Saturday 17 April 2010

Goldman Sach and CDOs: Banks Bundled Bad Debt, Bet Against It and Won


December 24, 2009

Banks Bundled Bad Debt, Bet Against It and Won



In late October 2007, as the financial markets were starting to come unglued, a Goldman Sachs trader, Jonathan M. Egol, received very good news. At 37, he was named a managing director at the firm.

Mr. Egol, a Princeton graduate, had risen to prominence inside the bank by creating mortgage-related securities, named Abacus, that were at first intended to protect Goldman from investment losses if the housing market collapsed. As the market soured, Goldman created even more of these securities, enabling it to pocket huge profits.

Goldman’s own clients who bought them, however, were less fortunate.

Pension funds and insurance companies lost billions of dollars on securities that they believed were solid investments, according to former Goldman employees with direct knowledge of the deals who asked not to be identified because they have confidentiality agreements with the firm.

Goldman was not the only firm that peddled these complex securities — known as synthetic collateralized debt obligations, or C.D.O.’s — and then made financial bets against them, called selling short in Wall Street parlance. Others that created similar securities and then bet they would fail, according to Wall Street traders, includeDeutsche Bank and Morgan Stanley, as well as smaller firms like Tricadia Inc., an investment company whose parent firm was overseen by Lewis A. Sachs, who this year became a special counselor to Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner.

How these disastrously performing securities were devised is now the subject of scrutiny by investigators in Congress, at the Securities and Exchange Commission and at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Wall Street’s self-regulatory organization, according to people briefed on the investigations. Those involved with the inquiries declined to comment.

While the investigations are in the early phases, authorities appear to be looking at whether securities laws or rules of fair dealing were violated by firms that created and sold these mortgage-linked debt instruments and then bet against the clients who purchased them, people briefed on the matter say.

One focus of the inquiry is whether the firms creating the securities purposely helped to select especially risky mortgage-linked assets that would be most likely to crater, setting their clients up to lose billions of dollars if the housing market imploded.

Some securities packaged by Goldman and Tricadia ended up being so vulnerable that they soured within months of being created.

Goldman and other Wall Street firms maintain there is nothing improper about synthetic C.D.O.’s, saying that they typically employ many trading techniques to hedge investments and protect against losses. They add that many prudent investors often do the same. Goldman used these securities initially to offset any potential losses stemming from its positive bets on mortgage securities.

But Goldman and other firms eventually used the C.D.O.’s to place unusually large negative bets that were not mainly for hedging purposes, and investors and industry experts say that put the firms at odds with their own clients’ interests.

“The simultaneous selling of securities to customers and shorting them because they believed they were going to default is the most cynical use of credit information that I have ever seen,” said Sylvain R. Raynes, an expert in structured finance at R & R Consulting in New York. “When you buy protection against an event that you have a hand in causing, you are buying fire insurance on someone else’s house and then committing arson.”
Investment banks were not alone in reaping rich rewards by placing trades against synthetic C.D.O.’s. Some hedge funds also benefited, including Paulson & Company, according to former Goldman workers and people at other banks familiar with that firm’s trading.

Michael DuVally, a Goldman Sachs spokesman, declined to make Mr. Egol available for comment. But Mr. DuVally said many of the C.D.O.’s created by Wall Street were made to satisfy client demand for such products, which the clients thought would produce profits because they had an optimistic view of the housing market. In addition, he said that clients knew Goldman might be betting against mortgages linked to the securities, and that the buyers of synthetic mortgage C.D.O.’s were large, sophisticated investors, he said.

The creation and sale of synthetic C.D.O.’s helped make the financial crisis worse than it might otherwise have been, effectively multiplying losses by providing more securities to bet against. Some $8 billion in these securities remain on the books at American International Group, the giant insurer rescued by the government in September 2008.

From 2005 through 2007, at least $108 billion in these securities was issued, according to Dealogic, a financial data firm. And the actual volume was much higher because synthetic C.D.O.’s and other customized trades are unregulated and often not reported to any financial exchange or market.

Goldman Saw It Coming

Before the financial crisis, many investors large American and European banks, pension funds, insurance companies and even some hedge fundsfailed to recognize that overextended borrowers would default on their mortgages, and they kept increasing their investments in mortgage-related securities. As the mortgage market collapsed, they suffered steep losses.

