Michael Kimelman's Blog, page 4

March 13, 2017

February 25, 2017

How insider trading impacts everyday investors

Credit: Market Watch 


Steven Cohen, the former chairman of SAC Capital Advisors, is one of the most successful and notorious traders in Wall Street history. He made tens of millions of dollars trading stocks, and his firm was also the subject of a wide-reaching fraud investigation by the U.S. government for insider trading.


The Cohen story is the subject of “Black Edge,” a new nonfiction book by journalist Sheelah Kolhatkar, who joined MarketWatch for a Facebook Live interview. She discussed the Cohen case and insider trading in general, what this sort of crime means for ordinary investors, and what the outlook for fighting such crimes looks like under the Donald Trump administration. Watch the full interview here.


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Published on February 25, 2017 08:58

Former SAC Trader on What Steve Cohen Bio ‘Black Edge’ Doesn’t Explore

Credit: Andrew Beresin posted on the Observer


1998-2000 was a rather interesting period in the stock market, thanks to things like the Asian/Latin American currency crises, the collapse of Long Term Capital Management, and “irrational exuberance” in the Nasdaq market, followed immediately by whatever the polar opposite of that is, i.e. the Nasdaq going poof.


It was also a very interesting time to be working four feet from Steven A. Cohen, which is where I sat for two years as a junior trader at his hedge fund, SAC Capital Advisors, in Stamford, Connecticut.


From that vantage point I overheard Steve conduct thousands of trades, discuss hundreds of ideas with SAC traders (a few of those being with me), and utter remarkable rhetorical statements, such as, “Should I buy The Jets?”


During my four years on the main trading desk at SAC, I also participated in numerous discussions with other traders, analysts and portfolio managers, and many of the resulting ideas were then passed along to Steve.


So it is with great interest that I read the new book, Black Edge: Inside Information, Dirty Money, and the Quest to Bring Down the Most Wanted Man on Wall Street by New Yorker staff writer Sheelah Kolhatkar. In it are myriad and colorful details of how Cohen grew up, began his legendary trading career, and later launched his famed, namesake hedge fund. He got married, divorced and re-married along the way (par for the course on Wall Street—and Steve can stripe a golf ball, too). Then, several years ago, he came under scrutiny as part of a sweeping federal insider trading investigation of Wall Street’s hedge fund community by the Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission. This ultimately resulted in a guilty plea by SAC, and Cohen’s personal settlement of civil charges that he failed to supervise his employees.


While I can’t speak to anything that occurred after I left SAC in 2002, the culture that existed while I was there was one of extreme commitment and hard work. Steve set lofty goals both for himself and those who worked for him. The market is an unforgiving mother. Being on the right side of every trade is impossible, and SAC was certainly not immune.


I recall Steve exclaiming, “you wanna blow up today?” while commiserating with colleagues about a trade that, despite his best efforts to choose opportune entry points, had been nothing but an increasingly deep sea of red. But Steve played a different game when it came to raising or folding, and that’s what set him apart. He knew when, and whether, to do one versus the other better than any other trader.


Was there pressure to perform at SAC? Yes. How could there not be when your boss sits in the same room with you all day, sees what you are doing in real time, and just so happens to be freak-of-nature trader numero uno on Earth?


But what I observed from Steve during my time on the main desk at SAC was a disciplined, strict work ethic and a rigid commitment to doing things the right way. On more than one occasion I heard him bark, “do that again, you’re fired,” at someone he thought had crossed the line. And that was if he liked you. On other occasions, there was no first warning—one ethical miscue and you were gone.


In Black Edge the author recounts how investigators looked suspiciously on the timing of certain large trades Steve made. And while surrounding facts could understandably arouse suspicion, I can confirm that when it comes to Steve Cohen, making large trades quickly is akin to breathing for most folks. I watched the man routinely multi-task dozens of stocks, trading millions of shares at a time, leaving an entire room of execution clerks panting like an Iditarod dog sled team—all before 10 a.m.


Steve was the king of taking action swiftly and decisively, a vital discipline in trading, especially when it came to being proactive about managing a difficult position. If a position wasn’t working and you didn’t understand why, sell half of it, he used to say—and, if soon thereafter it still wasn’t working, sell half again, thereby reducing your position by 75 percent from its original size and dramatically cutting the risk of an overwhelmingly bad result. If you’ve ever traded a stock, raise your hand if that kind of advice would have saved you some money.


Of course, the crux of Black Edge boils down to, well, “black edge,” i.e. material non-public information (“MNPI”), and whether/to what extent SAC employees, primarily sector analysts, hunted it down like wild game, either out of their own desire to outperform the competition in order to get paid—and paid handsomely—or at the behest of their supervising portfolio managers, including Steve himself.


Several times throughout the book the author makes reference to pressure SAC placed on its analysts to come up with proprietary trading ideas and to make sure that their highest-conviction ideas were passed along to Steve, but without too much detail in order to insulate him, e.g., by simply ranking such ideas on a 1-to-10 scale. However, knowing how Steve traded—at least during the years I sat on the desk—such a simple, numbered ranking scale should be no surprise, and it is certainly not sinister on its face. Steve only wanted to know where his people stood so that he could take action accordingly. If you loved an idea, he was in, and if you no longer loved it, he was out, often before you finished telling him.


