STOCKGATE TODAY
An online
newspaper reporting the issues of Securities Fraud
Prime Broker’s Defense; The SEC Made
Us Do It - July 24, 2007
Dave Patch
As first reported last week, the
case of Overstock.com v. Wall Street Prime Brokers has progressed to the next
phase of trial after Judge John Munter of the Superior Court of California;
County of San Francisco denied the defendants motion for dismissal. Court transcripts of the hearing are now
available to the public and it appears Wall Street’s most prestigious firms
will be rallying around a common defense.
Don't blame us, the SEC made us do it.
In the court transcripts it was
Merrill Lynch Attorney James E. Lyons, Esg. of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher
& Flom who plead the case for the defendants and opined on several
occasions that the activities of the prime brokerage firms were based on what
the SEC has allowed them to do over the years.
From the trading of unlimited quantities of naked shorts to the lack of
compliance to existing settlement rules, the industries limited interpretation
of recent SEC comments, and the lack of regulatory enforcement justified
whatever actions the firms engaged in.
Under a twisted arrangement of half
truths Lyons informed the Judge that “Reg SHO doesn't say you can't have a fail
to deliver and even an intentional fail to deliver, and the SEC has said even
naked short sales can provide benefits to the marketplace.” Lyons limiting his definitions of intentional
fails to deliver and naked shorts to only those legal trades he wishes to
discuss leaving out the illegal trades the SEC has openly voiced concern over.
Trades only a member of Wall Street can participate in by representing either
the buy side, sell side, or both sides of the executed trade.
Lyons courtroom bait and switch
denied the very existence of the SEC commentary imbedded in the 2003 SHO
proposal where the SEC identified that “Naked short selling can have a number
of negative effects on the market, particularly when the fails to deliver
persist for an extended period of time and result in a significantly large
unfulfilled delivery obligation at the clearing agency where trades are
settled.” With teh SEC following up those remarks by saying that “naked short sellers enjoy greater leverage
than if they were required to borrow securities and deliver within a reasonable
time period, and they may use this additional leverage to engage in trading
activities that deliberately depress the price of a security.”
Wall Street ultimately failed to
honor the concessions the SEC provided them in the 2005 release of SHO leading
the SEC to quickly respond with new reforms only 2 years later. Chairman Cox, in his opening remarks to the
2007 changes revealed “Changes to our short selling rules we consider today are
aimed squarely at abusive short-selling and market manipulation - and promoting
fair, efficient, and orderly markets.”
Those changes introduced by the
Commission included the elimination of the controversial grandfather clause
used almost extensively by market makers and member firms to sell these
unlimited naked shorts into the public markets, doing so with great financial
advantage. The industry ultimately
abused the privilege provided and the SEC responded to the abuse. In rare form,
the Prime Brokers continued to show little remorse for their actions again
blaming company financials for the intentional fails executed into the market
as if the two can ever be directly related.
Lyons: “They have both [Novastar and Overstock] reported dreadful
financial performance and they have a terrible outlook for the future. It's no
wonder their stock prices declined, and it's no wonder that people have engaged
in short selling activity.”
Did I miss a law somewhere? Where in our securities laws or rules does
it say that it is acceptable to abuse, using illegal trading practices, a
struggling company? I even have to
question where Lyons received his analyst training to accurately depict the
future outlooks of either public company.
I thought Mr. Lyons was just one of those high priced ambulance chasers
we all speak so highly of.
Lyons could not even keep his lines
of reasoning straight as one minute he was arguing that the fails in these
companies were related to legal naked shorts associated with market making
activities. I must point out that in a
collapsing stock there is no need for bona fide market making as the stock
already has an imbalance on the sell side.
And then in the next breath Lyons appears to be linking the fails to
short sellers taking advantage of the poor fundamentals in the company. To that argument, Prime Brokers cannot
legally execute orders for short selling clients where the intention is to fail
the trade. Such trades would be in
violation of SEC Rule 15c6-1 which demands 3-day settlement on trades.. Either
way, his clients are involved.
Lyons really minces his words
however when he summarizes on how intentional fails to deliver and naked short
sales are good for the market place.