A handful of investors and Wall Street traders, however, anticipated the crisis. In 2006, Wall Street had introduced a new index, called the ABX, that became a way to invest in the direction of mortgage securities. The index allowed traders to bet on or against pools of mortgages with different risk characteristics, just as stock indexes enable traders to bet on whether the overall stock market, or technology stocks or bank stocks, will go up or down.

Goldman, among others on Wall Street, has said since the collapse that it made big money by using the ABX to bet against the housing market. Worried about a housing bubble, top Goldman executives decided in December 2006 to change the firm’s overall stance on the mortgage market, from positive to negative, though it did not disclose that publicly.

Even before then, however, pockets of the investment bank had also started using C.D.O.’s to place bets against mortgage securities, in some cases to hedge the firm’s mortgage investments, as protection against a fall in housing prices and an increase in defaults.

Mr. Egol was a prime mover behind these securities. Beginning in 2004, with housing prices soaring and the mortgage mania in full swing, Mr. Egol began creating the deals known as Abacus. From 2004 to 2008, Goldman issued 25 Abacus deals, according to Bloomberg, with a total value of $10.9 billion.

Abacus allowed investors to bet for or against the mortgage securities that were linked to the deal. The C.D.O.’s didn’t contain actual mortgages. Instead, they consisted ofcredit-default swaps, a type of insurance that pays out when a borrower defaults. These swaps made it much easier to place large bets on mortgage failures.

Rather than persuading his customers to make negative bets on Abacus, Mr. Egol kept most of these wagers for his firm, said five former Goldman employees who spoke on the condition of anonymity. On occasion, he allowed some hedge funds to take some of the short trades.

Mr. Egol and Fabrice Tourre, a French trader at Goldman, were aggressive from the start in trying to make the assets in Abacus deals look better than they were, according to notes taken by a Wall Street investor during a phone call with Mr. Tourre and another Goldman employee in May 2005.

On the call, the two traders noted that they were trying to persuade analysts at Moody’s Investors Service, a credit rating agency, to assign a higher rating to one part of an Abacus C.D.O. but were having trouble, according to the investor’s notes, which were provided by a colleague who asked for anonymity because he was not authorized to release them. Goldman declined to discuss the selection of the assets in the C.D.O.’s, but a spokesman said investors could have rejected the C.D.O. if they did not like the assets.

Goldman’s bets against the performances of the Abacus C.D.O.’s were not worth much in 2005 and 2006, but they soared in value in 2007 and 2008 when the mortgage market collapsed. The trades gave Mr. Egol a higher profile at the bank, and he was among a group promoted to managing director on Oct. 24, 2007.

“Egol and Fabrice were way ahead of their time,” said one of the former Goldman workers. “They saw the writing on the wall in this market as early as 2005.” By creating the Abacus C.D.O.’s, they helped protect Goldman against losses that others would suffer.

As early as the summer of 2006, Goldman’s sales desk began marketing short bets using the ABX index to hedge funds like Paulson & Company, Magnetar and Soros Fund Management, which invests for the billionaire George SorosJohn Paulson, the founder of Paulson & Company, also would later take some of the shorts from the Abacus deals, helping him profit when mortgage bonds collapsed. He declined to comment.

A Deal Gone Bad, for Some

The woeful performance of some C.D.O.’s issued by Goldman made them ideal for betting against. As of September 2007, for example, just five months after Goldman had sold a new Abacus C.D.O., the ratings on 84 percent of the mortgages underlying it had been downgraded, indicating growing concerns about borrowers’ ability to repay the loans, according to research from UBS, the big Swiss bank. Of more than 500 C.D.O.’s analyzed by UBS, only two were worse than the Abacus deal.

Goldman created other mortgage-linked C.D.O.’s that performed poorly, too. One, in October 2006, was a $800 million C.D.O. known as Hudson Mezzanine. It included credit insurance on mortgage and subprime mortgage bonds that were in the ABX index; Hudson buyers would make money if the housing market stayed healthy — but lose money if it collapsed. Goldman kept a significant amount of the financial bets against securities in Hudson, so it would profit if they failed, according to three of the former Goldman employees.

