A few years ago, a clique of influential journalists went to
extraordinary lengths to cover up the problem of illegal short
selling. In the face of indisputable data and evidence, the
journalists insisted, over and over, that “naked” short
selling (hedge funds manipulating stock prices by flooding the
market with phantom stock) rarely occurred. And they said short
sellers (who profit from falling stock prices) don’t set out
to destroy public companies.
Moreover, if a person were to criticize illegal short selling,
the reporters would smear that person’s reputation with a
savagery that was almost without parallel in contemporary
journalism.
At the time, these journalists were working at major news
organizations like The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and
CNBC, but most shared a common history: they had been founding
editors or top employees of TheStreet.com, a financial news
website. The few who had not worked for TheStreet.com were close
colleagues of TheStreet.com’s owner, Jim Cramer, who is best
known as the eccentric host of CNBC’s “Mad Money”
program.
Having studied more than 1,000 stories by these journalists, I
can assure the reader that nearly every one of them was sourced
from a tight network of hedge fund managers, and that a great many
of the stories were false or misleading. Moreover, most of the
people in this network (including Jim Cramer himself) are tied in
important ways to two famous criminals from the 1980s – Ivan
Boesky and “junk bond king” Michael Milken.
And though I realize that is hard for some people to absorb
this, I will continue to provide evidence that a surprising number
of the “prominent investors” in this network have had
dealings with associates of organized crime – the Mafia.
* * * * * * * *
Last spring, we published “The Story of Deep Capture ,” which sought
to explain the origins of the Deep Capture website (mission:
“to bypass the ‘captured’ institutions mediating
our nation’s discourse”) by way of exposing the
machinations of the Cramer clique of journalists and their short
selling sources.
One day after we published our story, Cramer had some kind of
awakening. Whereas he had previously sought to whitewash short
seller crimes, he now suddenly repeated our assertion that illegal
short selling was a big problem – the same problem that
precipitated the great stock market crash of 1929.
A few months later, abusive short selling was implicated by U.S.
Senators, CEOs of major banks, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
respected academics, prominent law firms, current and past chairmen
of the Securities and Exchange Commission, and then-Treasury
Secretary Hank Paulson in the near total collapse of our financial
system.
Nowadays, Cramer is even more adamant. He says he knows a lot of
short sellers. He says that short sellers are destroying public
companies. He says they crushed the markets and they’re going
to crush America too.
These short sellers, Cramer hollers, are downright
“diabolical.”
* * * * * * * *
If you have not done so, please read Deep Capture reporter
Patrick Byrne’s primer on naked short selling . Please read
“The Story of Deep Capture .”
Think about what Cramer has said.
And then have a look at the following email.
= = = =
=Begin Message= = = = =
Message #
: 727
Message
Sent: 02/22/2006 08:57:48
From:
AHELLER3@bloomberg.net|ANDY HELLER|EXIS CAPITAL MANAGEM
To:
JONKALIKOW@bloomberg.net|JONATHAN KALIKOW|STANFIELD
CAPITAL
Subject:
CNBC – FAIRFAX
Reply:
He did
this one time before, and the stock went down 3 on the open, then
closed up 1. the way to get this thing down is to get them where
they eat, like the credit analysts and holders. we’re taking
this baby down for the count. ads and I are going to toronto in 2
weeks for a group lunch. J
= = = =
=End Message= = = = =
* * * * * * * *
That email was authored by a top employee of Exis Capital, which
is an offshoot of SAC Capital — said by some to be the most
powerful hedge fund on Wall Street. We can’t be certain who,
aside from the email’s author and “ads” (Adam D.
Sender, head of Exis), attended that “group lunch.” But
from other emails we know that a particular “group” of
hedge fund managers did, indeed, intend to take “this baby
down for the count.”
The “baby” was Fairfax Financial, a major, publicly
listed insurance and financial firm.
The reference in the first line of the above email is to
journalist Herb Greenberg, who bashed Fairfax on CNBC, apparently
causing the stock to go “down 3 on the open.” Other
emails in our collection (we’ll publish a couple more of
them) suggest that Herb’s reporting involved nothing more
than contacting the “group” to find out what he was
supposed to say.
* * * * * * * *
Herb took Fairfax “down 3 at the open” in February
2006, right at the time that Herb, a founding editor of
TheStreet.com, received a subpoena from the Securities and Exchange
Commission. TheStreet.com also got a subpoena. So did Jim Cramer,
the owner of TheStreet.com. Short seller David Rocker, a member of
the “group” and then the largest outside shareholder of
TheStreet.com, got a subpoena too.
At the time, the commission had opened a formal investigation
into Gradient Analytics, a financial research firm that stood
accused by multiple former employees of manufacturing false
“independent” research reports in cahoots with short
sellers (namely, the “group”) and letting the short
sellers trade ahead of the reports’ publication.