A good analogy to the Lyons propaganda
would be to take the medicinal belief that “a glass of wine a day is healthy
for you” and expand it to a grander scale leading to such conclusions that “binge drinking is a healthy habit if you
just stick to drinking wine.” Luckily
the Judge did not take a sip from the Kool-Aid, or wine, Lyons was serving up.
Lost by Lyons in his translation are
the scales of moderation vs. abusive levels. Even the SEC has been drawn to the
conclusion that binge trading of sales that result in settlement failures is
not healthy for our markets and could be used to manipulate the securities
involved.
While Lyons portrayal to the courts
that naked shorting is standard industry practice, the SEC and SRO rules do not
follow such lines of reasoning and each has placed extreme limits on the use of
intentional fails to deliver (naked shorts).
Those limited exceptions apply to bona fide market making activities
when necessary to create liquidity and are totally off limits to any retail or
institutional client not registered as a market maker in a particular
issue.
The bona fide market making
exemption, in itself carries limitations in that these naked shorts used to
create liquidity are to be temporary and would require that the market maker
demonstrate a patterns of equilibrium in representing both the buy side and
sell side of a market. Sell side only
market making is not market making.
NASD Rule 5100 offers guidance on
market making citing that “Disproportionate short selling in a market making
account to effectuate such strategies will be viewed by the Association as
inappropriate activity that does not represent bona fide market making and
would therefore be in violation.”
Thus where market making activities
may have been responsible for the persistence of failures equal to and
exceeding threshold levels for a period of no less than 18 trade days, 8 days
of qualification to reach threshold level and 10 days of failure thereafter,
there can be nothing legal about such activities. Eighteen trade days have never been considered a temporary
measurement of time.
The only other option would be that
those naked shorts were not market making failures, which would make them
illegal except under some extreme and unusual circumstance. Such responsibility for the illegal trades would
fall upon those responsible for the execution and timely close out of the
failed trade.
By my read of Lyons commentary the
Industry misinterpreted SHO and came to their own conclusion that the grandfather clause allowed market makers to short
hard-to-borrow stocks without fear they would have to close out losing
positions. As soon as the SEC
recognized that the members were abusing the clause reforms were being drafted
to stop the abuse.
‘Without fear they would
have to close out losing positions.’ When did Wall Street become a
riskless operation?
Ultimately, the case of
Overstock.com v. Wall Street Prime Brokers will be settled in a Superior court
in the state of California where the SEC will have no jurisdiction and little
influence over the Judge and Jury who will be presented the facts in the case.
What will be interesting when those
days come upon us will be how quickly and easily the Attorneys for Wall Street
will throw the SEC under the bus after all these years of the SEC protecting
these firms’ illegal actions. It will
be fun to watch the SEC feel the pain that so many investors have felt over
these past decades. Usually it is the
investing public thrown under the bus by the SEC and now turn around will be
fun to watch.
Neither the SEC nor the Prime
Brokers will have a place to hide.
In December 2005 the General Counsel
to Bear Stearns admitted in a conference call that “For the past few years we
have been hearing from many different regulators regarding their
concerns about the increase in the level of fails that
they are seeing. They believe, and they have stated on numerous occasions, that
one of the primary causes of the high level of fails was that various
participants in the short sale process, prime brokers, executing brokers,
clients, were not following already established rules."
This week these same Prime Brokers
identified above spoke before a state Superior Court Judge and demanded a
dismissal on the grounds that they did no wrong because the SEC has never taken
an enforcement action against them. It
was never about legal or illegal, it was about what the SEC has identified as
acceptable behavior by these firms, legal or otherwise.
Request for comment from the
Commission Staff at SEC was denied. The
Chairman and his staff have seen the documents but have once again gone into
silent mode as if possibly they have something of significance to hide.
A full copy of the transcripts will
be located at www.investigatethesec.com soon so continue to check out the site for
the link.
Later, Stockgate Today will discuss how
market makers have and will continue to manipulate our markets through the use
of abusive and intentional naked short selling when close out requirements come
calling on losing positions.
For more on this issue please visit the Host site
at www.investigatethesec.com
Copyright 2007