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Kcg Holdings Class A

Kcg Holdings Class A (KCG)

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KCG Discussion

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BlueAlien BlueAlien 8 years ago
whats happening here with ownership???
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 8 years ago
KCG - Just shuffling the chairs on the deck of the Titanic as the band plays.

Good Luck!
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BigBake1 BigBake1 8 years ago
How is that awesome short position going?
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stock1ace1 stock1ace1 8 years ago
18.50$ up easy $ :P
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TheFinalCD TheFinalCD 8 years ago
$18 potential bid http://finviz.com/quote.ashx?t=KCG
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janice shell janice shell 8 years ago
Wow. That is absolutely idiotic.
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doinit doinit 8 years ago
one of best posts i ever read,,,still is ,,..


newparadigm Saturday, 08/11/12 05:16:32 PM
Re: Daylas post# 4794
Post # of 9180
Regarding securities Knight naked shorted/counterfeited that are still trading if they should rise in price drastically someone has to buy them back even if Knights gone.
For example I use TDA and I do own securities I know have been shorted , Knight goes under the pps of security XYZ goes up and I sell at current market bid/ask TDA has to buy my securities or I can issue a news release under their ticker symbol via my legal representation announcing TDA sold me fake shares, TDA will not allow this to happen or their stock would plummet as fast as KCG.Knight may also have to hold a bond on these short positions and the bond issuer would be liable(not certain on this aspect)

Ironically I do own fake shares in TDA that I can prove were created in large part by Knight and on numerous occasions the people in the settlement dept claimed they have NEVER heard of Knight as a MM and are un sure if TDA uses them. LOL recently they admitted they do and even produced 3 share audits for me that indicate which mm created or sold said electronic digits(something they claimed was impossible unless the SEC mandated them to do it). I am persistent and did indeed receive interesting information regarding whom sold me "shares" TDA loves to say "WE DONT SELL SECURITIES, WE JUST MATCH YOU UP WITH SOMEONE" which technically is true but UM ER all my digits are held in TDAs accounts for me in street name. I do not "own" any shares nor does anyone else, the DTCC is the actual owner who keeps those magical shares in a safe place for TDA for me.
Anyone thats up on the history of fractional reserve lending should remember the goldsmiths of long ago held your gold and gave out a receipt, after many years the gold keepers realized 90% of the gold was always in the vault and only 10% was ever out in circulation, soooooo they decided to steal the bulk of the real gold, keep 10% on hand for the public to exchange, and fractional reserve lending (COUNTERFEITING) was born!
Today any bank thats part of the nonfederal reserve takes their reserves and magically multiplies that by a minimum factor of 10 (it fluctuates and can be much higher)They create money out of thin air.
Simple terms Joey sixpack locks his savings up in bankscamco and that bank lends out 10 times that amount (air money)and charges interest on it say average 8% x 10 =80% interest and gives Joey 1% back.

Your shares(electronic digits invented by Bernie Madoff) are held by TDA at the DTCC to keep them "safe" legally you do not own anything.
The DTCC is a self regulating criminal cabal that can and does hide all the evidence and has been rumored they even refuse majority shareholders(51%) of said company from seeing their records.

Thank GOD they did away with those old pieces of paper that can be verified I mean after all who can tell one electronic digit from another...or a few billion?

Add in the SEC, an agency created after the engineered crash of 1929 to create the illusion of oversight!
Secretive....oh so secretive and for decades they seem to miss the boat on thousands of Bernie Madoffs even when they are being handed all the proof they need to crack the case, they say golly we iz just undermanned and or stoopid? Shucks wheeze sorry but PULEEEZE keep allowing the same bozo clowns to run this charade, after all we are experts and stock thangs are complicated and the common folks dont understand them big words, YUK YUK
CANT COMMENT ON ONGOING CASES ITS ALL SUPER SECRET STUFF BUT TRUST US ANYHOW.

No the word secret is repugnant and is employed to cover criminal actions , coverups and collusion.
The SEC is a total fraud on a grand scale, not everyone who works there however is bad, they control investigations at choke points and the subordinate wild eyed young lawyers all gungho to do whats right are manipulated to comply or be fired, those who play ball the correct way leave and get a nice job sitting on the BOD of a company they once "regulated" or looked the other way, those who do not comply get fired and one former employee (lawyer) sued the SEC and won, got a large payoff and forced the SEC to prosecute a high profile case with buddies that were politically connected. VERY interesting case, google and read Pandora's box has been open for some time.

