15th January 2010, www.lankabusinessonline.com
Janus Capital Management, a US based fund said they had bought 12.23 percent of Sri Lanka's John Keells Holdings, shortly after Raj Rajaratnam and his Galleon asset management group started to sell out of the firm.
Janus Capital said they were holding the JKH stake on behalf of clients and had no economic interest in the share in the form of either dividends or eventual sale proceeds.
But the firm had the right to hold of shares held for clients.
Janus said it had 74.9 million shares or 12.23 percent out of a total of 613.1 million shares.
Showing posts with label Galleon Group. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Galleon Group. Show all posts
18 January 2010
19 November 2009
CSE: After COM Bank, Raj begins shedding HNB in Sri Lanka
9th November 2009, www.dailymirror.lk
Lankan born US hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam’s Galleon has begun exiting from HNB after it shed holding in Commercial Bank.
HNB saw 1.85 million of its shares (around 1% stake) traded yesterday between a high of Rs. 170 and a low of Rs. 168, before closing at the latter level, down by Rs. 1.50. Analysts said that among sellers of HNB was Galleon as well as Brown & Company. The latter, which has a stake of slightly over 7%, was booking profits.
Galleon’s focus on HNB is following the exit strategy on Commercial Bank, which the market witnessed in recent days.
On Tuesday, a block of 3.5 million shares of COMBank changed hands at Rs. 177 whilst the counter traded between a Rs. 180 and a low of Rs. 176.
Yesterday, a further block of 1.5 million shares of COMBank traded, also at the same price of Rs. 177. While COMBank gained only by 25 cents on Tuesday, it closed up by one rupee yesterday.
Buyers of Galleon shares as well as Browns quantity had been foreign and select local institutional investors.
Despite the second day of over Rs. 900 million turnover, investor sentiments remained relatively bearish on economic and political woes. Market capitalisation dipped by Rs. 1 billion yesterday over Tuesday.
Lankan born US hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam’s Galleon has begun exiting from HNB after it shed holding in Commercial Bank.
HNB saw 1.85 million of its shares (around 1% stake) traded yesterday between a high of Rs. 170 and a low of Rs. 168, before closing at the latter level, down by Rs. 1.50. Analysts said that among sellers of HNB was Galleon as well as Brown & Company. The latter, which has a stake of slightly over 7%, was booking profits.
Galleon’s focus on HNB is following the exit strategy on Commercial Bank, which the market witnessed in recent days.
On Tuesday, a block of 3.5 million shares of COMBank changed hands at Rs. 177 whilst the counter traded between a Rs. 180 and a low of Rs. 176.
Yesterday, a further block of 1.5 million shares of COMBank traded, also at the same price of Rs. 177. While COMBank gained only by 25 cents on Tuesday, it closed up by one rupee yesterday.
Buyers of Galleon shares as well as Browns quantity had been foreign and select local institutional investors.
Despite the second day of over Rs. 900 million turnover, investor sentiments remained relatively bearish on economic and political woes. Market capitalisation dipped by Rs. 1 billion yesterday over Tuesday.
18 October 2009
Hedge fund Billionaire Charged with Insider Trading
16th October 2009, www.dailyfinance.com
By the standards of Bernie Madoff's $60 billion swindle, the latest shenanigans from Wall Street are relatively small potatoes. But a hedge fund manager who Forbes ranked as the 236th richest person in America, worth $1.5 billion, just got charged with insider trading to the tune of $20 million. According to DealBreaker, an employee who had been fired may have turned him in.
Raj Rajaratnam, the founder of Galleon Group, was charged with four counts of conspiracy and nine counts of securities fraud. And DealBook reports that the head of the $7 billion hedge fund was not alone in plotting his $20 million in ill-gotten gains.
Charged with conspiracy and securities fraud along with Rajaratnam were five others. They were Mark Kurland, the president of another money manager, New Castle Partners; Danielle Chiesi of New Castle, who was once at Bear Stearns; an Intel Capital executive named Rajiv Goel; McKinsey & Co. executive Anil Kumar; and Robert Moffatt, an International Business Machines (IBM) executive.
The complaint alleges that $12.7 million of that $20 million in profit was gained by using inside information on three companies: Polycom (PLCM), Hilton (HLNQ) and Google (GOOG). The source of data to support the allegations came from an anonymous witness who started working with the FBI in 2007 and who helped record four telephone conversations.
Among some of the charges reported by Dow Jones Newswires, the alleged scheme involved several companies. Based on wiretaps, prosecutors allege in one case that Chiesi called Rajaratnam on his cellphone on July 24, 2008, to tell him that Web technology company Akamai (AKAM) was planning to "guide down" expectations for its earnings and that Akamai believed that its stock price would drop to $25 a share. Chiesi allegedly told him "Just keep shorting every day. We got a lot of days..." After Akamai announced that its earnings for the next quarter would miss analyst expectations, Rajaratnam allegedly called Chiesi to thank her for the information, prosecutors say.
According to The New York Times, Rajaratnam was ordered to post a $100 million bond as part of his bail conditions, though prosecutors argued for no bail because he posed a flight risk. Anil Kumar was released on a $5 million bond, the paper reported.
Given the wide network of people who remain in custody, this looks to become a bigger scandal. I predict someone will turn the story into a movie.
Peter Cohan is a management consultant, Babson professor and author of nine books, including Capital Rising (due in June 2010).
By the standards of Bernie Madoff's $60 billion swindle, the latest shenanigans from Wall Street are relatively small potatoes. But a hedge fund manager who Forbes ranked as the 236th richest person in America, worth $1.5 billion, just got charged with insider trading to the tune of $20 million. According to DealBreaker, an employee who had been fired may have turned him in.
Raj Rajaratnam, the founder of Galleon Group, was charged with four counts of conspiracy and nine counts of securities fraud. And DealBook reports that the head of the $7 billion hedge fund was not alone in plotting his $20 million in ill-gotten gains.
Charged with conspiracy and securities fraud along with Rajaratnam were five others. They were Mark Kurland, the president of another money manager, New Castle Partners; Danielle Chiesi of New Castle, who was once at Bear Stearns; an Intel Capital executive named Rajiv Goel; McKinsey & Co. executive Anil Kumar; and Robert Moffatt, an International Business Machines (IBM) executive.
The complaint alleges that $12.7 million of that $20 million in profit was gained by using inside information on three companies: Polycom (PLCM), Hilton (HLNQ) and Google (GOOG). The source of data to support the allegations came from an anonymous witness who started working with the FBI in 2007 and who helped record four telephone conversations.
Among some of the charges reported by Dow Jones Newswires, the alleged scheme involved several companies. Based on wiretaps, prosecutors allege in one case that Chiesi called Rajaratnam on his cellphone on July 24, 2008, to tell him that Web technology company Akamai (AKAM) was planning to "guide down" expectations for its earnings and that Akamai believed that its stock price would drop to $25 a share. Chiesi allegedly told him "Just keep shorting every day. We got a lot of days..." After Akamai announced that its earnings for the next quarter would miss analyst expectations, Rajaratnam allegedly called Chiesi to thank her for the information, prosecutors say.
According to The New York Times, Rajaratnam was ordered to post a $100 million bond as part of his bail conditions, though prosecutors argued for no bail because he posed a flight risk. Anil Kumar was released on a $5 million bond, the paper reported.
Given the wide network of people who remain in custody, this looks to become a bigger scandal. I predict someone will turn the story into a movie.
Peter Cohan is a management consultant, Babson professor and author of nine books, including Capital Rising (due in June 2010).
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