“Accountability – Integrity –
Reliability”
That’s the motto of the Government Accountability Office,
and it almost makes you believe that there really is a functioning
watchdog – somebody, aside from us Internet loons, to
investigate and report on the incompetence and malfeasance that
pervade our public institutions.
Certainly, there were high hopes when the GAO began
investigating the Securities and Exchange Commission’s
oversight of the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC),
a black box Wall Street outfit that is at the center of one of the
great financial scandals of our era.
Alas, the GAO has completed its “investigation” and
issued a
report on its findings. After reading this report, and
considering once again that the GAO (“Accountability –
Integrity – Reliability”) is the last line of defense
against government miscreancy, I have concluded, and am obliged to
inform you, that we are, without a shadow of a doubt, totally
screwed.
The report begins with an explanation: “An effective
clearance and settlement process is vital to the functioning of
equities markets. When investors agree to trade an equity security,
the purchaser promises to deliver cash to the seller and the seller
promises to deliver the security to the purchaser. The process by
which the seller receives payment and the buyer, the securities, is
known as clearance and settlement.”
In other words, people who sell stock need to deliver real
stock. That’s kind of important to the“functioning of
equities markets.” If you think it is strange that the GAO (
“Accountability – Integrity – Reliability”)
needs to clarify this point, you can begin to understand the scope
of a scandal that has helped bring us to the brink of a second
Great Depression.
The problem is that many hedge funds and brokers engage in
illegal naked short selling – selling stock and other
securities that they have not yet borrowed or purchased, and
failing to deliver stock within the allotted 3 days. They do this
to drive down stock prices and destroy public companies for
profit.
Emmy Award-winning journalist Gary Matsumoto
reported on the Bloomberg newswire last week that naked short
selling is one of Wall Street’s “darkest arts”
and contributed to the demise of both Lehman Brothers and Bear
Stearns. SEC data shows that an astounding 32.8 million shares of
Lehman were sold and not delivered to buyers as of last September
11, days before the company declared bankruptcy.
The collapse of Lehman, of course, triggered the near-total
implosion of our financial system.
How could this have been allowed to happen?
One answer lies within that black box – the Depository
Trust and Clearing Corporation. The DTCC is a quasi-private
organization that is charged with ensuring that securities trades
are cleared and settled. As is evident from the cases of Lehman,
Bear, and hundreds of other companies, however, the DTCC does not
always do its job.
Quite to the contrary, it enables naked short selling to go
unpunished. Rather than track individual trades to ensure that
delivery occurs, the DTCC merely calculates a net total of sales
and purchases at the end of each day. So we know how many shares of
a given company fail to deliver each day, but the DTCC won’t
tell us which hedge funds or brokers are responsible.
Meanwhile, the DTCC maintains something called the “Stock
Borrow Program,” whereby it purportedly borrows shares from
cooperating brokers to settle failed trades. Since these shares are
not actually on deposit with the DTCC, the effect has been to allow
brokers and hedge funds to sell massive amounts of non-existent
stock and delay delivery indefinitely. The DTCC records the trades
as settled, but all that has been delivered is a stock that may or
may not have been borrowed from some unknown source.
While enabling hedge funds and brokers to engage in their dark
art, the DTCC also goes to lengths to deny that illegal naked short
selling occurs and to smear the reputations of people who say
otherwise. It has orchestrated this vicious public relations
campaign in cahoots with a crooked Portfolio magazine reporter
named Gary Weiss, who has worked closely with a motley cast of
Mafia-connected hedge fund managers and convicted criminals.
There is indisputable evidence showing that
Weiss, while posing as a journalist, not only worked inside the
DTCC’s offices, but also went so far as to
seize total control of the Wikipedia entries on “naked
short selling” and “Depository Trust and Clearing
Corporation.” Yet, to this day, Weiss flat-out denies that he
has ever worked with the DTCC and insists that he has never edited
any Wikipedia page, much less the fabulously distorted entries
dealing with naked short selling.
That the DTCC facilitates and seeks to cover up naked short
selling is not surprising given that it is owned by the very
brokerages who profit from catering to hedge funds who engage in
the crime. The DTCC’s board of directors has included several
market makers – including Peter Madoff, brother of Bernard
Madoff, the $50 billion Ponzi schemer with ties to the Mafia
— who made a tidy profit from naked short selling.
At any rate, the SEC is responsible for overseeing the DTCC and
ensuring that it is doing all it can to enforce delivery of shares
and other securities. But the SEC conducts examinations of the DTCC
only once every two years, and former SEC officials have
admitted to Deep Capture that these visits entail nothing
more than “investigators” asking a few courteous
questions. Indeed, a number of former SEC officials have told us
that the nation’s securities regulator doesn’t even
understand what the DTCC does.
