Articles Posted in Morgan Stanley

The New York Stock Exchange’s regulator group says that Morgan Stanley must pay $500,000 for not overseeing a group of brokers that had recommended unsuitable transactions for accounts belonging to the guardians of injured children and to retirees. The guardian accounts were for children, 10 to 18 years of age, who received medical malpractice settlements after being injured at birth or as a child.

NYSE regulation started investigating the brokerage firm about three years ago. Disciplinary action has been taken against two brokers, while two other brokers and a branch manager were also investigated for misconduct.

The branch manager investigated in the case is believed to have known that there were court-ordered trade restrictions for the guardian accounts but did not tell staff members about them. The court had only authorized the guardian accounts to invest in Treasury strips and bonds. Commissions and fees were to remain low, which they did not.

A hedge fund managed by Bear Stearns that takes both bullish and bearish positions in subprime loans has been hit heavily by conditions in that market. Some of the fund’s assets were held at Merrill Lynch, on margin. When the equity in the fund dropped, Merrill issued margin calls.

The hedge fund reportedly began with about $600 million in investor capital, $40 million of that from Bear Stearns and its executives, then borrowed $6 billion from Wall Street lenders, including Merrill, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America and Deutsche Bank.

As the fund’s assets lost market value, the Bear Stearns managers scrambled to sell hundreds of millions of dollars in assets to satisfy demands for cash and assets from creditors to stave off liquidation of the fund. The managers auctioned almost $4 billion in mortgage bonds, and attempted to present a 30-day plan to sell more assets, but was unable to persuade Merrill to refrain from seizing assets.

Morgan Stanley & Co. Inc., the world’s second largest securities firm, will pay $7.9 million for its failure to provide best execution to certain retail orders for over-the-counter securities, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced today. Morgan Stanley embedded undisclosed mark-ups and mark-downs on certain retail OTC orders processed by its automated market-making system and delayed the execution of other retail OTC orders, for which Morgan Stanley had an obligation to execute without hesitation.

“By recklessly programming its order execution system to receive amounts that should have gone to retail customers, Morgan Stanley violated its duty of best execution and defrauded its customers,” said Linda Chatman Thomsen, Director of the regulator’s Division of Enforcement. “Best execution is a fundamental duty of a broker- dealer,” Thomsen, added. “Morgan Stanley violated its duty” and committed fraud by setting-up its order-execution system “to receive amounts that should have gone to retail customers.”

The company began overcharging clients after embedding undisclosed fees on some trades when it adopted a new computer system to handle transactions in 2001, the SEC said. The lapses affected more than 1.2 million transactions valued at about $8 billion from 2001 through 2004. A Morgan Stanley trader stumbled onto the problem in December 2004 when unusually high trading in a company’s stock generated a $400,000 profit within a few minutes, the SEC said. The trader alerted his supervisor, and by that afternoon a technician pinpointed the programming “error”.

Randi Collotta, an Ex-Morgan Stanley compliance officer and attorney, and her husband, Christopher Collotta, are slated to plead guilty on May 10, 2007 for their involvement in one of the largest insider trading schemes to take place on Wall Street since the 1980’s.

Randi Collotta is accused by U.S. prosecutors of informing her husband and Marc Jurman, a Florida broker, of deals that were pending, including Adobe Systems Inc.’s $3.4 billion buy of Macromedia Inc. and the $2.1 billion acquisition of Argosy Gaming Co. by Penn National Gaming Inc.

The charges against the couple are part of U.S. prosecutors’ crackdown against Morgan Stanley employees that are accused of involvement in insider trading. 13 people have been charged in separate schemes that took place over a 5 year period and generated the participants over $15 million in illegal profits.

Ronald Peteka, a former Morgan Stanley & Co. client services representative, was arrested last month. According to Michael Garcia, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Peteka allegedly stole proprietary information about hedge funds from Morgan Stanley while working with one of the brokerage firm’s consultants for the information technology department. The consultant, named Ira Chilowitz, who was in charge of establishing secure computer connections between prime brokerage clients and Morgan Stanley, pled guilty early this year to four felony counts connected to the allegations against Peteka.

Among the list of allegedly stolen items is the names of all of Morgan Stanley’s major brokerage hedge fund clients, as well as the formulas that were used to figure out the rates paid by them for specific services. This list, according to Garcia, could be of great value to Morgan Stanley’s competition. Garcia said both Chilowitz and Peteka conspired to misappropriate this list.

