Ex-Alger executive guilty of tampering

Ex-Alger executive guilty of tampering

By RIVA D. ATLAS New York Times

Friday, October 17, 2003

A senior executive at Fred Alger Management pleaded guilty Thursday to a charge of tampering with evidence and agreed to pay a $400,000 fine to settle regulatory charges that he allowed investors to improperly trade in and out of the company’s mutual funds.

The criminal charge, brought by the New York attorney general, and the settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission are the first involving a mutual fund executive since regulators began their broad investigation of the fund industry more than a month ago.

The Alger executive, James P. Connelly Jr., was director of sales and marketing at the firm, which manages more than $10 billion in assets. He is the third person to face criminal charges in the investigation, including a Bank of America executive, who has vowed to fight them, as well as a trader at the Millennium Partners hedge fund, who has pleaded guilty.

Executives said that Connelly’s guilty plea was particularly shocking within the fund industry given his leading role in Alger’s recovery after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack on the World Trade Center, where Alger had offices. Alger lost 20 of its 24 fund managers and analysts in the attack.

“I am bowled over,” said Geoffrey Bobroff, an industry consultant. “He was the guy who was traipsing around the country visiting with clients and potential clients.”

Alger fired Connelly, 40, of Chatham, N.J., after it uncovered evidence late last week that he tried to destroy incriminating e- mail messages soon after the regulators’ fund inquiry became public, according to a statement the firm released Thursday.

Connelly did not return calls placed to his home. His lawyer declined to comment.

According to documents filed Thursday by the SEC, Connelly arranged for “select investors” to engage in market timing through frequent, fast trades in and out of Alger mutual funds from the mid- 1990s until earlier this year. Connelly authorized the trading even though the funds’ prospectuses said investors could only trade in or out six times a year.

In return for allowing these short-term trades, Connelly asked investors to commit a certain amount of money to the firm for the long term, the SEC said. The short-term trading reached its peak earlier this year, with a dozen investors trading approximately $200 million in Alger funds, the commission said.

According to the SEC, one customer, Veras Investment Partners, was allowed to place $50 million in short-term trades in exchange for a $10 million long-term investment.

In a statement, a spokesman for Veras said that the hedge fund had received subpoenas from regulators and was cooperating.

Besides the fine, Connelly agreed to accept a lifetime ban from the securities industry. The state criminal charges to which he pleaded guilty carry a maximum jail sentence of four years.

According to the attorney general’s complaint, Connelly told Alger’s lawyers, who were responding to a subpoena from regulators, that he was not aware of any improper trading at the firm, even though he was aware of the Veras trading.

On Sept. 4, the day after Spitzer made his investigation into mutual fund trading public, Connelly asked an employee at the firm to “delete certain e-mails called for by the subpoena,” the attorney general’s complaint said. Connelly also told the employee to instruct others at Alger to do the same.

Besides market timing, regulators are investigating late trading in mutual funds, which involves buying or selling shares after the market close but at an earlier price. Veras also engaged in late trading at Alger, according to the attorney general’s complaint.

Alger is cooperating with the investigation.

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Ex-Alger executive guilty of tampering

Ex-Alger executive guilty of tampering

Improper mutual fund trades covered up, SEC says

By MICHAEL GORMLEY Associated Press

Friday, October 17, 2003

Albany, N.Y. — A former mutual fund executive pleaded guilty to a felony Thursday for trying to cover up improper trading of mutual funds, the latest in a widening investigation of industry practices prosecutors say cost investors billions of dollars.

James P. Connelly Jr., former vice chairman and chief mutual fund officer at Fred Alger Management, went as far as appointing an employee to serve as Alger’s “timing police,” to bust investors caught making short-term, in-and-out trades without his permission, the Securities and Exchange Commission said. The practice, known as “market timing,” constituted fraud, as it was not disclosed to Alger fund shareholders, the SEC said.

Connelly pleaded guilty in state Supreme Court in New York to tampering with physical evidence and agreed to pay a $400,000 civil penalty to settle related charges by the SEC. Connelly faces up to four years in prison when sentenced Dec. 17. Connelly, 40, of Hoboken, N.J., also is barred from the industry for life.

New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer said Connelly deceived his firm’s lawyers to withhold documents and directed employees to delete some e-mails subpoenaed by investigators. The indictment said Connelly also tried to conceal trading arrangements between his firm and Veras Investment Partners, a Texas hedge fund.

Connelly is the first mutual fund executive charged in the investigation. Two traders at other companies have been charged.

The SEC said Connelly permitted more than a dozen select investors to “time” trades in Alger funds, a practice the company did not disclose to investors in its fund prospectuses. In return, the investors agreed to keep substantial assets in Alger funds.

Market timing allows investors to exploit changes in prices and can hurt other mutual fund shareholders by diluting the value of their shares. Many funds prohibit the practice.

“By approving timing arrangements with select investors, Mr. Connelly put his own firm’s bottom line ahead of the interests of the fund shareholders he was entrusted to protect,” SEC enforcement director Stephen Cutler said. “Such conduct is a fundamental breach of an investment adviser’s fiduciary duties and warrants tough sanctions.”

In a statement late Thursday, Alger president Daniel Chung said Connelly was suspended Sept. 29. He was fired last week after an internal investigation turned up evidence that led to Thursday’s arrest, Chung said.

“Mr. Connelly’s misconduct was completely out of character for this firm and the personal commitment we made to the government to be fully cooperative,” Chung said. “Fortunately, we believe all documents were preserved.”

Connelly’s home telephone number wasn’t available.

Veras confirmed Thursday it had received subpoenas from Spitzer and the SEC and said it is cooperating.

“The scope of the investigation into illegal trading practices in the mutual fund industry continues to expand,” Spitzer said. “Any obstruction of this investigation will be dealt with swiftly.”

On Sept. 3, Spitzer accused hedge fund Canary Capital Partners LLC of illegal trading involving Bank of America, Janus, Bank One Corp. and Strong Capital Management funds. The same day, Canary Capital Management and its managers agreed to pay $30 million in restitution for profits generated from improper trading, plus a $10 million penalty to settle Spitzer’s allegations. The hedge fund neither admitted to nor denied wrongdoing in the settlement.

Earlier this month, Steve Markovitz, a former broker with Millennium Partners hedge fund, pleaded guilty to a felony charge for illegal late trading of mutual fund shares.

Spitzer has also charged a former Bank of America broker, Theodore Sihpol III, with larceny and securities law violations in connection with the Canary case. Sihpol has pleaded innocent.

Merrill Lynch & Co., Alliance Capital Management Holding LP and Prudential Securities have suspended or fired nearly two dozen employees believed to have engaged in market timing or illegal late trading.

Late trading involves allowing an investor to trade funds at the 4 p.m. Eastern time prices hours after the market closed. Such arrangements allow the investor to cash in on after-hours news ahead of other investors, who at that hour would be forced to chance buying at the next day’s closing price.

Spitzer said the practices cost investors billions of dollars.

AT A GLANCE

Fred Alger Management Inc.

— Headquarters: New York — Total assets under management: $9.8 billion — Founded: October 1964 — Employees: More than 200

Source: www.algerfund.com

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