Enter the GAO (“Accountability - Integrity –
Reliability”). Ostensibly, the GAO was going to determine
whether the SEC was properly monitoring the DTCC. However, the
GAO’s “investigation” entailed nothing more than
visiting the SEC and asking a few courteous questions. In response,
the SEC told the GAO that there is nothing to worry about, and the
GAO duly issued a report that concluded that the SEC had told the
GAO that there is nothing to worry about.
Really, that, in essence, is what the report says.
It notes, for example, that the SEC examines the DTCC only once
every two years, but offers no opinion as to whether this is
sufficient oversight of an organization that processes securities
transactions worth $1.4 quadrillion – or 30 times the gross
product of the entire planet – every year.
And here’s what the report has to say about the
DTCC’s Stock Borrow Program:
“…in response to media criticism and allegations
made by certain issuers and shareholders that NSCC and DTC [units
of the DTCC] were facilitating naked short selling through the
operation of the Stock Borrow Program, OCIE [a unit of the SEC]
also incorporated a review of this program into the scope of its
2005 examination. These critics argued that the Stock Borrow
Program exacerbated naked short selling by creating and lending
shares that are not actually deposited at the DTC, thereby,
flooding the market with shares that do not exist. As part of their
review, OCIE examiners tested transactions in securities that were
the subject of the above referenced allegations or had high levels
of prolonged FTD. The examination did not find any instances where
critics’ claims were validated. However, we did not
validate OCIE’s findings .” [Emphasis mine]
In other words, the SEC claims to have examined the Stock Borrow
Program once – in 2005 — but the GAO
(“Accountability – Integrity –
Reliability”) has no idea what that examination entailed. The
SEC claims to have “tested transactions” in securities
that had “high levels of prolonged” failures to
deliver, but offered the GAO no credible explanation as to why so
many companies have seen millions of their shares go undelivered
nearly every day since 2005.
The SEC says it looked into the “critics’
claims” and found them to be without merit. The GAO duly
notes this as if what the SEC has to say were the final say in the
matter. As to whether the SEC’s own claims might have been
without merit, the GAO says only that it “did not
validate ” the SEC’s findings.
Isn’t the job of the GAO (“Accountability –
Integrity – Reliability”) to “validate”
– or, as it were, invalidate – the SEC’s
findings? It is not exactly an “investigation” to
merely ask the SEC what it has to say and then publish a report
confirming that that is, in fact, what the SEC had to say.
Last year, more than 70% of all failures to deliver were
concentrated on a select 100 companies that short sellers had also
targeted in other ways (planting false media stories, issuing false
financial research, filing bogus class action lawsuits, harassing
and threatening executives, engaging in corporate espionage,
circulating false rumors, pulling strings to get dead-end federal
investigations launched, etc.), but the SEC told the GAO that the
failures to deliver could be mostly the result of “processing
delays” or “mechanical errors.”
Billions of undelivered shares – most of them concentrated
on 100 known targets of specific short sellers. Many of
those shares left undelivered for months at a time. The SEC tells
the GAO that this might be due to “mechanical errors.”
And what does the GAO (“Accountability – Integrity
– Reliability”) do? It transcribes the SEC’s
claims, offers no opinion as to whether the SEC might be full of
it, and then acknowledges that it is in no position to have such
opinions because it “did not validate ”
anything.
In a written response to the GAO, the SEC noted happily that the
GAO (“Accountability – Integrity –
Reliability”) “made no recommendations” in its
report.
“We appreciate the courtesy you and your staff extended to
us during this review,” the SEC told the GAO.
* * * * * * * *
Far better is a report
issued last week by the Office of the Inspector General at the
Securities and Exchange Commission. Inspector General David Kotz,
charged with conducting independent oversight of the SEC, is a
heroic figure – an honest man in government. He has
consistently lambasted the SEC for corruption and incompetence, and
now he has investigated the SEC’s regulation of naked short
selling. He found the regulation to be fairly abysmal and offered
concrete recommendations for how the commission could reform
itself.
The report concludes:
“The OIG received numerous complaints alleging that [SEC]
Enforcement failed to take sufficient action regarding naked short
selling. Many of these complaints asserted that investors and
companies lost billions of dollars because Enforcement has not
taken sufficient action against naked short selling
practices.”
“Our audit disclosed that despite the tremendous amount of
attention the practice of naked short selling has generated in
recent years, Enforcement has brought very few enforcement actions
based on conduct involving abusive or manipulative naked short
selling…during the period of our review we found that few
naked short selling complaints were forwarded to Headquarters or
Regional Office Enforcement staff for further
investigation…”
“Given the heightened public and Commission focus on naked
short selling and guidance provided to the public leading them to
believe these complaints will be taken seriously and appropriately
evaluated, we believe the ECC’s current policies and
procedures should be improved to ensure that naked short selling
complaints are addressed appropriately.”
