Former Posco Group Chairman Chung Joon-yang allegedly invested some trillions of won in questionable mergers and acquisitions during his term; Posco probe shifts to its subcontractors

http://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/news/article/article.aspx?aid=3002081&cloc=joongangdaily|home|newslist1

http://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/news/article/article.aspx?aid=3002084

Trillions of won spent on Posco M&As

Mar 19,2015

Former Posco Group Chairman Chung Joon-yang allegedly invested some trillions of won in questionable mergers and acquisitions during his term, according to data from a website specializing in corporate statistics. The 67-year-old has been recognized by prosecutors as the driving force behind alleged tax evasions and a multitude of suspicious mergers and acquisitions orchestrated by the nation’s No. 1 steelmaker that resulted in a massive financial blow.  Continue reading

Lotte Group’s shopping subsidiary is being investigated for allegedly creating a slush fund, prosecutors said

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2015/03/116_175521.html

Updated : 2015-03-19 17:46

Lotte under anti-corruption probe

By Kim Rahn
Lotte Group’s shopping subsidiary is being investigated for allegedly creating a slush fund, prosecutors said Thursday. Continue reading

Sri Lanka PM seeks probe into stock market’s insider trading

http://news.asiaone.com/print/news/asia/sri-lanka-pm-seeks-probe-stock-markets-insider-trading

Sri Lanka PM seeks probe into stock market’s insider trading

Thursday, March 19, 2015 – 18:25

Saman Indrajith

The Island/Asia News Network

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has submitted a motion to Secretary General of Parliament seeking the appointment of a Parliamentary Select Committee to investigate whether insider trading and other malpractices have taken place at the Stock Market since 2010. Continue reading

Bursa Securities raps, fines remisier RM312,000 for manipulation in numerous counters/securities

http://www.thestar.com.my/Business/Business-News/2015/03/19/Bursa-Securities-raps-fines-remisier-RM312000-for-manipulation/?style=biz

Bursa Securities raps, fines remisier RM312,000 for manipulation

Thursday, 19 March 2015

KUALA LUMPUR: Bursa Malaysia Securities Bhd has reprimanded and fined a remisier Tan Kai Kiat RM312,000 for manipulative dealing activities in numerous counters/securities. It had on Thursday ordered to strike off Tan, if he was still a registered person of Bursa Malaysia Securities. Bursa Securities said he had manipulated in  the call warrants of Oriental Holdings Bhd, Genting Plantations Bhd, PPB Group Bhd and IJM Plantations Bhd. He was also involved in manipulating the loan rights of Land & General Bhd and also in the shares of Integrated Rubber Corporation Bhd (IRCB);  Narra Industries Bhd, CIMB Group Holdings Bhd (CIMB) and its call warrants. Other counters were the shares and call warrants of DRB-Hicom Bhd, Malaysian Bulk Carriers Bhd and UEM Sunrise Bhd. Bursa Securities said Tan was then a dealer’s representative of HwangDBS Investment Bank Bhd in Penang. Continue reading

Ex-UOB Kay Huan remisier Tan Hua Ann penalised S$157,000 for false trading

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/ex-remisier-penalised-s/1726840.html

Posted by Joel CHUA Yong Sheng, Year 3 undergrad at the School of Business, Singapore Management University

Ex-remisier penalised S$157,000 for false trading

POSTED: 19 Mar 2015 16:57
Former UOB Kay Hian remisier Tan Hua Ann is not allowed to conduct business in any regulated activity under the Securities and Futures Act, among other prohibitions, for two years after making S$62,723 through false trading. Continue reading

How an Ex-Moore Trader Got Caught in the Most Complicated Insider Trading Investigation in British History

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-19/how-an-ex-moore-trader-got-caught-in-the-most-complicated-insider-trading-investigation-in-british-history

How an Ex-Moore Trader Got Caught in the Most Complicated Insider Trading Investigation in British History

bySuzi Ring

March 20, 2015

Julian Rifat, a former Moore Capital trader once named in a list of “Institutional Investors That Matter,” was sentenced to 19 months in jail by a London judge for insider trading. British authorities swept through the darkened streets of Oxford that Tuesday toward their appointment with a most wanted man. The quarry in this pre-dawn hunt was, of all things, a hedge-fund trader. His name was Julian Rifat, and he was a principal target of Operation Tabernula — the biggest, most complex insider-trading investigation in British history.  Continue reading

SEC Joins Battle on Broker Bias That Could Remake Industry

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-17/sec-will-develop-fiduciary-duty-rule-for-brokers-white-says

SEC Joins Battle on Broker Bias That Could Remake Industry

byDave Michaels

March 17, 2015

(Bloomberg) — The head of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission called for tighter rules on brokers, echoing the White House’s campaign to crack down on what the government calls biased financial advice that is costing investors billions of dollars. Continue reading

Review of SEC Enforcement Developments in 2014, and a Look Forward, A Memorandum from Bill McLucas, WilmerHale

Click to access review-of-sec-enforcement-developments-in-2014.pdf

Review of SEC Enforcement Developments in 2014, and a Look Forward, A Memorandum from Bill McLucas, WilmerHale

