I received an email a while back from Jim Brickman, a crony of
short selling hedge fund manager David Einhorn, demanding that I
post the Securities and Exchange Commission inspector
general’s report on the commission’s investigation of
Allied Capital (NYSE: AFC). According to Brickman, the report
proves that Einhorn was right about Allied being a massive fraud.
Moreover, says Brickman, the report definitively establishes that
Einhorn did not seek to drive down Allied’s stock price. The
report, which I gladly post below, does nothing of the sort. I will
discuss the report in further detail, but first a little
history.
Eight years ago, Michael Milken, the famous financial criminal,
appeared in the offices of a top Allied Capital executive.
“You know,” Milken told the executive, “I already
am quite a large shareholder of your stock – but my name will
never show up on any list you’ll see.”
This might have been a reference to a practice called
“parking stock” (owning stock but “parking”
it in the accounts of friends with whom one has made
under-the-table arrangements), a practice that figured in the
high-count indictment that sent Milken to prison in the 1980s. It
appeared to the Allied executive that Milken was fishing for inside
information about Allied and threatening an attack. For a variety
of reasons, short-side stock manipulators in the Milken network
often accumulate large numbers of shares in the companies that they
seek to destroy.
Not long after Milken’s strange appearance, David Einhorn
was at a hedge fund luncheon, sitting next to Carl
Icahn, one of Milken’s closest cronies. Einhorn launched
his career working for Gary Siegler, who was formerly a top partner
in Icahn’s investment…