About James

Prior to joining HedgeOp Compliance in March of 2010, James was an associate in the Investment Management group of Seward & Kissel LLP for over three years. At Seward & Kissel James focused on the structuring, formation and operation of domestic and offshore private investment funds. He advised investment managers on a variety of related topics, including issues concerning side letters, managed accounts, service provider arrangements, restructurings, reporting and compliance with the relevant securities laws. James graduated cum laude from Columbia University in 2003 with a B.A. in Economics and French and received a J.D. from the University of Michigan Law School in 2006.

Raj Rajaratnam Convicted of 14 Counts Related to Insider Trading

Earlier this morning Sri Lanka-born Raj Rajaratnam, co-founder of the Galleon Group, was convicted of 5 conspiracy charges and 9 securities fraud charges related to insider trading.  Rajaratnam was accused of using the inside information to make trades that made the Galleon Group’s hedge funds approximately $68 million in profits and avoided losses.  His defense claimed that all the information he traded on was publicly available.

The verdict came from the U.S. District Court in Manhattan after more than two weeks of deliberation and more than two months after the trial began.  During the trial prosecutors presented extensive evidence against Rajaratnam, including text messages, trading records and wiretapped phone conversations.  There were approximately 45 tapes used in the case, which represented one of the most extensive uses of wiretaps in a white-collar case.

The Galleon probe has resulted in more than two dozen arrests and 21 guilty pleas.  It has also led to a second investigation aimed at consultants in the securities industry who pass off inside information as the product of legitimate research.  Rajaratnam will remain free on bail, with electronic monitoring, until his July 29 sentencing.  He faces up to 25 years in prison.

Primary Global Research Consultant Arrested Today in Continuing Insider Trading Probe

Today federal authorities arrested Winifred Jiau, a technology expert who was employed as a consultant at Primary Global Research LLC, on charges related to her alleged involvement in an insider trading scheme.  Jiau is the seventh individual associated with Primary Global Research to be charged of insider trading beginning last month.  Primary Global Research, an expert-network firm based in Mountain View, California, specialized in providing investors with information from public company employees.  Jiau, who was hired as a consultant at Primary Global Research, allegedly sold inside information to portfolio managers at hedge funds that paid her over $200,000 between 2006 and 2008.

Jiau has been charged with both conspiring to commit securities fraud and engaging in securities fraud by selling material nonpublic information about publicly traded companies.  The latter charge could potentially involve up to 20 years in prison and a $5,000,000 fine.

EU Agrees to Stronger Hedge Fund Regulation

Today European Union finance ministers in Luxembourg reached unanimous agreement on a new set of rules regulating hedge funds in Europe.  The deal will create a single “passport” that allows approved hedge funds operating in one EU country access to investors across all other EU countries in exchange for more stringent regulation, which is to be governed by the European Securities and Markets Authority (“ESMA”).

The main obstacle in previous negotiations, which began in April 2009, has been how EU managers operating hedge funds outside the EU would be able market those funds to EU investors.  Great Britain, which is home to approximately 450 hedge funds that comprise 80% of the total European hedge fund market, has been the strongest advocate of a single “passport” system.  France has generally viewed UK regulations as insufficient in light of the financial crisis and supported ESMA being granted strong regulatory authority over the industry.

French finance minister Christine Lagarde acknowledged that the deal was very much a compromise.  “I think we probably could have come up with something better,” she added.

The rules must be backed by the European Parliament next month before becoming law.

Financial Reform Leaves New York Investment Advisers Unsure Where to Register

The Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, signed into law by President Obama on July 21, 2010, has left behind an odd but important ambiguity for investment advisers located in New York state.  The law requires most investment advisers with less than $100 million in assets under management to register with the securities commissioner of the state where the adviser maintains its principal office and place of business, provided that the adviser “would be subject to examination as an investment adviser” by such commissioner.  Unlike most other states, however, New York has never conducted examinations of investment advisers and currently its General Business Laws provide no specific authority for such examinations.

The Investment Adviser Association (the “IAA”), a not-for-profit association representing the interests of federally registered investment advisers, has estimated that approximately 350 New York-based advisers would be forced to de-register with the SEC as a result of the Dodd-Frank law.  David Tittsworth, the executive director of the IAA, has commented that “the answer about where they register is unclear.  It’s highly likely that the SEC will, in time, issue some sort of transitional rules that will deal with this and other questions.”

In order to avoid leaving these New York advisers in “no man’s land”, one of two responses is likely before the law takes effect in July of next year: either the SEC will bring these advisers back within its jurisdiction or New York will adopt an examination program to meet the requirements of the law.  New York advisers affected by the law will have to sit tight for the time being until guidance is released.

CFTC Likely to Expand Its Regulatory Purview

The Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is poised to obtain broad discretion to regulate the traditionally private over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives markets under the U.S. financial reform bill.  The notional amount of outstanding OTC derivatives has been estimated at $615 trillion as of December 2009.

While the Securities and Exchange Commission will regulate security-based derivatives, the CFTC will regulate swaps, which are a much larger component of the derivatives market.  Language currently in the bill would require large swap traders to register with the CFTC and disclose details of proposed swaps, as well as possibly establish position limits on trading.  The CFTC would also have discretion to regulate clearing houses that process derivatives.  CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler compared these regulations to “street lights” on “dark and dangerous highways.”

As reported by Reuters, Gensler is very interested in shaping the legislation and has been spending much of his time meeting with high-profile lawmakers, including Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, the ranking Republican committee member Richard Shelby and Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Blanche Lincoln.