Mark Cuban Charged With Insider Trading
geekboy_x writes "The SEC today charged Mark Cuban with insider trading violations, alleging that he divested himself of stock in mamma.com before the stock was diluted via a public offering." Something tells me that the billionaire blogger won't be talking about this one publicly any time soon.
Something tells me that the billionaire blogger won't be talking about this one publicly any time soon.
Are you crazy? Do you know how many page hits that would generate?! You don't know Mark Cuban. Of course, from his blog a few hours ago:
"I am disappointed that the Commission chose to bring this case based upon its Enforcement staff's win-at-any-cost ambitions. The staff's process was result-oriented, facts be damned. The government's claims are false and they will be proven to be so."
I'm not a lawyer. As for the case, I think this crap happens more often than you would like to think--the rich get richer, the poor get poorer. The fact that this occurred in June of '04 and he's being charged for it now implies that either it takes that long to build up evidence for a case or you don't hear about this until someone slips up. Also, I don't recall hearing the SEC drop charges or lose these cases very often so I'm pretty sure this guy is boned.
My work here is dung.
for all i can tell, the guy registered "broadcast.com" in the 90s, created a pretty business plan, and sold out for billions at exactly the right time, and bought a basketball team
i applaud his timing and his luck and success, but i haven't the faintest idea as to why anything this guy ever did is of any interest to slashdot
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
I wish *I* could be charged with insider trading.
It would mean I'm worth it enough to go after :(
The price is always right if someone else is paying.
Interesting how Cuban suddenly gets prosecuted right after he launches a website organizing against the Bush/Paulson Wall Street bailout called BailoutSleuth, in the final weeks of Bush's power to direct the SEC, even though Cuban's transactions happened in 2004.
And by "interesting", I mean "suspiciously consistent with Bush's treatment of the Justice Department as a political asset for selective prosecution".
--
make install -not war
His new name will be Marked Cuban.
The man is a crook, of course I'm sure you dopes idolize him due to his carefully crafted "innovator in jeans and a suit jacket" image.
Of course, it's more likely he'll get what Martha Stewart got.. A six month vacation with a book deal at the end.
And yet the SEC is having trouble finding any wrong doing in the current market melt down. Almost like they are trying to distract us with this.
Man uses free market mechanisms to avoid losing three quarters of a million bucks, and Big Brother comes down on him.
I can't imagine not selling stock after learning of some upcoming bad news, by any means.
what are you supposed to do?
``Gee, I'm going to lose 750 thousand dollars just to be a law-abiding citizen, out of the goodness of my heart''.
This is no more wrong than counting cards at a black jack table.
So, Cuban commits SEC fraud, and we're supposed to ignore it because he's anti-Bush and it was 4 years ago?
Mamma.com took a private investment at a discount (a PIPE). This is a sign of weakness, and the announcement sent the shares lower. The SEC alleges that Mr. Cuban sold his shares with insider knowledge of the PIPE, liquidating his stake before it got battered the next day.
WSJ article (report updated since I saw it earlier; it now erroneously says it was an investment in a private company).
looks like he is going to federal pound me in the ass prison
Insider trading isn't allowed if you're not in the insider trading club.
Lying about inside trading was more serious than the modest trading itself. However the the SEC stripped her of the right to be CEO and be on boards for the trading conviction. Was that permanent?
According to the complaint filed by the SEC, they are not seeking any jail time.
They are seeking judgement:
a. enjoining Cuban from engaging in future violations of the antifraud provisions of the federal securities law.
b. ordering Cuban to disgorge, with prejudgement interest, the losses avoided as a result of the actions described
c. ordering Cuban to pay a civil money penalty to pursuaint to Section 21A.... blah blah
But.. no jail time. Martha Stewart received jail time because she was convicted of obstruction of justice / lying to investigators. Not that I don't think jail time is warranted personally..
Twice in my career I have had a good laugh at the expense of someone whose abuse I suffered.
The first was David Duncan. He was a senior finance/accounting manager when I was a peon at Mobil. I basically had to jump at his every request even though I never worked for him or his department. I left that job to start an internet business, but I really enjoyed the day that I saw David Duncan testifying before Congress, explaining Enron to them. Beautiful day.
