“SELL! SELL! SELL!” shouted Jim Cramer on March 28,
2007.
The CNBC “journalist” assured his viewers that the
FDA advisory panel would vote that Dendreon’s treatment for
prostate cancer was neither safe nor effective (notwithstanding the
fact that the FDA had given the treatment “priority
review” status because Provenge had shown strong trial
results and was destined for critically ill patients).
On the following day, when the FDA advisory panel voted unanimously that
Provenge was safe and overwhelmingly that it was effective,
Cramer said, once again, that he had made “a mistake.”
By way of explanation, Cramer said
that he had mixed up Dendreon’s treatment, Provenge, with
Provaisic, the fictional drug from the 1993 Hollywood movie
“The Fugitive,” in which Harrison Ford plays a doctor
trying to expose an evil pharmaceutical company called Devlin
MacGreggor.
But Cramer, again drawing upon his vast medical expertise,
continued to insist that Provenge remained unlikely to gain FDA
approval.
By this time, a number of bloggers and stock market observers
had noted that Cramer, a former hedge fund manager, had recently
made a video available to a limited number of high-paying
subscribers to his financial news website, TheStreet.com. In
this video, Cramer advised his viewers – mostly Wall
Street operators — to illegally drive down stock prices.
“Maybe you need $10 million capital to knock [a stock]
down,” Cramer had said. “It’s a fun game and
it’s a lucrative game…By the way, no one else in the
world would ever admit that, but I don’t care…Now, you
can’t foment…You can’t create yourself an
impression that a stock’s down. But you do it anyway because
the SEC doesn’t understand it…This is just actually
blatantly illegal…But I think it’s really important to
foment…You get [the CNBC reporter]…talking about it
as if there’s something wrong [with the stock]…Then
you would call The Wall Street Journal and get the bozo
reporter…if you’re not doing it maybe you
shouldn’t be in the game.”
The bloggers and observers who pointed to this video as evidence
of Cramer’s skulduggery also noted that Cramer had
once planned to run his hedge fund out of the offices of Ivan
Boesky, the famous co-conspirator of the criminal stock manipulator
Michael Milken. When Boesky was indicted, Cramer instead went to
work with Michael Steinhardt, the Boesky-Milken crony and
“prominent” hedge fund manager whose father was the
“biggest Mafia fence in America” and who was financier
for the fugitive billionaire Marc Rich, for whom Steinhardt later
arranged a pardon from Bill Clinton.
By 2007, I had (while working as an editor for the Columbia
Journalism Review) spent close to a year studying the work of
Cramer and a clique of influential journalists, most of whom had
previously worked in high-level positions for Cramer’s
website, TheStreet.com. I had discovered that the existence of
short-side stock manipulation was denied by these journalists
(including Cramer, when he was communicating to general audiences,
as opposed to when he was explaining to select groups of Wall
Street operators how to do the thing he was publicly saying does
not exist).
The journalists were especially keen to whitewash the crime of
naked short selling, and given the threat that this crime posed to
so many companies and the very stability of the financial system,
it seemed to me that these journalists were engaged in a
cover-up of immense proportions.
I had also discovered that these journalists routinely reported
negative stories that contained bias, falsehoods, and well-timed
“mistakes.” The vast majority of these stories were
sourced from one particular network of hedge fund managers and
miscreants. Invariably, these stories were about public companies
that the hedge fund managers had sold short. And, invariably, these
stories were aired right at the time that the target companies were
getting bombarded with phantom stock.
Moreover, most of the hedge funds and miscreants in this network
seemed, like Jim Cramer, to be connected in important ways to the
criminals Michael Milken and Ivan Boesky, or their close
associates. One of them was David Rocker.
Last year, Rocker’s hedge fund, Copper River (previously
known as Rocker Partners), was shut down. Soon after, Carol Remond,
a Dow Jones Newswires journalist who had close ties to Rocker,
revealed that Rocker’s most important trading strategy had
been to abuse “the Madoff Exemption” allowing market
makers to engage in naked short selling (see “Carol
Remond Tells a Joke She Doesn’t Get” for details)
.
According to Remond, when the SEC closed this loophole, making
it more difficult for Rocker Partners/Copper River to work with
option market makers to manufacture phantom stock, the hedge fund
went out of business. What she left unexplained, however, was that
such exploitation was illegal. Therefore, Dow Jones reporter Carol
Remond was in fact bemoaning the tragedy that a hedge fund had to
close because it was not able to break the law anymore.
Rocker had previously worked as a top trader for
Michael Steinhardt, the Boesky and Genovese Mafia crony whose
offices had also housed Jim Cramer’s hedge fund. In later
years, Rocker became
the largest outside shareholder in Cramer’s financial
news website, TheStreet.com.
In 2006, staff at the Securities and Exchange Commission
suspected that Rocker and other hedge funds in his network were
working with an “independent” financial research shop
called Gradient Analytics and a select group of journalists to
disseminate false information in order to drive down stock prices.
The SEC
issued subpoenas to Rocker, Gradient, TheStreet.com, Jim
Cramer, Herb Greenberg (a founding editor of TheStreet.com who was
then working for MarketWatch.com and CNBC), and that Dow Jones
reporter, Carol Remond.
In
response, Cramer famously vandalized his subpoena on live
television. Other journalists (most of them tied to Cramer) went
berserk, claiming that Rocker had done no wrong and the SEC’s
subpoenas had violated the media’s first amendment right to
free speech. Soon after, the SEC said it would not enforce the
subpoenas it had issued to journalists. And a year later, the
commission dropped its investigation of Gradient and Rocker.
