By MARK JEWELL – 3 days ago
BOSTON (AP) — Massachusetts' top securities regulator on Tuesday accused managers of a fallen money-market fund of lying about its safety in an ultimately futile bid to prevent investors from pulling out cash before they suffered almost unprecedented losses in a normally safe type of investment.
Secretary of State William Galvin's administrative complaint against Reserve Management Co. comes three weeks after the company that pioneered money-market funds said it expected federal securities regulators to bring a separate civil case against it. That case has not yet been filed.
Galvin's complaint alleges Reserve sales workers were directed by managers to reassure investors that they could not lose money, even though Reserve's Primary Fund had made an investment in unsecured debt of Lehman Brothers.
That investment totaled about 1 percent of the Primary Fund holdings that stood at $64 billion three days before Lehman's Sept. 15 bankruptcy filing.
The same day, the bankruptcy prompted Reserve Management's board to write down the value of the $785 million in Lehman debt, the complaint alleges.
But on that day and the next, Reserve was telling investors that the Lehman holdings were being valued on par, the complaint says.
Written and oral statements to investors "contained outright falsities which the principals of Reserve Management knew at the time were not true," the complaint says. It seeks restitution on behalf of 566 Massachusetts businesses and residents who had invested about $2.1 billion in the Primary Fund, according to the complaint. It also seeks an unspecified administrative fine.
Reserve Management spokeswoman Ming Lee Hatch declined to comment, saying the New York-based company had not yet seen the complaint.
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and lookee here another ponzi scheme.
Bloomberg.com
CRE Capital Corp. and owner James Ossie, 48, falsely promised investors 10 percent monthly profits on U.S. and Japanese currency bets, the Securities and Exchange Commission said in a suit at federal court in Atlanta. In reality, money from new investors was used to pay returns to early participants, while the firm's trading lost more than $12 million since June, the agency said. More than 120 investors were lured into the scheme, it said.
BOSTON (AP) — Massachusetts' top securities regulator on Tuesday accused managers of a fallen money-market fund of lying about its safety in an ultimately futile bid to prevent investors from pulling out cash before they suffered almost unprecedented losses in a normally safe type of investment.
Secretary of State William Galvin's administrative complaint against Reserve Management Co. comes three weeks after the company that pioneered money-market funds said it expected federal securities regulators to bring a separate civil case against it. That case has not yet been filed.
Galvin's complaint alleges Reserve sales workers were directed by managers to reassure investors that they could not lose money, even though Reserve's Primary Fund had made an investment in unsecured debt of Lehman Brothers.
That investment totaled about 1 percent of the Primary Fund holdings that stood at $64 billion three days before Lehman's Sept. 15 bankruptcy filing.
The same day, the bankruptcy prompted Reserve Management's board to write down the value of the $785 million in Lehman debt, the complaint alleges.
But on that day and the next, Reserve was telling investors that the Lehman holdings were being valued on par, the complaint says.
Written and oral statements to investors "contained outright falsities which the principals of Reserve Management knew at the time were not true," the complaint says. It seeks restitution on behalf of 566 Massachusetts businesses and residents who had invested about $2.1 billion in the Primary Fund, according to the complaint. It also seeks an unspecified administrative fine.
Reserve Management spokeswoman Ming Lee Hatch declined to comment, saying the New York-based company had not yet seen the complaint.
********
and lookee here another ponzi scheme.
Bloomberg.com
CRE Capital Corp. and owner James Ossie, 48, falsely promised investors 10 percent monthly profits on U.S. and Japanese currency bets, the Securities and Exchange Commission said in a suit at federal court in Atlanta. In reality, money from new investors was used to pay returns to early participants, while the firm's trading lost more than $12 million since June, the agency said. More than 120 investors were lured into the scheme, it said.