As for the SEC’s claims that naked short selling
isn’t really a problem, or that failures to deliver could be
the result of “mechanical error,” the OIG nicely
contrasts this blather with the SEC’s own decision last fall
to take “emergency” action against naked short selling
(because naked short sellers were contributing to the toppling of
the American financial system) and the SEC’s statement that
“we have been concerned about ‘naked’ short
selling and, in particular, abusive ‘naked’ short
selling, for some time.”
In response to the OIG’s rightfully scathing report, the
SEC wrote a letter in which it flatly refused to abide by most of
the OIG’s recommendations.
The SEC did not thank the OIG for its
“courtesy.”
* * * * * * * * *
Meanwhile, that other watchdog – the media –
continues to ignore the problem of naked short selling. After Gary
Matsumoto’s rather earth-rattling
Bloomberg report that naked short selling destroyed Bear Stearns
and Lehman Brothers – and, by extension, destabilized the
entire financial system – there were a total of two
mainstream media stories on the subject.
The first was in Portfolio magazine. Actually, this wasn’t
really a story. It was one of those question and answer things. And
the Q&A was not with some credible expert. Instead, a Portfolio
magazine reporter interviewed another Portfolio magazine reporter
about the Bloomberg reporter’s story. Even more shocking to
those who believe there is hope for balanced media coverage of this
issue, the interviewee was none other than… Gary Weiss, the
crooked reporter who sidelines as a flak for the DTCC.
Weiss, of course, smeared the messenger, suggesting that
Matsumoto was a “conspiracy theorist.” He cited no data
or evidence, but repeated the SEC and DTCC nonsense that failures
to deliver might be caused by mechanical errors (which just happen
to show up overwhelmingly concentrated in those firms targeted by
the hedge funds who serve as Gary Weiss’s sources). And he
asserted that naked short selling isn’t a problem because the
SEC says that naked short selling isn’t a problem (except
when the SEC says that naked short selling is an
“emergency”).
Read the full interview
here . You’ll get a sense of the way Weiss deliberately
employs straw man arguments to distort the truth, though as an
example of Weiss’s dishonesty, this is rather mild.
* * * * * * * *
The other magazine to report on the Bloomberg bombshell was the
Columbia
Journalism Review , which is the most prominent watchdog of the
watchdogs – an outlet for serious media criticism. As
Deep Capture ’s regular readers know, I used to work
as an editor for the Columbia Journalism Review. I spent ten months
preparing a story for that publication about dishonest journalists
(including Gary Weiss) who were deliberately covering up the naked
short selling scandal.
In the course of working on this story, I was threatened and, on
one occasion, punched in the face. Then, in November 2006, shortly
before the story was to be published, a short selling hedge fund
that I was investigating announced that it would henceforth be
providing the Columbia Journalism Review with the funding that
would be used specifically to pay my salary.
The hedge fund that bribed the Columbia Journalism Review is
called Kingsford Capital. It has worked closely with criminals,
including a thug named Spyro Contogouris. In November 2006, a
couple weeks after Kingsford bribed the Columbia Journalism Review,
an FBI agent arrested Spyro. This was the same FBI agent who was
investigating a cabal of short sellers – SAC Capital, Kynikos
Associates, the former Rocker Partners, Third Point Capital, Exis
Capital — who were then working with Spyro to attack a
company called Fairfax Financial.
Spyro had harassed and threatened Fairfax executives, so he was
going to feature prominently in my story. The centerpiece of my
story, however, was to be that cabal of short sellers, not only
because the Fairfax case was quite
shocking , but also because these short sellers and a few
others were the primary sources to dishonest journalists
(especially MarketWatch reporter Herb Greenberg and CNBC
personality Jim Cramer) who were then whitewashing the naked short
selling scandal. Moreover, nearly every company known to have been
targeted by these short sellers had been victimized by naked short
selling, with millions of shares going undelivered, often for
months at a time.
Emails in my possession show that Kingsford Capital is closely
connected to that cabal of short sellers. Moreover, one of
Kingsford’s managers at the time, Cory Johnson, was, along
with Herb Greenberg and Jim Cramer (the journalists who were going
to feature most prominently in my story) a founding editor of
TheStreet.com. (Johnson removed Kingsford from his online resume
after I revealed the relationship in “The Story of Deep
Capture.”).
For a number of years, Kingsford Capital was partnered with
Manuel Asensio, who was one of the most notorious naked short
sellers on the Street. Prior to his work with Kingsford, Asensio
worked for
First Hanover , a Mafia-affiliated brokerage whose owner later
became a homeless crack addict.