A Goldman salesman involved in Hudson said the deal was one of the earliest in which outside investors raised questions about Goldman’s incentives. “Here we are selling this, but we think the market is going the other way,” he said.

A hedge fund investor in Hudson, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that because Goldman was betting against the deal, he wondered whether the bank built Hudson with “bonds they really think are going to get into trouble.”

Indeed, Hudson investors suffered large losses. In March 2008, just 18 months after Goldman created that C.D.O., so many borrowers had defaulted that holders of the security paid out about $310 million to Goldman and others who had bet against it, according to correspondence sent to Hudson investors.

The Goldman salesman said that C.D.O. buyers were not misled because they were advised that Goldman was placing large bets against the securities. “We were very open with all the risks that we thought we sold. When you’re facing a tidal wave of people who want to invest, it’s hard to stop them,” he said. The salesman added that investors could have placed bets against Abacus and similar C.D.O.’s if they had wanted to.

A Goldman spokesman said the firm’s negative bets didn’t keep it from suffering losses on its mortgage assets, taking $1.7 billion in write-downs on them in 2008; but he would not say how much the bank had since earned on its short positions, which former Goldman workers say will be far more lucrative over time. For instance, Goldman profited to the tune of $1.5 billion from one series of mortgage-related trades by Mr. Egol with Wall Street rival Morgan Stanley, which had to book a steep loss, according to people at both firms.

Tetsuya Ishikawa, a salesman on several Abacus and Hudson deals, left Goldman and later published a novel, “How I Caused the Credit Crunch.” In it, he wrote that bankers deserted their clients who had bought mortgage bonds when that market collapsed: “We had moved on to hurting others in our quest for self-preservation.” Mr. Ishikawa, who now works for another financial firm in London, declined to comment on his work at Goldman.

Profits From a Collapse

Just as synthetic C.D.O.’s began growing rapidly, some Wall Street banks pushed for technical modifications governing how they worked in ways that made it possible for C.D.O.’s to expand even faster, and also tilted the playing field in favor of banks and hedge funds that bet against C.D.O.’s, according to investors.

In early 2005, a group of prominent traders met at Deutsche Bank’s office in New York and drew up a new system, called Pay as You Go. This meant the insurance for those betting against mortgages would pay out more quickly. The traders then went to the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, the group that governs trading in derivatives like C.D.O.’s. The new system was presented as a fait accompli, and adopted.

Other changes also increased the likelihood that investors would suffer losses if the mortgage market tanked. Previously, investors took losses only in certain dire “credit events,” as when the mortgages associated with the C.D.O. defaulted or their issuers went bankrupt.

But the new rules meant that C.D.O. holders would have to make payments to short sellers under less onerous outcomes, or “triggers,” like a ratings downgrade on a bond. This meant that anyone who bet against a C.D.O. could collect on the bet more easily.

“In the early deals you see none of these triggers,” said one investor who asked for anonymity to preserve relationships. “These things were built in to provide the dealers with a big payoff when something bad happened.”

Banks also set up ever more complex deals that favored those betting against C.D.O.’s. Morgan Stanley established a series of C.D.O.’s named after United States presidents (Buchanan and Jackson) with an unusual feature: short-sellers could lock in very cheap bets against mortgages, even beyond the life of the mortgage bonds. It was akin to allowing someone paying a low insurance premium for coverage on one automobile to pay the same on another one even if premiums over all had increased because of high accident rates.

At Goldman, Mr. Egol structured some Abacus deals in a way that enabled those betting on a mortgage-market collapse to multiply the value of their bets, to as much as six or seven times the face value of those C.D.O.’s. When the mortgage market tumbled, this meant bigger profits for Goldman and other short sellers — and bigger losses for other investors.

Selling Bad Debt

Other Wall Street firms also created risky mortgage-related securities that they bet against.

At Deutsche Bank, the point man on betting against the mortgage market was Greg Lippmann, a trader. Mr. Lippmann made his pitch to select hedge fund clients, arguing they should short the mortgage market. He sometimes distributed a T-shirt that read “I’m Short Your House!!!” in black and red letters.

Deutsche, which declined to comment, at the same time was selling synthetic C.D.O.’s to its clients, and those deals created more short-selling opportunities for traders like Mr. Lippmann.

