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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Naked Shorting-Hedge Fund & Market Maker manipulation? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: makeuwonder who wrote (4787)6/10/2010 9:38:33 AM
From: makeuwonder  Respond to of 5034
 
Geez if this guy was able to attempt to pull off this scheme then it makes me wonder just how many of this type stuff is going on and how is it so easy to get going.


For Immediate Release
June 8, 2010 U.S. Department of Justice
Office of Public Affairs
(202) 514-2007/TDD (202) 514-1888
Mansfield, Texas Man Pleads Guilty to Commodities Fraud Involving Foreign Currency Trading Ponzi Scheme

WASHINGTON—Ray M. White, 51, pleaded guilty today before U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul D. Stickney in Dallas to a criminal information charging him with one count of commodities fraud, announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney James T. Jacks of the Northern District of Texas.

According to court documents, White admitted that in July 2008 he contracted with an investor to sell $50,000 in commodities through CRW Management LP, which White operated in Mansfield, Texas. White admitted that, from July 2008 until January 2009, he knowingly and willfully cheated and defrauded, made false statements to, and deceived the investor by making several misrepresentations in connection with the contract to sell commodities.

Specifically, according to court documents, White represented to the investor that his funds would be used to trade off-exchange foreign currency contracts and that CRW averaged 7 percent per week returns through off-exchange foreign currency trading. According to the court documents, White provided written account statements showing purported returns, and represented to this investor that CRW would maintain separate bank accounts for each investor. White admitted that in fact, these account statements were false and that he did not maintain separate bank accounts for the investors.

According to the criminal information, the vast majority of the funds were never used to trade off-exchange foreign currency. White admitted that he either misappropriated investor funds or paid them to other investors in the form of Ponzi payments. White admitted losing more than $86,500 on off-exchange foreign currency trading, rather than making the 7 percent per week profits he claimed.

According to March 2009 emergency civil enforcement actions filed in the Northern District of Texas by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), White solicited at least $10.9 million from late 2006 until March 2009 from more than 250 investors to trade in the foreign currency market. The SEC and CFTC court documents also allege that CRW never traded off-exchange foreign currency, and that White lost money in the limited off-exchange foreign currency trading in which he engaged. According to the SEC and CFTC court documents, White used at most $93,900 of the $10.9 million he raised to trade in the foreign currency market. The remaining approximately $10.8 million was either misappropriated or returned to CRW customers as part of the Ponzi scheme. The complaint filed by the SEC states that White used the funds to finance his son’s car-racing career, to purchase a company called Hurricane Motorsports LLC, in Arlington, Texas, and to purchase a home and other real property.

The SEC and CFTC court documents also state that White was never registered with the SEC or the CFTC, and has never been licensed to sell securities. While White led investors to believe that his special expertise in trading foreign currencies would yield exceptional returns, in reality he was not a successful foreign currency trader and had no lucrative foreign currency trading fund or program. In fact, White filed for bankruptcy in 2003 and in 2006, a fact he concealed from investors.

White faces a maximum prison sentence of 10 years and a maximum fine of $1 million. He is scheduled to be sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Barbara M.G. Lynn on Sept. 17, 2010.

This law enforcement action is part of President Barack Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. President Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.

The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Bill Bowne of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Alan Buie and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephanie Tourk for the Northern District of Texas. The case was investigated by the CFTC, the SEC, the FBI, and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service.



To: makeuwonder who wrote (4787)6/18/2010 12:22:10 AM
From: makeuwonder1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5034
 
French and German leaders in joint plea to EC president over short-selling
(1)Tweet this (15)Elena Moya guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 9 June 2010 17.33 BST Article history
The German chancellor Angela Merkel and French president Nicolas Sarkozy have called for a total European ban on naked short-selling of government bonds.

In a joint letter to European commission president Jose Manuel Barroso, the leaders of Europe's two biggest economies urged the EU to ban trades where investors bet a certain stock or bond will fall in value when they don't hold that stock or bond itself.

"Naked short-selling should be prohibited to refrain European markets from suffering a new wave of severe turbulence," the two presidents said.

They added that they believed "there is an urgent need for the commission to speed up its work to establish stricter control of markets in sovereign credit default swaps (CDS) and of short-selling. We believe it is indispensable to reinforce the transparency of short positions on equities and bonds, especially sovereign bonds."

EU leaders claim that speculators have exacerbated the recent European sovereign debt crisis by betting that the price of insuring Greek, Spanish or Portuguese debt, bought through CDSs, would rise, regardless of whether they held the bonds themselves.

Merkel and Sarkozy now propose that only investors holding sovereign bonds should be allowed to buy such protection. A rise in the cost to insure government bonds is seen as an indicator of future trouble, and often pushes up the cost that countries need to pay to lure investors into its debt. In the case of Greece, such increase led to unbearably high borrowing costs, pushing the country into a bailout by the EU and the International Monetary Fund.

Banning such trades, however, may come too late as investors have moved elsewhere, say analysts. "We've seen a contraction amongst European sovereign CDS – uncertainty has increased to the point that there's less appetite," said Jonathan Di Giambattista, managing director at Fitch in New York. "We've seen emerging markets – such as South Korea, Mexico and Brazil – eclipse developed markets."

Neil Williams, chief economist at Hermes Asset Management, said: "The letter is just a side issue to a far bigger problem – perhaps a sign of politicians looking for scapegoats.

"The underlying cause is that the eurozone has a monetary union, some political union, but no economic union - over the past decade, eurozone members had disparate economic growth and different patterns, and it's taken a global crisis to expose the cracks."

In response to Merkel and Sarkozy's letter, the European commission said it was already working on measures on the derivatives, and that it would present "concrete" proposals "during the summer".

While EU politicians debate, the euro is trading near a four-year low against the US dollar, and the cost of borrowing for troubled countries keeps rising. Portugal today had to pay 5.2% to lure investors into €816m worth of 10-year bonds, higher than the 4.5% paid in a previous sale. Spain's current 10-year bond yield is at about 4.5%, compared with less than 4% before the crisis.

guardian.co.uk