As we noted last year in our memorandum focused on 2013 developments, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Mary Jo White has called for the SEC to be more aggressive in its enforcement program. By all accounts, the Enforcement Division has responded to that call. The past year saw the SEC continue the trend, started under Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami in 2009, of transforming the SEC’s civil enforcement arm into an aggressive law enforcement agency modeled on a federal prosecutor’s office. This should not come as a surprise since both Andrew Ceresney, the current Director, and George Cannellos, Ceresney’s Co-Director for a brief period of time, like Khuzami, spent many years as federal prosecutors in the Southern District of New York. And the Commission itself is now led for the first time by a former federal prosecutor, Mary Jo White, the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York from 1993 to 2002. Given the events of the past decade involving the Madoff fraud and the fallout from the 2008 financial crisis, we believe both the aggressive tone and positions the SEC has taken in recent years will continue. In this memorandum, we outline some of the developments in the SEC’s enforcement program and the remedies it has pursued over the past year. We also discuss important developments in areas where we expect to see continued enforcement attention during 2015, including insider trading law, the private equity industry, and accounting and financial reporting matters.

SEC Enforcement Program Focus

Accounting and Financial Reporting

Another area where we expect to see increased SEC enforcement activity in 2015 is in accounting and financial reporting cases. Although this has not been much of a focus area since the financial crisis, that is beginning to change. After several years of seeing the number of such actions decline year over year, the number of financial reporting and disclosure cases brought by the SEC shot up 45% in fiscal 2014.66 The SEC has said it expects to “continue the momentum in pursuing financial reporting and accounting fraud” in 2015.67 The Financial Reporting and Audit Task Force mentioned above was established by the Commission to identify and develop potential cases that can then be referred to the Enforcement Division for investigation. While the Task Force has begun issuing information requests to public companies, it remains to be seen how active or effective it will be in generating enforcement recommendations. Continue reading

Regulatory Capture in India/Asia: DLF gains after Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) quashes SEBI’s market ban on the company; the ruling comes as a blow to SEBI which has stepped up its efforts to curb market manipulation and has called for better disclosures by listed companies

http://money.livemint.com/news/market/equity/movers-today/dlf-gains-after-sat-quashes-sebi%E2%80%99s-market-ban-on-the-company-364388.aspx

DLF gains after SAT quashes SEBI’s market ban on the company

16 March 2015

Accord Fintech

India, March 16 — DLF is currently trading at Rs. 161.75, up by 4.25 points or 2.70% from its previous closing of Rs. 157.50 on the BSE.The scrip opened at Rs. 162.10 and has touched a high and low of Rs. 163.90 and Rs. 158.85 respectively. So far 13,10,000 shares were traded on the counter.The BSE group ‘A’ stock of face value Rs. 2 has touched a 52 week high of Rs. 242.80 on 09-Jun-2014 and a 52 week low of Rs. 100.00 on 16-Oct-2014.Last one week high and low of the scrip stood at Rs. 163.90 and Rs. 139.20 respectively. The current market cap of the company is Rs. 28,840.00 crore.The promoters holding in the company stood at 74.91% while Institutions and Non-Institutions held 20.18% and 4.91% respectively.Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) has quashed a Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) order against DLF, lifting a capital markets ban on the company’s promoters and related entities. The case relates to alleged non-disclosure of information by the company during its IPO in 2007, which had garnered about Rs 9,000 crore. Earlier in October 2014, SEBI had banned DLF and its key officials from accessing the capital markets for three years. This verdict will boost DLF in its struggle to reduce its net debt, which stood at $3.3 billion at the end of December. However, the ruling comes as a blow to SEBI which has stepped up its efforts to curb market manipulation and has called for better disclosures by listed companies.DLF is one of India’s largest real estate companies that has over 60 years of track record of sustained growth, customer satisfaction, and innovation.

Korean prosecutors are investigating DongA One, a flour maker owned by Lee Hi-sang, the father-in-law of former President Chun Doo-hwan’s third son, Jae-man, for alleged stock manipulation; stockbroker detained on suspicion he helped the firm inflate its stock price

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2015/03/116_175390.html

DongA One under probe for stock manipulation

17 March 2015

Korea Times

By Lee Kyung-min

Prosecutors said Tuesday they are investigating DongA One, a flour maker owned by Lee Hi-sang, the father-in-law of former President Chun Doo-hwan’s third son, Jae-man, for alleged stock manipulation. The Seoul Southern Prosecutors’ Office said it detained a stockbroker, surnamed Kim, on suspicion he helped the firm inflate its stock price in 2010 and 2011. During the period, the company’s stock price doubled from 3,000 to 6,000 won. The company reaped some 38 billion won in illegal gains by selling its stock to institutional and individual investors, the prosecution said. DongA One is suspected of providing money to the stockbroker to help raise the stock’s price. The Securities and Futures Commission first detected the manipulation last year and referred the case to the prosecution in May. Previously, Lee was investigated for allegedly helping the Chun family create a slush fund to hide assets.