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Trader Pleads Guilty To Illegal Purchase of Nearly $1B In Apple Stock

An anonymous reader writes "A trader who last year made an unauthorized purchase of nearly US$1 billion worth of Apple stock has pled guilty to wire fraud, securities fraud and conspiracy. On October 25, 2012 — the same day Apple posted its Q3 2012 earnings — David Miller of Rochdale Securities made a number of unauthorized purchases of Apple shares which ultimately led to the demise of the financial services firm he worked for. The aim of Miller's action was to make a lot of money very quickly by purchasing large quantities of Apple shares and selling them in a post-earnings surge."

6 of 174 comments (clear)

  1. Would they arrest him if he had won money? by femtobyte · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Color me skeptical, but for some reason I doubt that a trader who recklessly threw a billion dollars on the stock market roulette table and *won* would be outed by his firm and sent to jail. Rather, he'd be the "ballsy financial genius" who'd be in charge of $10 billion next time. And of course, this type of perverse incentive system only encourages the next thrill-seeking gambling addict to try their own play. A few years in a minimum security white-collar slammer, versus the chance to take your cut of zillions in winnings gambling on others' money? Sounds like a gamble far too many "I earned my position by skill, not chance!" scamming scum would take.

    1. Re: Would they arrest him if he had won money? by mapsjanhere · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They would have laid him off with a golden parachute and a huge non-disclosure. Unauthorized high-risk trading is not something you let your investors know about, even if it went well. It shows your internal procedures lacking at the very least.

      --
      I'm aging rapidly, I bought a new game and had no idea if my machine was good for it.
  2. Unauthorized? by DarthVain · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Erm. How does one spend ONE BILLION dollars unauthorized? Wouldn't the firm be at fault? Someone singularly has the ability to decide to spend a billion dollars on something?

  3. Re:Worth it? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is it worth throwing a minimum of 5-8 years of your life away for money?

    Of course it is not worth it if you get caught.. But for most financial shenanigans, the chance of getting caught is pretty low. If enough other people are doing the same thing, there is safety in numbers, and instead of going to jail, you get a bailout. This guys problem was that he made a bet too big to go unnoticed, and he was very unlucky. He isn't being punished for making an illegal bet. He is only being punished for losing the bet.

  4. Re:Worth it? by femtobyte · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's the rule according to the SEC, but the SEC has largely been gutted of power to closely monitor and regulate what actually goes on. This guy is going to jail because his own investment firm outed him. If you're an investment firm boss, and one of your employees just lost you millions, you'll gladly blame the loss on a rogue employee (not standard firm operating procedures). But what if you just made millions? Is this when you announce to the world "no, we're not an especially clever investment firm, we just have dangerous loose cannons at our trading desks who got lucky this time."? Or, do you cover for your employee's actions; give him a nice bonus to keep quiet, and retire from the firm to a nice island mansion; and shuffle paperwork to keep the trading off the SEC's radar?

  5. Re:Worth it? by nedlohs · · Score: 5, Informative

    You have a very strange definition of "valuable to the economy".