Posts Tagged ‘Tannin’

Bear Managers’ Acquittal May Hamper U.S. Fraud Prosecutions

A federal jury acquitted two former Bear Stearns hedge fund managers of defrauding investors. Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin were found not guilty on all charges of conspiracy, securities fraud and wire fraud. They were accused of deliberately misleading investors before the financial crisis. “There wasn’t enough evidence …

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Prosecution begins Opening Statements in Case Against Former Bear Sterns Hedge Fund Managers

Opening statements by the prosecution started today in the trial of one time Bear Stern employees Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin. The former hedge fund managers are the first to be tried in connection with a federal probe into the subprime market collapse.The men are charged with misleading clients who invested into two separate hedge funds that collapsed.

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Bear Stearns hedge fund managers begin fraud trial

The trial of two Bear Stearns hedge fund managers has begun today, with the men facing potential jail sentences of 20 years if they are found guilty of fraud.Matthew Tannin and Ralph Cioffi are denying allegations they knew two hedge funds they were operating were close to collapse but did not tell investors.When the hedge funds, which bet on the sub-prime mortgage market, collapsed in June 2007, investors lost $1.4 billion.Less than a year after the funds collapsed, so did Bear Stearns itself, becoming one of the highest-profile casualties of the financial crisis.Much of the evidence against the pair is expected to center on emails sent between the two men from November 2006 up to June 2007.Prosecutors claim Mr Tannin and Mr Cioffi continued to encourage clients to invest in the hedge funds, despite both being aware of the coming financial storm.In an email from March 2007 that was cited in the indictment, Mr Cioffi told Mr Tannin: “The worry for me is that sub-prime losses will be far worse than anything people have modelled.”A few days later, Mr Cioffi emailed a colleague to say that while Mr Tannin could not choose whether the market was heading towards meltdown or merely becoming a fantastic buying opportunity, he believed meltdown was the more likely option.Jury selection for the trial at the Federal District Court in Brooklyn started today (October 13th 2009) and proceedings are expected to last for around five or six weeks.Last week, JPMorgan Chase, which bought out Bear Stearns, paid $55 million on behalf of both investment banks in order to settle allegations they were involved in a Ponzi scheme at American Business Financial Services (ABFS), a now-collapsed mortgage lender.Credit Suisse and Morgan Stanley also paid out an additional $45 million after it was claimed the four Wall Street firms falsely made the impression that ABFS was still financially viable, despite it becoming insolvent in 2000.All allegations of wrongdoing were denied by the companies.

Bank of America’s $2bn lawsuit against Bear Stearns set for court

A Bank of America lawsuit against Bear Stearns and two of its hedge-fund managers will go ahead after a federal judge refused to dismiss contract and fraud claims.Bank of America is claiming more than $2 billion in hurts, alleging that Bear Stearns’s hedge fund losses were hidden from it, causing it significant losses as the value of the assets and the securities fell dramatically.Hedge-fund managers Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin are set to go on trial on October 13th 2009 in New York for their part in the alleged fraud.The collapse of Bear Stearns’s hedge funds in 2007 led to the investment bank’s dramatic downfall that saw it sold to JPMorgan Chase & Co in May 2008 for just $10 a share.Staff at the company, who owned nearly 40 per cent of the shares between them, lost billions of dollars on their holdings, which had been trading at more than $150 a share in early 2007.

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