Videogame Failure and Securities Fraud

As a Red Sox fan, Curt Schilling is an iconic player to me, leading the team to break the curse of the Bambino. I don’t think that leads to him being a successful entrepreneur or video game developer. Nonetheless, he invested a great deal of his own wealth and raised a big pile of capital to create 38 Studios and start production of a massive multi-player video game. Despite his greatness as a pitcher, he was not able to close the deal and publish the game. The company folded and laid off its employees.

Now the Securities and Exchange Commission has brought charges of securities fraud in connection with the raising of capital.

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Rhode Island was looking to bring jobs to the state and lured 38 Studios to relocate to the Ocean State. The Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation agreed to issue bonds and raise $50 million of capital for 38 Studios through a $75 million offering. The remaining $25 million was for offering expenses and a reserve fund.

The EDC hired Wells Fargo as the placement agent to sell the bonds. However, Wells Fargo had already been hired by 38 Studios to raise capital. According to the SEC complaint, the bond offering documents should have disclosed more about Wells Fargo’s role and how much it was getting paid.

The other problem was that the bond offering was not enough money to finish production of the video-game.  The original projection was for the full $75 million to go to 38 Studios. By only getting $50 million, it had a capital shortfall. It would run out of money by the end of 2011. According to the SEC complaint, the offering documents should have disclosed this shortfall and did not.

38 Studios managed to last longer than projected. It did not default on the bond payments until the Spring of 2012. Then it filed for bankruptcy in June 2012.

The SEC does not spell it out, but clearly the myth of Curt Schilling was the selling point for the deal. Wells Fargo’s ability to sell the bonds was based on the myth of Curt Schilling.

The ability of 38 Studios to successfully produce a videogame was a myth. The job creation behind the bond offering was myth. According to the SEC suit and various other lawsuits it looks like a lot of people thought they could make money from the myth of Curt Schilling.

The first tenet of our securities laws is disclosure. Making money from the myth is not inherently illegal. Failing to disclose is.

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Phishing for Losses

You’re security is only as secure as your employees. I was struck by this when I received an email from the head of my firm wanted to discuss a wire. I was being subject to a phishing attack.

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I think we all see this often. Personally, I always find it curious when a bank sends me an email with a a warning about my account. I’m not worried since I don’t have an account at that bank. Of course that also leads to me ignoring emails from my own bank.

I pay a bit more attention when the CEO sends me an email.

Email business scams may caused more than $2 billion in losses over the last two years.

It’s not just advisers or fund managers that need to worry. At least one publicly listed company has suffered a loss from this scam. The company had to admit in it’s quarterly report that $46.7 million had gone missing.

As good as a firm’s systems may be to deter external threats and hackers, it’s the social engineering attacks at a firm that are becoming more successful.

Convincing an employee to authorize a wire takes less technical skill than hacking into a firm’s network. It all starts with a simple email.

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Whistleblower Revealed

Several weeks ago the Securities and Exchange Commission handed out a big whistleblower award to an industry expert who lacked the first person knowledge of wrongdoing. That whistleblower has been revealed.

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The SEC itself has a strict rule on disclosing the identity of whistleblowers. Eric Hunsader said the Securities and Exchange Commission is sending him a $750,000 whistleblower award according to Francine McKenna of Marketwatch.

The SEC fined the New York Stock Exchange and its parent NYSE Euronext in 2012 for violating Regulation NMS. The NYSE sent data through two of its proprietary feeds before sending that data to the consolidated feeds, according to the SEC.

Hunsader said his firm, Nanex, originally discovered the issue on the day of the flash crash, May 6, 2010: Analysis of the “Flash Crash”.

With high-frequency trading small delays in quotes can lead to dramatic changes in trading. The NYSE data feed was delayed because of the diversion, resulting in the quotes being time-stamped improperly. This inaccuracy in data lead to a flood of short-selling causing prices to drop dramatically.

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