NationStates Jolt Archive


U.S. Accuses Texas Financial Firm of Billion Fraud

Truly Blessed
17-02-2009, 19:23
HOUSTON — Stopping what it called a “massive ongoing fraud,” the Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday accused Robert Allen Stanford, the chief of the Stanford Financial Group, of fraud in the sale of about $8 billion of high-yielding certificates of deposit held in the firm’s bank in Antigua. Also named in the suit were two other executives and some affiliates of the financial group.

In the complaint, filed in Federal District Court in Dallas, the S.E.C. accused Mr. Stanford and two associates — James M. Davis, a director and chief financial officer of Stanford Group and the Antigua-based bank affiliate, and Laura Pendergest-Holt, the chief investment officer of both organizations — with misrepresenting the safety and liquidity of the uninsured CDs.

The CDs were sold by Stanford International Bank through the firm’s registered broker-dealer and investment adviser, which are in Houston. Both the bank, which claims $8.5 billion in assets and 30,000 clients in 131 countries, and the brokerage unit, which operates about 30 offices in the United States, were named in the S.E.C. suit. Stanford Financial asserts that it advises about $50 billion in assets.

Shortly after 10 a.m. Central time, about 40 police officers and other law enforcement officials simultaneously entered Stanford Group’s two office buildings in Houston. Many of the law enforcement personnel carried large black briefcases. Stanford group’s headquarters are in two offices in Houston, one within a tower of the Houston Galleria shopping mall, and the other across the street.

A spokesman for Stanford Group declined to comment.

Law enforcement officials hung up two white signs stating thatthe offices of Stanford Financial Group was temporarily closed. “The company is still in operation but under the management of a receiver,” the signs read.

In its complaint, the S.E.C. said it could not account for the $8 billion in assets that were housed in the Antigua bank after issuing subpoenas for bank records and to various witnesses. Most witnesses, including Mr. Stanford, Mr. Davis, and the Antigua-based bank’s president, failed to appear to testify nor did they produce documents shedding light on the assets.

Ms. Pendergest-Holt said in testimony to the S.E.C. that she could not account for the assets, asserting that Mr. Stanford and Mr. Davis were the only ones with access to the bank’s assets.

In the complaint, the S.E.C. called “improbable, if not impossible” claims by the offshore bank that it paid “significantly” higher returns on its CDs because of the high quality of its investments.

The S.E.C. accused the bank and its affiliates of falsely stating in marketing materials that client funds were placed in liquid financial instruments, when in fact they were invested in private equity funds and real estate. On Nov. 28, Stanford International Bank quoted a rate of 5.375 percent on a $100,000 three-year CD, compared with rates of less than 3.2 percent at American banks. The bank recently has offered rates of more than 10 percent on five-year CDs, the filing stated.

In the complaint, the S.E.C. requested that the defendants’ assets be frozen and that a receiver be appointed to take control of business operations. It also requested that the assets of the bank and other offshore units be repatriated. And the agency asked that Mr. Stanford and the other named executives be required to surrender their passports.

The S.E.C. has come under fire in Congress and the media for ignoring repeated warnings over a period of years about the Bernard L. Madoff, who is accused of running a $50 billion Ponzi scheme. While investigators have been looking at Mr. Stanford and his financial empire’s activities for many months, the scrutiny into the too-good-to-be-true returns on the CDs increased substantially after the Madoff case.

Oddly enough, even the Stanford operation was touched by Mr. Madoff. Despite the fact the Antigua-bank assured investors in a report in December 2008 that it had no “direct or indirect” exposure Mr. Madoff’s funds, the bank suffered an estimated $400,000 in losses, apparently through investments in so-called “feeder funds.”

Additionally, the S.E.C. accused Stanford Capital Management, another Houston-based investment advisory unit, of inflating the performance of its $1.2 billion-asset Stanford Allocation Strategy mutual fund in promoting it to prospective investors.

The complaint also accused the offshore banking unit and the Houston-based broker dealer of violating provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940 in failing to register as an investment company.

Clifford Krauss reported from Houston, and Phillip L. Zweig and Julie Creswell from New York.






Is anything based on real finances anymore with regard to investing? The more we look the more in seems to be based on illusion. How can we prevent this stuff from happening?
Hotwife
17-02-2009, 19:24
Is anything based real anymore with regard to investing? The more we look the more in seems to be based on illusion. How can we prevent this stuff from happening?

Hums softly while stacking 5.56mm magazines...
Knights of Liberty
17-02-2009, 19:24
I blame Clinton, Obama, the Jews, and Crab people.
Truly Blessed
17-02-2009, 19:25
And we wonder why the market is tanking?
Knights of Liberty
17-02-2009, 19:31
And we wonder why the market is tanking?

I dont. I know why. Its because of Clinton, Obama, the Jews, and the Crab People.


George Bush tried to save us, but we betrayed him by not electing his padawan.
Nodinia
17-02-2009, 20:09
I blame Clinton, Obama, the Jews, and Crab people.

Now thats just nasty. We all know Jews are good with money. It must be the goyim.
Truly Blessed
17-02-2009, 20:42
These are like household names in finance. I am beginning to lose faith in the system.
Conserative Morality
17-02-2009, 21:10
I dont. I know why. Its because of Clinton, Obama, the Jews, and the Crab People.


George Bush tried to save us, but we betrayed him by not electing his padawan.

George Bush DID save us! All this talk of 'depression' is all a sham thought up by the liberal media to keep his legacy hidden from the public!
Knights of Liberty
17-02-2009, 21:12
Clearly this just proves we need more deregulation.
Gauthier
17-02-2009, 21:56
I blame Clinton, Obama, the Jews, and Crab people.

You didn't blame the Ebil Mozlems, you UnAmerican Uruk-Hai!!
greed and death
17-02-2009, 21:57
they didnt file with SEC sounds fishy.
Also they were using off shores banks CD's...
Sounds like its a semi legitimate investment. and what SEC
is pissed about is that its rich people avoiding taxation.
I want to see what the investigation turns up.