markrmau said:Todays AFR
Citigroup charged with inside trading
Mar 31 12:19
Feedback AFR staff
Australia's corporate regulator is taking action again Citigroup in the Federal Court, saying the investment bank acted on inside information to trade shares in ports operator Patrick Corporation just ahead of Toll Holdings' announcement last August of a takeover bid for Patrick.---------
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The matter, which follows joint initial enquiries with the Australian Stock Exchange, is due to go before the Federal Court on April 28.
markrmau said:Michael Kiernan, MD of CSM sells 1,000,000 shares at average price of about $2.66 on 10 May.
12 trading days later, CSM released a profit warning at 3.51pm Friday afternoon. The SP dropped 5% (from $2.12 to $2.02) after the warning, but probably has much more to fall monday.
SEC, attorney-general probe options killing
David Litterick in Chicago
May 8, 2007 SMH http://www.smh.com.au/news/business...options-killing/2007/05/07/1178390225368.html
THE US Securities and Exchange Commission has waded into Rupert Murdoch's $US5 billion bid for Dow Jones after launching an investigation into suspicious trading of Dow Jones stock.
The attorney-general of New York is also probing trading of stocks and options made ahead of last Tuesday's offer.
Spokesmen for both Dow Jones and News Corp said they had received subpoenas from the attorney-general and inquiries from the SEC. Both said they were co-operating fully.
The authorities are looking at trading in Dow Jones options from late April to last Monday - the day before news of the offer emerged. More than 10,000 call options on the stock changed hands in that period, compared with about 7000 during the entire first quarter.
Dow Jones's shares themselves traded very heavily on April 17, the day that Mr Murdoch sent a letter containing his proposed offer to the Dow Jones board, with 2.8 million changing hands. This was more than double the average daily volume, although the company also reported results that day.
The trades left some with enormous profits as shares of Dow Jones rose almost $US20 to $US56.20 on the day that news of the bid emerged.
On April 25, less than a week before the $US60-a-share offer was publicly disclosed, an investor bought an option to buy 280,000 shares of Dow Jones for $US40 each in September.
At the time the shares were worth about $US36 and had not crossed $US40 in a year. The future for newspaper companies, meanwhile, was widely considered to be grim. As a result, the options cost the investor US85c a share on the American Stock Exchange.
After Mr Murdoch's offer was announced on Tuesday, however, shares of Dow Jones shot up to $US56 and the value of the options jumped to $US17.20. The buyer of the options had a profit, on paper, of $US4.6 million.
The investor was either lucky, highly perceptive or - as many on Wall Street suspect - acting on insider information.
That profitable bet was one of severally unusually large trades in the options to buy Dow Jones in the last week.
Trading in Dow options is generally light and has rarely exceeded 100,000 options a day, let alone in one big trade.
"The chances of this being just shrewd timing are zero," said Jon Najarian, co-founder of OptionMonster.com, a site that studies unusual trading.
The investigations come as the SEC has ramped up its focus on insider trading, especially involving Wall Street professionals and merger activity.
Telegraph, London with agencies
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