Twitter Pump and Dump

It should be obvious that some random twitteratti handing out investment advice is going to be a shady character. Right? There are lots of them. I’m not sure any get dragged before the Securities and Exchange Commission on charges.

@AlexDelarge6553 made thousands of tweets encouraging his numerous followers to buy stocks. No surprise that the man behind @AlexDelarge6553 held a bunch of those stocks he encouraged his followers to buy. The SEC named Steven M. Gallagher as the man behind the twitter handle. He bought a bunch of the stock, encouraged his followers to but the stock. The price went up and @AlexDelarge6553 sold out of positions as the price rose.

Classic pump and dump scheme or scalping scheme. Of course the stocks involved were penny stocks at tiny prices and tiny volumes. That made it easier to manipulate the stock price.

Kudos for the SEC for bringing the case. Bigger kudos to @AlexDelarge6553’s broker who tried to shut him down and, I assume, alerted the SEC to the problem.

“Despite repeated, written warnings from his brokerage firm (“Broker A”) that he appeared to be engaged in manipulative trading in violation of securities laws and regulations, Gallagher continued to engage in manipulative trading and scalping. On September 9, 2021, Broker A informed Gallagher that it was closing his trading account effective October 9, 2021, and that it would immediately prevent him from making new stock purchases, restrict his account to just liquidating transactions, and not allow him to open a new account in the future.”

Of course, since he was still allowed to liquidate his holdings, he could keep flogging his followers to buy as he sold out of his positions.

The fun part for the SEC is they have the transaction data from @AlexDelarge6553’s broker and his public tweets. It’s really easy to match the timing of the tweets to the timing of the transactions.

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