Going All In To Save The Fund

In browsing through enforcement actions I look for lessons learned. In some cases it’s compliance doing its job and stopping a fraud before it gets too big. The case against Owen Li caught my eye. His trades were not working so he made a last ditch effort to make it all back. Given that this about an enforcement action, you can guess how that trade worked out.

poker face

Mr. Li was an alumnus of Galleon Capital. After that firm imploded, he went to work for another firm and then left in 2012 to start his own firm: Canarise Capital. He managed to raise $50 million of capital.

As part of the fundraising, the documents stated that risks would be managed through limits on position sizing and market exposure. Generally, no position would exceed 10% of the fund’s assets.

The first trouble came in February of 2014 when Mr. Li must have fallen in love with Facebook and Groupon. Those each accounted for 20% of the fund’s capital. He was operating outside of his investment mandate.

Then Mr. Li started playing games with orders at his prime broker to keep his margin balance high. When the prime broker got wind of the bad behavior it cancelled the margin allowance and placed trading restrictions.

The Custody Rule worked to an extent in this case. The NAV that the fund sent out differed materially from the NAV sent by the fund administrator directly to investors. He blamed the error on the fund administrator. That seemed to work twice.

Mr Li must have sensed that it would not work a third time. He put off approving the NAV distribution for November 2014. The NAV he told investors and the NAV that would be sent out by administrator would differ materially. He delayed and then decided to go all in.

He liquidated fund cash and other positions to buy long positions in market index options with short-dated expirations. He had eliminated all short positions in the account. He basically took all of the fund’s assets and pushed them all in to one position. Hardly a sound way to manage to risk. Certainly, it was outside the investment promises he made to his investors.

If it worked well, there was a huge upside. I assume thought his investors would forgive his past sins.

But rarely do enforcement actions come from a happy result. Mr. Li had bet wrong. When the options expired he incurred $39 million in losses, leaving the fund with less than $200 thousand in assets. Over the course of the year he had caused the fund to lose $56.5 million.

In years past, a manager might have been able to keep the lie going. Look at Madoff. I suspect something similar, although less catastrophic happened to Madoff. With no third-party reporting on the investments, he could keep going.

Without the Custody Rule, maybe Mr. Li could have put up a big Madoff lie and tried to go all in again in the future. But since investors were getting statements directly there was no place for him to hide. The Custody Rule worked.

Sort of worked. It prevented a Ponzi scheme from forming. It did not prevent the investors from being wiped out.

As for the enforcement, the SEC charged Mr. Li with failing to adhere to his investment limitations and labeled that a fraudulent action under Section 206.


Sources:

Poker Face by Lawrence
CC BY NC SA

Happy Start to Your Compliance New Year

I hope you were able to enjoy the long weekend. Perhaps an extra long weekend if you found December 31 to be an optional work day. Today is obviously not the first day of the new year, but it is the first day of work in the new year.

start-1108550_640

With the new year, come the resolutions to do things differently this year, to do better, to meet goals.

That all starts with setting goals and expectations. There is no magic to choosing the beginning of January, as opposed to any other month.

Except you will write the wrong year at least three times today.

We often get to stages in our life where we want change. Maybe today is that day for you. Maybe you have already written “2015” three times today.

Here in Boston, today means that winter has arrived. After a flirtatious light snow, the cold has come and wrapped me in its icy grip.

But I already went for a bike ride in the cold and went to the gym. So I’m still on track for some personal goals.

When it comes to compliance, there are many tasks we need to address. It’s time to get at least one done today and stay on track.

Enjoy 2016.

Compliance Bricks and Mortar for the New Year

Happy New Year! May 2016 be better for you than 2015.

These are some of the compliance related stories that caught my eye before the end of 2015.

Happy New Year 2016


Compliance Fiction by Roy Snell in SCCE’s Compliance & Ethics Blog

Let me tell you a completely fabricated compliance story. [More…]


The Father of Texas and Leadership in Compliance by Thomas Fox in the FCPA Compliance Report

Today we celebrate leadership, which comes from a different place than we usually see. On December 27, 1836, the Father of Texas, Stephen F. Austin, died. Most people think Sam Houston was the father of this great state but it was the person for whom our state capital is named. Austin was the man who led the colonization of Texas in the early 1830s and was one of Texas’ earliest political leaders. He was appointed by Sam Houston as the first Secretary of State for the Republic of Texas but only served two months before his death at the age of only 43. On his deathbed, Austin’s last words were “The independence of Texas is recognized! Don’t you see it in the papers?…” Upon hearing of Austin’s death, Houston ordered an official statement proclaiming: “The Father of Texas is no more; the first pioneer of the wilderness has departed.” [More…]


Why does the SEC care about elder clients by Joshua Horn in Securities Compliance Sentinel

The SEC is conducting an exam sweep that focuses on retirement advice being given to clients of investment advisors and broker-dealers. Some commentators see this as a turf war between the SEC and the Department of Labor (DOL) because the sweep focuses on things that may come under the DOL’s jurisdiction. Whether the exam sweep intrudes upon the DOL’s purview is really not the point. [More…]


Happy New Year 2016 (Plenty of opportunities)
by Miquel Angel Pintanel Bassets
CC BY SA