The “group” – which also included
“prominent investor” Jim Chanos of Kynikos Associates
– had a similar scam going with “independent
research” firm Morgan Keegan. Deep Capture reporter Judd
Bagley broke that story more than a month ago.
Bloomberg News, which seems to be the only major media outfit
willing to write critically about these “prominent
investors,” picked the story up last week.
The Wall Street Journal published a major, front-page article that exposed the dubious
tactics that Jim Chanos and affiliated short sellers used to
demolish public companies.
But that article was published more than twenty years ago
— in 1985.
Since then, the Journal has not published a single negative
story about Chanos and his friends. It has not published a single
investigative story about abusive short selling.
When David Kansas, a founding editor of TheStreet.com, was
running The Wall Street Journal “Money & Investing”
section, that part of the paper served as little more than a
mouthpiece for Rocker, Cohen, Chanos and affiliated
“prominent investors.”
But last week, even The Wall Street Journal had to acknowledge that
Chanos is now the target of an SEC investigation.
* * * * * * * *
When the SEC issued subpoenas in the Gradient investigation, one
former Gradient employee provided a sworn affidavit stating that
Herb Greenberg held his negative stories so that David Rocker could
establish short positions that would make money when Herb’s
stories caused stocks to do such things as go “down 3 at the
open.”
At the time, Jon Markman, a founding editor of TheStreet.com and
later managing editor of MSN Money was running a hedge fund out of
Gradient’s back office. Former Gradient employees said that
Markman was also trading ahead of Herb’s negative stories and
Gradient’s false negative information. If true, this would
likely be illegal.
But SEC officials say that the investigation in February 2006
was aimed at bigger prey than just Gradient and a few journalists.
The commission was aware that some “prominent
investors” were, in the words of our email author, taking
companies “down for the count.” Good people at the SEC
(the rank and file) hoped to put a stop to this.
But when the subpoenas were issued, Herb, Cramer and others in
their media clique went berserk. They said journalists don’t
have special relationships with short sellers. They said short
sellers don’t destroy companies. Cramer famously vandalized
his government subpoena – live on CNBC.
Under this “media” pressure, the SEC chairman
announced that it would not enforce the subpoenas. Later, the SEC
dropped its investigation altogether.
In an interview with Bloomberg News about the decision not to
enforce the subpoenas, SEC attorney Kathleen Bisaccia said this:
“To have the chairman publicly slap us in the face for doing
our jobs – that really crushed the spirit of a lot of people
for a long time.”
Indeed, former SEC officials say that this was a pivotal moment
in SEC history. With morale sapped, the commission all but ceased
to function.
Certainly, it did not stop the short sellers who would soon
begin efforts to take some of Wall Street’s biggest financial
institutions “down for the count.”
* * * * * * * *
Herb Greenberg, the journalist who took Fairfax “down 3 at
the open,” and who was alleged to have allowed at least one
short seller in the “group” to trade ahead of his
stories, now runs an “independent” financial research
firm that advertises itself as “bridging financial journalism
and forensic analysis.”
We believe that Herb receives the bulk of his income from the
above-mentioned “group” and affiliated “prominent
investors.”
* * * * * * * *
From the above email it is evident that in addition to working
with corrupt journalists, the “group” sought to destroy
Fairfax Financial by getting “them where they eat.”
That is, the hedge funds sought to “take this baby down for
the count” by cutting off the company’s access to
capital.
Sometimes “prominent investors” will merely dish
dirt to a company’s lenders. Other times, the schemes are
more complicated, with investors in their network actually
financing the company. This gives them access to inside information
and (in the case of convertible debentures) to stock that can be
lent to affiliated short sellers.
In other cases, “prominent investors” will buy the
company’s debt, package it into “collateralized debt
obligations” (financial weapons of mass destruction that were
pioneered by Michael Milken’s team at Drexel Burnham
Lambert), and then trade it in such a way as to make it seem as if
the company is in trouble.
When the time is right, the “prominent investors”
fob off the debt to some witless or compliant pension fund. Then
they tell people that they’re no longer financing the company
– the company’s been “cut off.”
Meanwhile, the company will be subjected to unbridled
“naked” short selling – hedge funds illegally
selling stock that they do not actually possess (phantom stock) to
manipulate down the share price. (By way of example: when the above
email was written, SEC data showed that millions of phantom Fairfax
shares had been “failing to deliver” on a daily
basis.
What usually happens is that legitimate lenders see the
plummeting stock price. They see a supposed “financial
partner” yanking credit. They see the negative media. They
see the debt trading at disturbing prices. They have short sellers
feeding them horrible news about the company.