In May of 2006, shortly after the SEC announced that it would
not enforce its subpoenas, a recently dismissed SEC attorney named
Gary Aguirre wrote an eye-popping
letter to the United States Congress in which he stated that he
had led an SEC investigation into allegations of rampant naked
short selling and insider trading at a hedge fund called Pequot
Capital.
Aguirre said that his rank-and-file colleagues at the SEC
believed that Pequot’s naked short selling had the potential
to “seriously injure the financial markets,” but before
he could complete his investigation, Aguirre’s superiors at
the SEC, captured by powerful Wall Street interests, had fired him
for political reasons.
Since then, a U.S. Congressional Committee has investigated and
issued a lengthy
report noting that there seemed to be evidence that Pequot was
indeed engaged in “stock manipulation” (naked short
selling). As for the SEC’s failure to fully investigate
Aguirre’s allegations, the Congressional Committee concluded
that the “picture is colored with overtones of a possible
cover-up.”
The SEC inspector general also issued a report
that backed up all of Aguirre’s claims.
Late in 2008, the SEC re-opened its investigation into Pequot
Capital. And in May, 2009, Pequot manager Art Samberg
shut down the fund, noting that the investigations had made the
“situation increasingly untenable for the firm and for
me.”
But from what is known publicly, the SEC is only looking into
insider trading at Pequot. As for Aguirre’s investigation
into Pequot’s alleged naked short selling – the crime
that had the potential to “seriously injure the financial
markets”—the SEC has said nothing.
Remember, as far as the SEC is concerned, illegal naked short
selling is a big secret – “proprietary trading
strategies.”
At any rate, it is worth noting that Cramer’s financial
news website, TheStreet.com, had several founding partners. One was
Cramer. Another was Marty Peretz, a Milken-Boesky crony who
was–along with Marc Rich, Boesky, and the Genovese
Mafia—a key limited partner of Michael Steinhardt (the hedge
fund manager who gave Rocker his start and also incubated
Cramer’s hedge fund).
A third founding partner of TheStreet.com was famously alleged
to have engaged in rampant illegal naked short selling, just as
David Rocker, once the largest outside shareholder of
TheStreet.com, was reported (by Dow Jones reporter Carol Remond,
unwittingly) to have engaged in rampant illegal naked short selling
in cahoots with options market makers.
The name of this third founding partner of Cramer’s
website, TheStreet.com, was…Pequot Capital, the hedge fund
whose alleged naked short selling and insider trading were the
targets of Gary Aguirre’s SEC investigation — the
investigation that got quashed, leading to one of the greatest
scandals in SEC history.
So it goes almost without saying that
Pequot Capital was the fifth of seven “colorful”
hedge funds that held
large numbers of put options in Dendreon at the end of March,
2007 – right at the time when Cramer was shouting
“SELL! SELL! SELL!” and criminal naked short sellers
were flooding the market with at least 9 million phantom Dendreon
shares.
* * * * * * * *
In addition to Cramer’s rants, there were other
indications that Dendreon might be in the sights of some powerful
players, and might therefore be in trouble – despite the fact
that its treatment for prostate cancer seemed to be on the fast
track to FDA approval.
On March 22, 2007, CNBC’s Mike Huckman wrote in a blog
that he remembered “sitting at a table at a rare Dendreon
analyst meeting a few years ago and someone from a Connecticut
hedge fund leaned over and whispered in my ear, ‘It
[Provenge] doesn’t work.’” Huckman made no
indication of questioning whether the hedge fund might have had a
motive for saying that.
There were odd mutterings from other quarters as well. On the
day before the FDA’s advisory panel met to vote on Provenge,
Matthew Herper of Forbes magazine published
an article casting doubts on Dendreon’s prospects. He
wrote that “researchers, statisticians and Wall Street
analysts are fiercely debating whether there is enough data about
[Dendreon’s] radical new treatment.”
In fact, there was no “fierce” debate at all. For
most Wall Street analysts, the calculation was rather simple. Given
that Dendreon’s trials had shown that Provenge was safe, and
given that the treatment was destined for end-stage patients (hence
its “priority review” status), the advisory panel was
likely to vote in its favor. In 97% of all cases, the FDA had
followed the recommendations of its advisory panels. And when FDA
advisory panels recommended approval for drugs destined for dying
patients, the FDA had accepted its panels’ recommendations
100% of the time.
When the FDA approved treatments, the companies that developed
them almost always saw their stock prices go up. So from the
perspective of most Wall Street analysts, the future for Dendreon
looked bright.
As for those “researchers and statisticians,” most
agreed that Provenge was not only safe, but also effective.
However, a small number of researchers and statisticians were,
along with the hedge funds, whispering in reporters’ ears.
They were saying that Provenge doesn’t work.
But there were excellent reasons to doubt the words of the
researchers who were critical of Provenge. And, as we will see, the
most prominent of them were preparing (with the possible connivance
of a criminal “philanthropist” named Michael Milken and
seven “colorful” hedge fund managers) to cash in on one
of the stranger occurrences in the FDA’s 80 years of
existence.
* * * * * * * *
This is part 5 of a 15-part series.
The remaining installments will appear on Deep Capture over the
next several weeks, after which point the story will be published
in its entirety at DeepCapture.com. It is a
story about the travails of just one small company, but it
describes market machinations that have affected hundreds of other
companies, and it contains a larger message for anyone concerned
about the “deep capture” of our nation’s media
and regulatory bodies.
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