Among the most aggressive C.D.O. creators was Tricadia, a management company that was a unit of Mariner Investment Group. Until he became a senior adviser to the Treasury secretary early this year, Lewis Sachs was Mariner’s vice chairman. Mr. Sachs oversaw about 20 portfolios there, including Tricadia, and its documents also show that Mr. Sachs sat atop the firm’s C.D.O. management committee.

From 2003 to 2007, Tricadia issued 14 mortgage-linked C.D.O.’s, which it called TABS. Even when the market was starting to implode, Tricadia continued to create TABS deals in early 2007 to sell to investors. The deal documents referring to conflicts of interest stated that affiliates and clients of Tricadia might place bets against the types of securities in the TABS deal.

Even so, the sales material also boasted that the mortgages linked to C.D.O.’s had historically low default rates, citing a “recently completed” study by Standard & Poor’sratings agency — though fine print indicated that the date of the study was September 2002, almost five years earlier.

At a financial symposium in New York in September 2006, Michael Barnes, the co-head of Tricadia, described how a hedge fund could put on a negative mortgage bet by shorting assets to C.D.O. investors, according to his presentation, which was reviewed by The New York Times.

Mr. Barnes declined to comment. James E. McKee, general counsel at Tricadia, said, “Tricadia has never shorted assets into the TABS deals, and Tricadia has always acted in the best interests of its clients and investors.”

Mr. Sachs, through a spokesman at the Treasury Department, declined to comment.

Like investors in some of Goldman’s Abacus deals, buyers of some TABS experienced heavy losses. By the end of 2007, UBS research showed that two TABS deals were the eighth- and ninth-worst performing C.D.O.’s. Both had been downgraded on at least 75 percent of their associated assets within a year of being issued.

Tricadia’s hedge fund did far better, earning roughly a 50 percent return in 2007 and similar profits in 2008, in part from the short bets.



Goldman Sachs Responds to The New York Times on Synthetic Collateralized Debt Obligations
December 24, 2009

Background: The New York Times published a story on December 24th primarily focused on the synthetic collateralized debt obligation business of Goldman Sachs. In response to questions from the paper prior to publication, Goldman Sachs made the following points.

As reporters and commentators examine some of the aspects of the financial crisis, interest has gravitated toward a variety of products associated with the mortgage market. One of these products is synthetic collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), which are referred to as synthetic because the underlying credit exposure is taken via credit default swaps rather than by physically owning assets or securities. The following points provide a summary of how these products worked and why they were created.

Any discussion of Goldman Sachs’ association with this product must begin with our overall activities in the mortgage market. Goldman Sachs, like other financial institutions, suffered significant losses in its residential mortgage portfolio due to the deterioration of the housing market (we disclosed $1.7 billion in residential mortgage exposure write-downs in 2008). These losses would have been substantially higher had we not hedged. We consider hedging the cornerstone of prudent risk management.

Synthetic CDOs were an established product for corporate credit risk as early as 2002. With the introduction of credit default swaps referencing mortgage products in 2004-2005, it is not surprising that market participants would consider synthetic CDOs in the context of mortgages. Although precise tallies of synthetic CDO issuance are not readily available, many observers would agree the market size was in the hundreds of billions of dollars.

Many of the synthetic CDOs arranged were the result of demand from investing clients seeking long exposure.

Synthetic CDOs were popular with many investors prior to the financial crisis because they gave investors the ability to work with banks to design tailored securities which met their particular criteria, whether it be ratings, leverage or other aspects of the transaction.

The buyers of synthetic mortgage CDOs were large, sophisticated investors. These investors had significant in-house research staff to analyze portfolios and structures and to suggest modifications. They did not rely upon the issuing banks in making their investment decisions.

For static synthetic CDOs, reference portfolios were fully disclosed. Therefore, potential buyers could simply decide not to participate if they did not like some or all the securities referenced in a particular portfolio.

Synthetic CDOs require one party to be long the risk and the other to be short so without the short position, a transaction could not take place.

It is fully disclosed and well known to investors that banks that arranged synthetic CDOs took the initial short position and that these positions could either have been applied as hedges against other risk positions or covered via trades with other investors.

