Sep. 24–Information about Bank One’s involvement in the big ongoing mutual fund investigation is coming to light, and there’s a twist.
Bank One had ended its relationship with Canary Capital Partners, a market-timing hedge fund, several months before New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer released his complaint against four fund companies.
The complaint, filed Sept. 3, claims some mutual funds, including those run by Bank One Corp., Bank of America Corp., Janus Capital Corp. and Strong Capital Management, have given special trading breaks to wealthy investors of Canary Capital. It also notes that Canary stopped its timing activity at Bank One in April. The trading had lasted roughly a year.
Whether investors will view Bank One’s early cutoff from Canary as a reassuring sign might be subject to debate.
It looks better than the Bank of America story. There, the complaint says, Canary continued to time Bank of America’s Nations Funds until July. The trading stopped when Canary received a subpoena from Spitzer.
No firm wants to be implicated in a mutual fund mess that alleges that some funds put profits ahead of small investors.
For now, though, investors and investigators are trying to judge where things were the worst.
So far, Bank One’s role in the Spitzer complaint has let the company take a fairly business-as-usual approach. No one at Bank One has been charged; no one has been fired yet.
Bank One has said it’s not noticed a sizable pickup in calls regarding its 49 mutual funds with $102 billion in assets.
On Tuesday night, business-as-semi-usual meant that Bank One investment officials were to meet with key investors in Detroit at the Gem Theatre. The speakers were Dave Kundert, chief executive officer of Banc One Investment Advisors, and Anthony Chan, chief economist at the company, which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Bank One Corp.
On Monday, Chan told me the focus of the meeting is the investment outlook, not the mutual fund trading investigation.
His message: “This is still what I call a job-terminating economic recovery.”
Chan, who has visited Detroit in the past, maintains that jobs aren’t being added because the demand for goods is limited.
“If nobody’s buying your products, of course you’re going to lay people off,” Chan said.
Chan does not see significant job creation until the second quarter of 2004. But he does see some slight improvement in jobs beginning late this year.
For investors, he says, a slow, steady recovery could be the right ticket. A faster, hotter recovery has a better chance of ending quickly, Chan says.
For Bank One, a slow, steady business-as-usual approach could be just as helpful in dealing with the trading scandal.
The Spitzer complaint says Bank One allowed Canary to actively market-time some of its One Group funds — two international funds, the Small Cap Growth Fund and two mid-cap funds.
While not illegal, market timing can prove costly for small shareholders who end up covering the costs of excessive trading by big-money players.
Bank One has said it is reviewing the trading matter and will take corrective action, if necessary. It also has said it will make restitution if it finds that shareholders were damaged.
And Bank One is the only fund company mentioned in the complaint to have ended the relationship before Spitzer’s involvement.
Brock Vandervliet, an analyst at Lehman Brothers in New York, said he doubts the investigation will have a significant impact on Bank One’s mutual funds.
So far, he says, most individual investors don’t seem to be furious over the trading talk. They don’t seem as angry, he says, as they were a year or so ago over the scandal involving stock research.
The trading issues involving mutual funds are complex. So, it could be hard to put a number on how much money, if any, individual shareholders lost, thanks to extra expenses from frequent trading of some funds.
It’s much easier to recognize a stock analyst who had a buy recommendation on the stock right as it zipped to zero.
“It’s less clear to most people now exactly how this hurt them,” Vandervliet said.
Vandervliet does not own Bank One stock. Lehman Brothers has an investment banking relationship with Bank One. But Lehman Brothers does not own 1 percent or more of Bank One’s outstanding stock.
He maintains that Bank One looks to be in a less-serious predicament in the scandal than Bank of America.
To their credit, the One Group fund managers were complaining about the effects of Canary’s timing activity. The fund managers wanted Canary to reduce the frequency of its trading.
But before anyone thinks that Bank One was pure, read the complaint.
The relationship ended, at least according to the complaint, mainly because Canary wasn’t living up to its promises to invest other money into a Bank One hedge fund.
It fizzled out. Nobody really stamped it out, at least according to the complaint.
And it’s too bad that we don’t read that everyone said the trading arrangement was wrong and had to end, no matter what.
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