The second is today. When my internet company was encoding and streaming his sports and talk radio broadcasts (innovative for 1994, mind you), Mark Cuban used to page me and call me at home at all hours with the most unreasonable demands and questions. Now I realize if I had been willing to kiss his ass the way he was accustomed to being kissed, I might be a billionaire today, but it would never have happened. Today I am all smiles.
-fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
alleging that he divested himself of stock in mamma.com before the stock was diluted via a public offering.
Will now turn into:
shrieking as his digestive-tract was filled with cock and "Daddy's" cum before the cock dilared his ass as it was publicly offered to other inmates
Ah ok, a bit far-stretch...FETCHED!
If you quote this signature there'll be 72 copies of Windows ME waiting for you in Heaven.
...in the private corrections firm which will be accommodating him?
-- In the beginning was the WORD, and the WORD was UNSIGNED, and the main(){} was without form and void...
And pwned hard by an AC. Wow.
That weak comeback shows what happens when a bully gets it right back.
Doc Ruby really deserved to be smacked down like that. What a Grade A asshole.
1] News for Nerds. Hmm.. no..
2] "Stuff that matters" - If I were Mark Cuban or this were an investor site related to Mama.com, then yeah it'd matter, but to me and the general audience of this site, it doesn't matter one iota.
Slashdot still suckage.
making billions doing nerdy things
mark cuban: making billions. but not doing a single nerdy thing
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
http://www.businessassociationsblog.com/lawandbusiness/comments/the_insider_trading_charges_against_mark_cuban/
This was written by a Law Professor. Basically it boils down to the SEC has to really stretch current law to cover this situation.
It appears the CEO of Mamma.com knew that several of their original investors, specifically Mark Cuban, would be upset by the release of more stock, diluting his original investment. The CEO might have told Mark about the investment in an attempt to keep him from being able to sell his shares before the announcement.
Mark was a minor stockholder (6.3%) and didn't meet any of the other legal standards (fiduciary responsibility to the company) to be considered a traditional insider.
So here is question. If you are a stockholder in a company, can the SEC consider you an insider under the law if an insider calls you and asks you to keep a secret? Under traditional insider rules, the CEO of the company is the person who violated the law by telling Mark about the upcoming announcement.
not a lawyer, but find legal topics fascinating
This story raises one very important question.
Who's Mark Cuban?
Bit of a coincidence that this comes about just after he started and funded http://www.bailoutsleuth.com/ even though it was four years ago...
If you RTFA you find "The Commission's complaint seeks to permanently enjoin Cuban from future violations of the federal securities laws....". So am I to understand that part of Mark Cuban's "punishment" is that in the future he will not be allowed to violate the same laws that everyone else is already expected to not violate?
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
> She was convicted of lying to investigators when she wasn't under oath and hadn't been warned that what she said might be used against her.
> Now we know: never talk to the feds unless your lawyer's present, even if you don't think you've done anything against the law.
To be fair, the lesson I take from it is don't lie to the feds without a lawyer present. (And even then...)
Requires less time in prison. http://www.insidetraderapp.com/
I thought he'd done some good, too (though it appears he doesn't mind selling out, given that open letter...).
Right now I'm wondering about his address. I'm tempted to send him a bar of soap with a note saying, "Don't drop this."
Though I guess that might be a bit gauche.
To be fair, the lesson I take from it is don't lie to the feds without a lawyer present. (And even then...)
Anything you say that turns out not to be true, even if you don't know it, "can and will be used against you in a court of law." Anything you say that helps you is inadmissible as 'hearsay'.
So if you do a two hour interview, are thoroughly truthful except for 15 seconds, which you may or may not know is not true, the jury will only know about those 15 seconds. Somebody file a bug.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
I'd much prefer if the government just got it's nose out of the market. The only thing insider traders do is lead to a more accurate market..
Just want to be sure I understand. If you were making an equities market, you don't see the value of trying to have a level playing field for information, where all those who would trade an equity have the same information about it (or, if insiders, they'd have some rules on how they can trade)...
Sort of like the SNL all drug olympics, right? Ah, I kid. :D
But for serious now, am I supposed to be happier about investing in your insider-trading-friendly market, versus one that does make an attempt to be transparent?
Do you propose that your market (where I am virtually guaranteed to get rooked unless I am an "insider") will draw more investors than a more transparent market (were more investors have a more level playing field)?
In fact, you really think the less transparent market is actually more accurate?