Most major banks had similar businesses in synthetic mortgage CDOs.

As housing price growth slowed and then turned negative, the disruption in the mortgage market resulted in synthetic CDO losses for many investors and financial institutions, including Goldman Sachs, effectively putting an end to this market.

http://www2.goldmansachs.com/our-firm/on-the-issues/viewpoint/viewpoint-articles/response-scdo.html

Mergers and acquisitions back with a bang


STUART WASHINGTON
April 17, 2010
    AFTER sharemarkets plummeted in 2008 and the world was on the precipice of a global economic disaster, US Federal Reserve governors used the word ''panic''.
    Fast forward 18 months and the Australian corporate landscape has shifted with a rapidity that has surprised even the most seasoned market watchers.
    This week the ASX 200 topped 5000 amid evidence Australia's mergers-and-acquisition market has reignited.
    Macarthur Coal juggles three suitors. AXA is being stalked by two camps of would-be buyers. One of those buyers, AMP with $13.4 billion market capitalisation, is frequently named as being in the cross-hairs of a takeover itself.
    Thomson Reuters data shows announced takeovers reached $US28.8 billion ($A30.8 billion) for the first quarter of 2010, pushing the year-to-date levels back towards boom-time peaks last experienced through 2007.
    ''I think it is more likely to be part of a longer wave,'' says David Cassidy, an equity strategist at broking firm UBS.
    ''Cyclical'' is how Cassidy describes a corporate world that moved from instances of insane levels of debt in 2006 and 2007 to very real questions about survival in 2008 and a slew of desperate capital raisings in 2009.
    But a sharp recovery in Australia's economic fortunes has the sharemarket ticking higher. Earlier this month Cassidy lifted his forecast for the ASX 200 to 5550 by year-end.
    And in lockstep with a resurgent sharemarket is the prospect of a return to heady levels of mergers-and-acquisitions.
    UBS nominates sharemarket operator ASX, financial services business Suncorp Metway, Australian energy-and-power business AWE, Bank of Queensland, media buyer Mitchell Group, technology play Redflex and New Zealand casino Sky City as its top likely targets.
    The wave of mergers-and-acquisitions shares common features with the pre-crisis boom (Cassidy singles out the absence of private equity as the most notable difference this time around).
    First, many takeovers are now focused on a Chinese-led resources boom that is likely to bring high-level policy issues and low-level rabble rousing as China's interest in Australian assets continues.
    ''China is now Australia's largest trading partner. Just like the Japanese in the '80s, China is now looking to rapidly integrate vertically across the supply chain,'' says Tony O'Sullivan, an investment banker with boutique advisory firm O'Sullivan Partners.
    Second, in common with the pre-crisis boom, retail shareholders will face the significant question - should I stay or should I go? - when they find themselves caught up in a bidding war.
    Academic literature points to several indicators retail shareholders can look to as they decide whether the day their company announces its intention to buy another company is as good as it gets.
    Third, the resurgence also has in common with the pre-crisis boom the often overlooked reality: it too will end.
    First, how did we get back to investment bankers spruiking deals again?
    Despite signs of health in the economy, it would be easy to see merger-and-acquisition activity as vultures picking over carcasses that barely survived the crisis.
    In laying the foundations for the recovery, the recapitalisations throughout 2009 was a central plank, raising more than $US60 billion in equity to restore overstretched balance sheets across the Australian public market.
    In Cassidy's view the recapitalisation was the building block that means merger and acquisition activity is more than a ''dead cat'' bounce.
    Cassidy cites interest on loans faced by industrial companies of about 20 per cent of available cash before the capital raisings, falling to about 10 per cent of available cash after the capital raisings.
    Just like a home loan, the more cash you have after you have met your interest bill, the more there is to spend.
    ''The cycle has swung back in the opposite direction very quickly,'' says Cassidy. ''Two things happened; they raised equity … and the second leg, that's the profits kicking up.''
    The result is a lot of cash on the balance sheet available for - you guessed it - mergers and acquisitions.
    The asperity with which investment bankers are ringing the bell for mergers and acquisitions, after taking at least $1 billion in fees from the wave or recapitalisations, has not gone unremarked. ''So in four financial years the (investment bank) advice has been 'maximise gearing', 'minimise gearing', and now 're-gear for M&A','' Charlie Aitken, an analyst with broker Southern Cross Equities, wrote in his April 7 newsletter.
    ''The only winner from that series of advice would be the investment banks themselves.''
    But he adds: ''Trust me, the investment banks and their new M&A push will get an audience. Many Australian boards will sit around and say, 'Yes, the world is getting better and we have a good balance sheet, we need to do something'.''
    O'Sullivan makes a similar point: ''M&A is incredibly sentiment driven. Every time a chairman and chief executive officer opens the paper and sees a bold move, it gives them the confidence and courage to think about their own business.''
