broadcom's former chief financial officer, William J. Ruehle, 66, was indicted on conspiracy, securities fraud and other charges the same day as Nicholas. A second indictment alleges that Nicholas, 48, slipped ecstasy into the drinks of business associates, maintained a drug warehouse and concealed illegal conduct with bribes and death threats.

Both Nicholas and Ruehle have pleaded not guilty and are free on bail.

Broadcom's former vice president of human resources, Nancy Tullos, pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice earlier this year in exchange for her cooperation in the case.

And in April, the Irvine-based company agreed to pay the SEC $12 million to settle a civil complaint related to stock option backdating but did not admit any wrongdoing.

Backdating stock options involves retroactively setting the exercise price to a low point in the stock's value to increase profits for an executive or employee when shares are sold. If companies backdate options without properly disclosing and accounting for the move, it can cause profits to be overstated and taxes to be underpaid.

Backdating is legal when properly accounted for.

At Monday's hearing, Carney asked Adkins why the government decided against filing charges against Samueli similar to those Nicholas faces.

"You know, Dr. Nicholas will be complaining about this and will be saying you're giving Dr. Samueli better treatment," Carney said to Adkins.

"Each defendant rises and falls on his own merits," said Adkins, who had no comment outside court.

Exhibits filed with the plea documents Monday show Samueli exchanged e-mails with Tullos and helped her select a specific date to grant stock options to certain officers.

Tullos sent Samueli an e-mail saying Nicholas did not want to grant the options on Oct. 1 but wanted to find "another opportunistic date," such as Oct. 5 when options were worth $25.55 or Oct. 19 when options were worth $29.25 each.

Samueli wrote back, "OK, then go with the 10/19 price."

In a 2007 deposition during the SEC investigation, however, Samueli said he wasn't involved in any way in the process of granting stock options to those officers, according to the U.S. attorney's office.

Samueli is a well-known philanthropist and high-profile figure in Southern California, where he and his wife own the Ducks and have donated more than $180 million.

Schools of engineering at the University of California campuses in Los Angeles and Irvine bear his name. The couple also have donated millions to the performing arts and UC Irvine's medical school.

Nicholas and Samueli, his adviser in graduate school, founded the semiconductor-maker in 1991. In May, after the SEC filed its civil complaint against him, Samueli stepped down as chairman of the board of directors and took a leave of absence as chief technology officer.