I was investigating Kingsford and Asensio primarily because they
appeared to be among the favorite sources of Gary Weiss, the
crooked journalist who was then secretly doubling as a flak for the
black box DTCC. Asensio, for example, helped Weiss write “The
Mob on Wall Street,” a 1995 BusinessWeek story that was all
about the Mafia’s infiltration of Wall Street stock
brokerages, but which deliberately omitted reference to
Mafia-connected naked short sellers, even though the brokerage that
featured most prominently in the story, Hanover Sterling, was at
the center of one of the biggest naked short selling fiascos in
Wall Street history.
According to someone who knows Weiss well, Asensio was also a
source for a Weiss story about the gangland-style murder of two
stock brokers, Al Chalem and Meier Lehmann. Chalem was tied to the
Mafia and specialized in naked short selling. Multiple
sources say that Russian mobsters killed Chalem in a dispute over
the naked short selling of stocks that were manipulated by
brokerages connected to the Russians and the Genovese organized
crime family.
One of these sources – a man who worked closely with
Chalem – says that he tried to tell Weiss the true story, but
Weiss refused to listen to anybody who would pin the murders on the
Russian Mob or accuse Chalem of naked short selling. Instead, Weiss
wrote a false story describing Chalem as a “stock
promoter” and suggesting that he had been killed by people
tied to the Gambino crime family, which was then a fierce rival of
the Genovese and the Russians.
On another occasion, the current principals of Kingsford Capital
sent Weiss a fax containing false negative information about a
company called Hemispherx Biopharma. Another source, who was
sitting in Weiss’s office at the time, says that he tried to
tell the reporter that Kingsford was working with Asensio, that
Asensio might have ties to the Mob, and that Asensio was naked
short selling Hemispherx stock. Weiss ignored this information and
wrote a negative story about Hemispherx. Hemispherx’s stock
promptly plummeted by more than 50%.
Remember, Gary Weiss is the Portfolio magazine reporter who just
who just told Portfolio magazine that only “conspiracy
theorists” believe that abusive short selling is a
problem.
* * * * * * * *
It is too much for me to believe that Kingsford Capital’s
managers (along with Gary Weiss and Asensio?) could be influencing
the Columbia Journalism Review’s stories, but I do know that
the magazine is now an ardent defender of short sellers and has
written favorably about several of the dishonest journalists
– including Gary Weiss –who were to appear in my
story.
And, in its recent piece about Matsumoto’s Bloomberg
bombshell, the Columbia Journalism Review cast doubt on the theory
that naked short selling wiped out Lehman – never mind those
30 million shares that didn’t get delivered.
The Columbia Journalism Review reporter, who receives a salary
thanks to the beneficence of Kingsford Capital, wrote this:
“Now, I don’t have a dog in the naked-shorts fight.
I can’t tell you if this is being done illegally on a
large-scale and having a real impact on companies. I just
don’t know.”
“But one of the first things that comes to mind here
is—wouldn’t you expect fails-to-deliver to soar for a
company teetering on the brink of bankruptcy under an avalanche of
bad news? I’d expect there would be a rush to short a stock
like Lehman, which was about to collapse anyway. So, people who
usually could expect to borrow shares to short might have found
that they couldn’t because everybody else was doing the same
thing.”
It is true that by mid-September of last year, Lehman was on the
brink of bankruptcy. Partners backed out of deals and there was a
run on the bank. But people got nervous and pulled their
money only because hedge funds bombarded Lehman with rumors (which
are currently the subjects of a federal investigation) while naked
shorting the stock to single digits.
In July of 2008, the SEC issued an emergency order designed to
prevent just this eventuality. For a few weeks, the order stopped
naked short selling of Lehman Brothers and 18 other big financial
companies. At this time, Lehman was not on the brink of
bankruptcy.
But in early August, the SEC lifted its order and Lehman
immediately came under a massive naked short selling attack. On the
day the SEC lifted the order, Lehman’s stock was trading at
around $20. A few weeks later, the stock was worth around $3
– a fall of 85%.
Only after this precipitous fall did Lehman’s partners
begin pulling their money, making bankruptcy inevitable.
But, apparently the Columbia Journalism Review believes that it
is perfectly natural for a stock to fall 85%, even though no new
information (aside from unsubstantiated rumors) had entered the
marketplace. According to the Columbia Journalism Review (which
has, no doubt, plowed Kingsford Capital’s money into a
thorough investigation of this issue), it is perfectly natural that
people who “usually could expect” to borrow real shares
would instead illegally sell, and fail to deliver, 30 million
shares that did not exist.
The truth is, that 30 million share “mechanical
error” and hundreds of similar “mechanical
errors” have brought this nation to its knees.
That’s why I do have a dog in this fight.
____________________
Mark Mitchell is a reporter for DeepCapture.com .
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