    O'Sullivan sees the return of the cycle in mergers and acquisitions being spurred by the demand for resources from the emerging middle classes in India and China.
    And he predicts continuing demand for Australia's resources will raise profound policy considerations for Australia similar to the period in the 1980s when it was feared Japan would come to control significant assets within Australia.
    He said that to date the Chinese had shown sophistication in avoiding Vegemite-style iconic assets, unlike the disproportionate Japanese interest in Gold Coast real estate.
    ''The fear, if people like Kevin Rudd have any fear at all, would be we wake up one day and a lot of our minerals have been hollowed out and so [affect] our wealth as a nation,'' he said.
    And he said it could be a case for the federal government to rethink ownership structures for Australian resources, moving from a leasehold arrangement rather than outright ownership.
    HOW investors should think about mergers and acquisitions has been informed by detailed academic research. US research has shown that acquirers, on average, tend to lose out in takeovers.
    The most cited research on the negative experience in US takeovers, by Sara Moeller, Frederik Schlingemann and Rene Stulz, studied 12,000 takeovers of more than $US1 million between 1980 and 2001.
    The research found, on average, acquiring firms lost $US25 million of value when a takeover was announced, with problems in acquisitions most pronounced in large company takeovers.
    These losses on announcement of activity were long-lasting and were not reversed.
    The research found large companies were more likely to offer larger premiums than small companies and also enter transactions where there were no synergy gains.
    The research supported as the major reason for these failures the hubris, or overconfidence, among managers in large bidding companies.
    Dr Ronan Powell, a senior lecturer in banking and finance with the University of New South Wales' Australian School of Business, said research had repeatedly shown the importance of the initial market reaction in assessing the likely success or failure of a takeover.
    The US paper notes: ''The market seems fairly efficient in incorporating the information conveyed by acquisition announcements in the stock price.''
    Powell says this ability of the market to judge a takeover accurately means a negative reaction for the acquirer should be a warning for both managers and the company's investors to think again.
    And he says a management determined to conclude a negatively received deal indicated a willingness of management to act in its own interests, rather than those of shareholders.
    ''If it's negative [reaction to a takeover], as a manager you should be questioning this deal,'' he says. ''It's a good way to pick out the really entrenched managers, the ones who say they don't care what the market thinks.''
    (As an example, investors need only think of the negative market reaction when Allco announced the purchase of Rubicon in October 2007. The acquisition heralded the end of Allco.)
    Powell offers an additional checklist of takeover characteristics that lead to positive outcomes for acquirers, based on research.
    - A strong rationale for the acquisition as a strategic necessity rather than overconfident empire-building.
    - An acquirer using its shares as acquisition ''currency'' can signal that management believes its shares are overvalued. Think of AOL's takeover of Time Warner; AOL's shareholders would have been best off if they sold the moment the deal was announced.
    - A takeover of a listed company rather than a private company is much more likely to result in the acquirer paying too much.
    Powell and his student Mark Humphery issued an Australian Business School working paper in January that found the overall Australian takeover experience was significantly better than the US experience.
    Their study of 1900 Australian acquisitions between 1993 and 2007 found a net gain to acquirers on takeover announcements of an average of $8 million. The Australian research also found, unsurprisingly, strong links between the company's previous operating performance and its operating performance after a takeover.
    There was also a strong link showing the higher the premium paid, the better the operating performance after the takeover.
    Of course, the maths are much simpler for investors in a target company considering a takeover offer.
    ''Obviously the general rule is, if I'm a retail investor … give me a control premium,'' Powell says.
    Boutique investment advisory firm Greenhill Caliburn chairman Peter Hunt offers a note of caution on the overall return to economic good times, with recent history underlining how participants and investors should scrutinise potential downsides of any acquisition.
    ''We should have learnt there's a big risk this (crisis) will happen again because of the speed of the markets and the volatility of the markets and the tendency towards greed at the end of the cycle,'' he says.
    ''While the politicians and the regulators have talked about the need to stop it happening again, it's not clear to me yet that they will actually do anything meaningful to stop it happening again.''
    Announced mergers and acquisitions
    Year ending first quarter Value
    2006 $95bn
    2007 $221bn
    2008 $179bn
    2009 $113bn
    2010 $144bn