The legitimate lenders know the news is false. They know the
company is credit worthy. But the negativity itself becomes a
liability. The falling stock price is a liability. The legitimate
lenders get worried. They raise their cost of capital, or cut if
off altogether.
And so the “baby” goes “down for the
count.”
* * * * * * * *
Fairfax survived this onslaught. Other companies were not so
lucky.
Last year, Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and dozens of other
companies all went bust in a similar pattern — waves of naked
short selling slightly preceding false stories planted in the media
and then, suddenly, a financial “partner” cutting off a
source of capital.
That is, short sellers got these companies “where they
eat.”
Did the short sellers “cause” these companies to
collapse? If a sniper shoots at a man who is swimming in a
dangerous ocean current, and the man drowns, we cannot say for sure
that the sniper “caused” the man’s death. But we
can say that shooting at struggling swimmers is a crime.
Which short sellers committed the crimes? Only the SEC and the
FBI can tell us for sure.
But we know which “group” attacked Fairfax
Financial. We know that this same “group” and
affiliated “prominent investors” attacked the big
financial companies that collapsed last year. And we know that the
people in this “group” are not passive investors.
Rather, when they attack a “baby,” they seek to take
it “down for the count.”
Given that the collapse of the financial companies caused an
economic catastrophe that will wipe out the jobs and savings
accounts of millions of Americans, it seems that the
“group” and affiliated “prominent
investors” warrant further attention.
* * * * * * * *
One “prominent investor” is Adam Sender, proprietor
of Exis Capital, the hedge fund that employs the author of the
above email. As you will recall, Exis is an offshoot of SAC
Capital, which is managed by Steve Cohen – described by
BusinessWeek magazine as “the most powerful trader on the
Street.”
As I noted in my previous piece , a former Mafia soldier turned
private investigator offered to have one of Sender’s business
partners buried in the Nevada desert. Sender claims to have
declined this offer, but an FBI recording (hear it again here ) suggests that Sender paid
more than $200,000 to that former Mafia soldier and that Sender
intended to “fix” his business partner and somehow
bring about a “doomsday.”
Sender also hired a thug named Spyro Contogouris to harass and
threaten executives of Fairfax Financial – part of the
“group” effort to take that “baby down for the
count.” In upcoming stories, I will publish some of
Spyro’s shocking emails. In one, he told an FBI agent that
somebody was threatening his life. He claimed that it was lawyers
working for Fairfax Financial.
But that claim seems somewhat absurd. Fairfax Financial is a
Canadian insurance company run by a mild-mannered immigrant from
India named Prem Watsa, who is known as “the Warren Buffett
of Canada.”
Given that Spyro wrote his email shortly before he was arrested
by the FBI agent, and given that this FBI agent was investigating
the “group,” it is possible that Spyro either made up
the story to solicit sympathy, or the “group” was
threatening Spyro’s life to prevent him from testifying.
Either way, it says something about the state of the American
media that this intrigue, involving a major financial firm and some
of the nation’s most “prominent investors,” is
not front page news.
* * * * * * * *
The recipient of the email promising to take Fairfax “down
for the count” was Jonathan Kalikow of Stanfield Capital, a
hedge fund specialized in the trading of collateralized debt
obligations.
Jonathan is a member of the mighty Kalikow family. The patriarch
of this family is “prominent investor” Peter Kalikow,
who was one of the largest financial backers of the stock
manipulation firm run by Ivan Boesky, the famous criminal from the
1980s.
But Peter Kalikow is perhaps best known as the former owner of
The New York Post.
When Kalikow owned the Post, the newspaper’s fleet of
delivery trucks was handed over to members of New York’s five
organized crime families. With Bonanno Mafia soldier Richard
“Shellack-head” Cantarella presiding over the delivery
bay, guns and drugs were loaded into the Post’s newspaper
trucks and transported throughout the city.
Indeed, the New York Post became one of La Cosa Nostra’s
principal smuggling operations.
* * * * * * * *
The other members of the “group” — David
Rocker, Steve Cohen of SAC Capital, Jim Chanos of Kynikos
Associates, and Dan Loeb of Third Point – have been discussed
at length on this website. In upcoming installments, I will tell
you more about them and others in their network.
They are all “prominent investors.”
To be continued…
This is Part 3 of an ongoing series.
Read Part 1
Read Part 2
* * * * * * * *
Mark Mitchell is a reporter for DeepCapture.com ,
where this story originated. He previously worked as an editorial
page writer for The Wall Street Journal in Europe, a business
correspondent for Time magazine in Asia, and as an assistant
managing editor responsible for the Columbia Journalism
Review’s online critique of business journalism. He holds an
MBA from the Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern
University. Email: mitch0033@gmail.com