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August 24, 2010
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SEC Charges Family With $3.7 Million Insider Trading Scheme

The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced the filing of a civil action in federal district court in New York, New York involving a rampant insider trading scheme which generated more than $3.7 million in profits and losses avoided for a family and certain friends over a five year period. From at least 2001 through 2005, seven individuals, including lawyers and accountants, participated in a scheme to trade in the stock and option contracts of Taro Pharmaceuticals Industries, Ltd. ("Taro"), an Israeli-based publicly traded pharmaceutical company, ahead of eight earnings announcements and five FDA approval announcements. In the later stages of the scheme, certain of the defendants broadened the scheme by trading on information stolen from Pricewaterhouse Coopers LLP ("PwC") and Ernst & Young, LLP concerning two possible mergers.

In its complaint, the Commission alleged that Zvi Rosenthal, a Vice President at Taro, abused his position at Taro by systematically stealing material, nonpublic information concerning 13 separate company announcements, including earnings results and pending generic drug approvals by the Food and Drug Administration. Zvi then traded on the information and passed it on to his family members who then traded in Taro stock and options. Typically, Zvi provided information to his son, Amir Rosenthal who traded in personal accounts he controlled, and in the account of the family- owned and controlled hedge fund, Aragon Partners, LP. Amir also tipped his brothers, Oren Rosenthal and Ayal Rosenthal; his father-in-law, Bahram Delshad ("Delshad"); his best friend, David Heyman ("Heyman"); and his work supervisor, Young Kim ("Kim"), with information he received from Zvi, and each of them traded. The complaint further alleges that in its later stages, certain of the defendants broadened the scheme to include trading on nonpublic information stolen from entities other than Taro. On at least two occasions, Ayal and Heyman misappropriated material, nonpublic information concerning impending mergers from their respective employers, PwC and E, and tipped Amir with the information. Amir then traded on it. Amir also tipped Kim with the information from Ayal and Heyman, and Kim traded on the information. Read more at sec.gov.

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Did You Know?    
 
 
Variation Margin: Payment made on a daily or intraday basis
Variation Margin: Payment made on a daily or intraday basis by a clearing member to the clearing organization based on adverse price movement in positions carried by the clearing member, calculated separately for customer and proprietary positions.

 


  Securities News  
 


Latest news about securities cases in New Hampshire and nationwide:

Former Currency Trader Sentenced To 5 More Years For $3 Billion Ponzi Scheme
MICHAEL J. GARCIA, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced that MARTIN A. ARMSTRONG, a former currency trader a...
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Pump & Dump.con: Tips for Avoiding Stock Scams on the Internet
One of the most common Internet frauds involves the classic "pump and dump" scheme. Here's how it works: A company's web site may feature a glowing...
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SEC and NYSE File Settled Action Charging Fidelity Brokerage Services for Violating Federal Securities Laws and NYSE Rules in Connection with Document Alteration and Destruction
Washington, D.C., and New York, Aug. 3, 2004 — The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the New York Stock Exchange today announced t...
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Securities Terms

 


Tuesday's Term

Call

Definition:
An option contract giving the buyer the right but not the obligation to purchase a commodity or other asset or to enter into a long futures position

Buy (or Sell) On Opening

Definition:
To buy (or sell) at the beginning of a trading session within the open price range.

Aggregation

Definition:
The principle under which all futures positions owned or controlled by one trader (or group of traders acting in concert) are combined to determine reporting status and compliance with speculative position limits. See CFTC Backgrounder: Speculative Limits, Hedging, and Aggregation.

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Securities Resources

 


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Securities Hot Topics

 
Topics Related to Securities:

  • Investment Fraud
  • Stock Fraud
  • Bond Fraud
  • Mutual Fund Fraud

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New Hampshire Securities Attorney

 
If you live in the following cities and need an securities attorney you should contact our Securities Attorney as soon as possible:

  • Bedford
  • Concord
  • Derry
  • Dover
  • Durham
  • Exeter
  • Hampton
  • Hudson
  • Keene
  • Laconia
  • Londonderry
  • Manchester
  • Merrimack
  • Nashua
  • Portsmouth
  • Rochester
  • Salem
 


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