    ANNOUNCED DEALS, FIRST QUARTER 2010

     SOURCE: THOMSON REUTERS
    Target Acquirer Value
    AXA Asia Pacific National Australia Bank $6.6bn
    Macarthur Coal Peabody Energy $3.7bn
    Arrow Energy Investor Group $3.1bn
    AXA Asia Pacific (offshore) AXA SA $2bn
    WesTrac Seven Network $1.8bn
    Source: The Age


    Director who engaged in insider trading walks free


    LEONIE WOOD
    April 17, 2010
      JOHN Francis O'Reilly, a former director who pleaded guilty to insider trading, has averted jail after a judge said the businessman's judgment was ''clouded'' at the time and the nature and value of the shares he traded did not mark the offence as particularly serious.
      In sentencing O'Reilly, Justice Terry Forrest of the Victorian Supreme Court said the former Lion Selection director had obtained only a ''modest'' $29,045 profit from his purchase and sale of 50,000 Indophil Resources shares in mid-2008.
      The judge said that while the most troubling aspect of O'Reilly's conduct was that he traded shares as a ''true insider'' - from inside the boardroom - he acknowledged that O'Reilly conducted only one trade and did not embark on a sustained course of trading.
      O'Reilly was convicted of one count of insider trading. Justice Forrest imposed a jail sentence of 10 months and then wholly suspended the term, allowing O'Reilly to walk free. Justice Forrest said that but for the guilty plea, O'Reilly would have been sentenced to 13 months' jail and ordered to serve a minimum of five months.
      O'Reilly must be of good behaviour for 18 months and pay a $500 bond. The court also imposed a $30,000 pecuniary penalty on top of the $61,600 that O'Reilly must forfeit under the Proceeds of Crime Act. O'Reilly bought $38,880 of Indophil shares in May 2008, when he was privy to confidential information as Lion negotiated to sell its 25 per cent Indophil stake to Xstrata - a move that would trigger a takeover of Indophil and send its shares higher.
      ''By your conduct you have misled your fellow directors, acted in contravention of Lion's security trading policy, misled your shareholders and the Australian Securities Exchange, and undermined the integrity of the securities market,'' Justice Forrest said yesterday.
      He said the ''objective gravity'' of O'Reilly's offence emerged after considering that, as a director, O'Reilly was a ''true insider'', but he did not try to conceal the trading through secret or nominee accounts. This ''relative lack of sophistication'' suggested ''that your judgment was clouded at this time'', the judge said.
      ''Thirdly, I do not regard the nature of the trade, the amount invested or the anticipated profit as falling into a particularly grave or serious category. You did not seek to multiply your anticipated profit by choosing an exotic method of trading, nor did you invest a really large sum of money.''
      Justice Forrest said he considered it a ''mid-range example of a serious offence'' and accepted O'Reilly's conduct was ''an aberration''.
      Ian Ramsay, director of Melbourne University's Centre for Corporate Law and Securities Regulation, suggested the sentence appeared ''relatively modest'' considering several earlier insider trading cases had attracted jail or periodical detention sentences.
      Professor Ramsay argued that the number of insider enforcement actions in Australia and the penalties tended to be ''relatively light'' compared with overseas.
      ''I actually think the Australian insider trading law is a mess in some respects,'' he said. In some ways it was too broad, he said, adding: ''You could be an insider by picking up a piece of paper on Collins Street.''
      And in other areas, the legislation was too proscriptive.
      ''What you do come to quickly, though, is the realisation that courts typically do not impose terms of imprisonment for offences under the Corporations Act,'' he said.
      Source: The Age