What Black Edge doesn’t explore enough, or even at all, is the possibility that SAC research analysts may have buried MNPI they had secretly acquired and simply relied on it to express higher conviction about the trades than their otherwise extensive, legitimate research and modeling work called for. This way, the analysts would look that much smarter when the trading profits came rolling in and, most importantly to them, at bonus time. After all, why would an analyst voluntarily disclose that ideas were based on illegal MNPI and not his own hard work?


The book also highlights that the government ended up not charging Cohen personally with insider trading, only with the failure to supervise his employees, which frustrated investigators and prosecutors. But this should really be no surprise. When I arrived at SAC in 1998, Steve’s ability to supervise his employees was unfettered. We all sat within earshot—the research, portfolio management and trading was largely done right in front of him.


When I left in 2002, however, SAC was employing sector analysts who circled the globe regularly, were rarely in the office, and may have been tough for Steve to pick out of a lineup. Whatever research these analysts were performing was happening in their own version of “dark pools,” often in other time zones across the international date line. Try supervising that while personally trading a billion-dollar pad from a chilly, shades-drawn trading desk in Connecticut.


I’ve often said that a big difference between Steve Cohen and the rest of us sitting in the room with him was that you could cut the phone lines and kill the power to the building, save for his stock ticker and his order-entry machine, and Steve would still come out alive with a positive p&l. But you can’t teach that. If he could, he might’ve gone ahead and flipped that kill switch himself—it would have kept any “black edge” out and saved him a lot of hassle.


Andrew D. Beresin is a practicing securities attorney, former hedge fund trader, and a senior consultant with UnderwoodFX. He represents Wall Street firms and individuals in compliance, enforcement defense, and regulatory advisory matters, and provides expert services on exchange-listed trading. Beresin is a former federal district court judicial clerk and a graduate of Harvard Law School.


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Published on February 25, 2017 08:37

Editorial Review

“Kimelman delivers a taut page-turner that gives readers an inside seat at the real life Billions that are a daily part of the cutthroat world of proprietary traders. He also exposes a criminal justice system in which prosecutors will do anything to win a case and questions of innocence are far less important than notching a victory. In this disturbing and cautionary tale from the inner sanctums of Wall Street to Federal prison, Kimelman ultimately tells a singular and riveting tale of survival and endurance.” – Gerald Posner, author of God’s Bankers: A History of Money and Power at the Vatican


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Published on February 25, 2017 07:51

What ‘Billions’ Gets Right About Insider Trading

By Joe Nocera, Bloomberg View Columnist



“Billions” is back on Showtime — Season 2 began on Sunday — and aren’t you glad? From the start, “Billions” has been a guilty pleasure, a drama about Wall Street that may lack the highbrow seriousness of, say, the Sopranos, but more than makes up for it with wicked portrayals and campy fun.


The central plotline of “Billions” revolves around an epic struggle between a U.S. attorney named Chuck Rhoades (played by Paul Giamatti) and the fictional hedge fund titan Bobby “Axe” Axelrod (played by Damian Lewis). Rhoades is convinced that Axelrod is crooked — guilty of insider trading — and he’s hell-bent on bringing him down. If that sounds familiar, it should: Andrew Ross Sorkin, the financial journalist and co-creator of the show (and a friend and former colleague, I should note) took inspiration for it, in part, from a real-life epic struggle: the one between U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara and hedge fund titan Steven “Stevie” Cohen.


To view the full article please click here 




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Published on February 25, 2017 07:47

February 23, 2017

Confessions of a Wall Street Insider

Although he was a suburban husband and father, living a far different life than the “Wolf of Wall Street,” Michael Kimelman had a good run as the cofounder of a hedge fund. He had left a cushy yet suffocating job at a law firm to try his hand at the high-risk life of a proprietary trader — and he did pretty well for himself. But it all came crashing down in the wee hours of November 5, 2009, when the Feds came to his door—almost taking the door off its hinges. While his wife and children were sequestered to a bedroom, Kimelman was marched off in embarrassment in view of his neighbors and TV crews who had been alerted in advance. He was arrested as part of a huge insider trading case, and while he was offered a “sweetheart” no-jail probation plea, he refused, maintaining his innocence.


The lion’s share of Confessions of a Wall Street Insider was written while Kimelman was an inmate at Lewisburg Penitentiary. In nearly two years behind bars, he reflected on his experiences before incarceration—rubbing elbows and throwing back far too many cocktails with financial titans and major figures in sports and entertainment (including Leonardo DiCaprio, Alex Rodriguez, Ben Bernanke, and Alan Greenspan, to drop a few names); making and losing hundreds of thousands of dollars in daily gambles on the Street; getting involved with the wrong people, who eventually turned on him; realizing that none of that mattered in the end. As he writes: “Stripped of family, friends, time, and humanity, if there’s ever a place to give one pause, it’s prison . . . Tomorrow is promised to no one.” In Confessions of a Wall Street Insider, he reveals the triumphs, pains, and struggles, and how, in the end, it just might have made him a better person.


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Published on February 23, 2017 14:03

November 16, 2016

Editorial Review

“Kimelman is guilty of one thing: writing a helluva book. If you want a front row seat to a Wall Street witch-hunt – read this.” – Turney Duff, bestselling author of The Buy Side

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Published on November 16, 2016 05:27