The U.S. Attorney said that when Chilowitz pled guilty, he confessed that the reason he stole the list was because he anticipated that it could possibly help both him and Peteka gather new business for a consulting company they had planned on setting up together.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office announced the unsealing of criminal actions against a dozen individuals for allegedly stealing and trading on inside information from Morgan Stanley and UBS Securities, LLC, two Wall Street brokerage firms. The SEC also filed charges against these individuals in a separate civil case.

Former Morgan Stanley attorney Randi Collotta and former UBS Securities LLC executive Mitchell Guttenberg are two of the individuals out of more than a dozen people being charged by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for two bribery schemes and two insider trading schemes. Participants made over $8 million in illegal trading profits. U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia says all of the criminal defendants are in custody. Four of them have pleaded guilty.

Garcia said that the defendants violated the trust that had been given to them, made money illegally, and took extensive measures to hide their alleged illegal actions. Concealment measures included secret meetings, paying cash kickbacks, and communicating in code using disposable cell phone.

The international financial services firm of Morgan Stanley and French luxury goods leader LVMH announced an out-of-court settlement of a lengthy legal dispute over allegations that Morgan Stanley issued financial analysis reports which were biased against LVMH.

The settlement, with terms not disclosed, ends nearly five years of legal proceedings in French courts over the potential conflicts of interest between equity analysts and investment banking activities of financial services firms. The case marked the first time the French judiciary was asked to decide potential conflicts of interest of financial analysts at investment banking firms.

The dispute began in 2002, when LVMH accused Morgan Stanley of publishing biased analyst reports and sought 100 million euros ($131.4 million) in damages. In 2004, the Paris Commercial Court heard arguments that the Morgan Stanley analyst report had skewed its analysis of LVMH in order to aid an investment banking client of Morgan Stanley, the Italian luxury goods holding company Gucci. The Court then ordered damages of 30 million euros ($39.4 million) to be paid to LVMH by Morgan Stanley.

A recent investigation by the Senate regarding the handling of Morgan Stanley CEO John Mack in regards to an insider trading investigation sheds light on why regulators are never able to “nail” senior level executives at major securities firms.

Former SEC attorney Gary Aguirre alleges that he was let go after insisting that he interview John Mack in 2005. Mack, at the time, was about to become Morgan Stanley’s chief executive. According to Aguirre, his superiors were hesitant to challenge the soon-to-be head honcho, and the SEC dropped the insider trading case, which also involved Pequot Capital Management Inc., due to insufficient evidence last year.

SEC branch chief Robert Hanson, Aguirre’s former boss, has told the Senate that he knew that lawyers representing Mack would likely contact Hanson’s superiors. Hanson says he would not have minded going up against Mack, but that more preparation and work had been needed to keep Hanson’s superiors in the loop-although, apparently, SEC officials already knew what was going on.

The NASD says that securities giant Morgan Stanley lied when it said that millions of key email messages requested by plaintiffs and investigators in numerous proceedings against the company had been destroyed during the September 11 terrorist attack in 2001.

According to NASD head of enforcement and executive vice president James Shorris, thousands of cases were affected by this deliberate lie. “The firm made the claim they didn’t know the e-mail was restored, but everyone who came back to work on Sept. 17 turned on their computer, and the e-mail was there.”

The allegations were brought forth by the NASD late December in a disciplinary complaint. Pending an NASD hearing, remedies could include censure, a fine, disgorgement of gains associated with violations, a suspension or bar from securities industries, and payment of restitution.

This year, Morgan Stanley Chief Executive Officer John Mack was given the largest bonus ever for a Wall Street firm head. His company gave him $40 million after garnering its best profits yet in their 71-year history. As of December 12, the bonus was presented to Mack in options worth $4 million and $36.2 million in shares. His 2006 bonus was 44% larger than his bonus last year and nearly $2 million more than the total compensation received by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. CEO Henry Paulson in 2005.

Mack’s bonus comes 18 months after he rejoined the firm following the firing of former Morgan Stanley CEO Philip Purcell because of the company’s unimpressive performance. Upon being appointed CEO, Mack promised investors that he would improve the Morgan Stanley’s lowered stock price and increase the company’s profits. Morgan Stanley also gave over $57 million in company bonuses to several other Morgan Stanley executives.

This year, shares of Morgan Stanley have gained 43%, outpacing the 24% advantage of the Amex Securities Broker/Dealer Index. It is the second-biggest securities firm in the United States by market value. Morgan Stanley is also one of 12 financial firms that has been accused of allowing its interests to affect its stock reports. In one case, the investment banking firm agreed to pay a $125 million fine to the SEC-although the firm did not admit any wrongdoing-following accusations by luxury firm LVMH that Morgan Stanley treated Gucci-a Morgan Stanley client-preferentially by giving them favorable coverage.

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