I should say I thought the point of your market was for it to be less accurate, and therefore provide more of an opportunity for insiders to take money from outsiders. :)
Do you have any comment on the relative historical success of transparent markets (such as those in first world nations) versus less transparent markets (either in fact and in principle), such as those in the 3rd world, over say, the last 50 or 100 years?
Do you mind if I ask, which kind of market has the majority of your investments?
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Maybe he can get Martha Stewart's old cell. Should be a nice homey place...
But let's hope he'll get to a nice homo place instead...
"I just said that the timing should make us suspicious of who and what is really ordering this prosecution."
Why should the timing be suspicious? Your theory that this is Bush's payback for all of the anti-Bush stuff Cuban has funded over the years has one huge flaw; when Bush leaves in two months, so does his appointees. This is just an indictment. The prosecution will be the responsibility of the Obama Administration, and if they don't see a problem, they can simply drop it. What are you going to say if they continue the prosecution? That Dick Cheney has a mind control device implanted in Obama's brain? It'd be about as plausible as all the other conspiracy theories you're offering.
Life is hard, and the world is cruel
I recently had a mind-blowing conversation with the new maintenance guy. He's got one of those macho, forceful personalities that can't withstand criticism or anything against what he 'knows'. (Actual conversation. I wrote it down after to keep it fresh.)
Anyways, we were talking about the internet. He says "I read the internet all the time. I keep up on all the news. "
Then he says "You know those two Google guys are gay right?"
I say "Well, one is married and the other is about to be married. So unless they're on the Downlow, I don't think they're gay."
He says "Oh, I mean those two YouTube guys. And the Myspace guys. You know Google owns Myspace right?"
I say "Well, Google bought YouTube, but I don't think they have anything to do with MySpace."
He says "Yeah, Google bought MySpace. Anyways, those guys are gay. And I was also reading about the inventor of the internet!"
(I"m thinking "Tim Berners-Lee???? DARPA??? Who is he going to say is the inventor of the internet?)
He says" Yeah the inventor of the internet---MARK CUBAN."
I'm flabbergasted. Mark Cuban.
I say "Mark Cuban sold the site called Broadcast.com and became a billionaire. But he didn't invent the internet."
He says "Yeah he invented the BROWSER."
I say "I don't think he invented the browser. The first browser was called MOSAIC and invented by a bunch of specialists working for a university or the government or something."
He says "No he invented the internet.
I don't know what to say at this point and just say "uhhhhhhhh....ok.....Looks like you've been doing a lot of reading the internets."
His attacks on those trying to out naked short selling I thought were vindicated by his lousy performance on Dancing with the Stars. This is somewhat more resolving. I bet Bud Burrell saw this coming months ago.
Mark was a minor stockholder (6.3%) and didn't meet any of the other legal standards (fiduciary responsibility to the company) to be considered a traditional insider.
This case had nothing to do with Cuban being an insider. It is about Cuban (the Tippee) trading on a tip from the CEO (the Tipper).
Anyone - no matter how much or how little stock he owns - may not trade on insider information, you, me, Rob Malda. This is known as "tippee" liability. And it's exactly what got Martha Stewart in trouble (actually, lying to the feds about it and obstructing justice is what really got her in trouble).
IAALBNYLSDNROTAA (I am a lawyer, but not your lawyer, so do not rely on this as advice).
Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
Isn't it funny how his previous post is titled "I Hate to Lose".....
Insider Trading is quite rampant in the industry.
Do you think Warren Buffet's investment in Goldman Sachs isn't Insider Trading?
Something tells me that the billionaire blogger won't be talking about this one publicly any time soon.
He blogged about it in 2005, three years before this filing and this post http://blogmaverick.com/2005/03/02/naked-shorts-what-i-have-learned/:
"I had purchased stock in Mamma.com in hope that it could be an up and coming search engine. I thought I had done some level of due diligence. Talked to the company management. Talked to some employees who worked in sales. Read the SEC Filings.
I knew that they had a checkered past and had been linked to stock promoter Irving Kott, and that their law firm still handled some of Kotts business, but the CEO, Chairman, lawyers all said that things were reformed and the company was focused on its business.
Then the company did a PIPE financing. Im not going to discuss the good or bad of PIPE financing other than to say that to me its a huge red flag and I dont want to own stock in companies that use this method of financing. Why?
Because I don't like the idea of selling in a private placement stock for less than the market price, and then to make matters worse, pushing the price lower with the issuance of warrants. So I sold the stock. "
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