Sorry for the rant but our system is systematically corrupt to the core and by sharing the truth we are making a difference.\

Peace and Profits

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utamaro71 utamaro71 8 years ago
Glad to see some posting here. I've learned my lesson and no longer post opinions on these boards. KCG will continue to fleece the American public without penalty. The last glitch resulted in a paltry few million dollar fine, after a 300M+ tax write down gift from the government. I know, certain people will defend this company to the death, claiming KCG's legitimacy for its standing on the big board. KCG AND it's kind must be allowed to continue with their criminal conduct inorder for the financial house of cards to stay afloat. I'm hoping we can stay afloat for at least 5 years more, my egg will be sufficient enough to walk away from the day to day corruption taking place.
This has been my third time taking money from kcg got out this time at 15.03. I really wish it would go back to 3.00 but I believe if it falls like that again, nothing will recover.
Remember the so called computer glitch which knight went through a couple years back. The first day the number was staggering, by the third day the clean up was well under way, with the losses dropping daily until they settled on a number that would appease most people who have little understanding of money. And then, as stated before, the government allowed them to take 300M+ tax credit, on money they had lost investors, of course the investors received not one penny of compensation and reduced their "fine" to under 50m and no one went to jail, as certain posters have pointed out, IT WAS A COMPUTER GLITCH!!!!
Thanks for the rant, have a great weekend
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 8 years ago
KCG - Correction coming. No doubt excuses will be made by the talking heads on CNBC...

Tic Toc
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Militia Man Militia Man 8 years ago
First start with arrogance. Have to have a massive boat load of it to start with. The 100% right crowd are in bed with them making it work come hell or high water. Being able to sell/borrow something they never intend to physically buy and or borrow for billions and billions of shares reeks of it. Getting away with stealing for decades now is wading thin on the markets. So thin they would prefer to shut the OTC down al together. What a perfect scam. Kill one of the most """" corrupt """ liquid markets said to be out there (buyer beware) so in effect those that are the real cause of the corruption (mm, broker dealers, etc..) don't have to ever make good on all those fake shares (so they think) that are on the hook for. Did you notice the wording in the sec report that used the words systemic risk. Powerful words from the so called highest authority wouldn't you say? Words like that and having public information accumulated now from the 100% right crowd knowing which companies to target and be right 100% of the time must now be talked about in those meetings that took place to have to use terms as powerful as that. Systemic risk. How many stocks can we prove on one Hand that traded while in one case never even DTCC eligible and let to go defunct? Lol
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AlanC AlanC 8 years ago
Is it magic or captured regulators?
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 8 years ago
KCG - One has to ask how NITE, UBS, Citadel, et al could get away with such transparent manipulation of the markets and of the data.

The most recent account of Knight being an agent of money laundering for tax evasion purposes is quite plausible.

Remember, no shares are actually sold by insiders. And no cash ever hits the balance sheet of any of the companies that these fictitious counterparties "invest in"...
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Militia Man Militia Man 8 years ago
Yes, even T-3 minutes
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 8 years ago
KCG - When market makers, such as NITE, know all the loopholes, they could make it T-1 and they would still find a way to game the system.

Speaking of T-1...

Things are about to get interesting AGAIN for KCG...

Blame it on another glitch...

Tic Toc
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Militia Man Militia Man 8 years ago
Interesting read..

https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/2016/34-78962.pdf

SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (“Commission”) proposes to amend
Rule 15c6-1(a) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”) to shorten the
standard settlement cycle for most broker-dealer transactions from three business days after the
trade date (“T+3”) to two business days after the trade date (“T+2”). The proposed amendment
is designed to reduce a number of risks, including credit risk, market risk, and liquidity risk and,
as a result, reduce systemic risk for U.S. market participants.
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janice shell janice shell 8 years ago
Knight is being exposed in the Jehu Hand investigation. Bragging about how his band of merry men were paying off Knight traders to aid and abet.

I'm sure you can provide a citation for that. While dirty brokers often play a role in pumpadump schemes, they're usually from nickel bds.
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 8 years ago
KCG - Of course it is alleged to be rubbish.

Knight is being exposed in the Jehu Hand investigation. Bragging about how his band of merry men were paying off Knight traders to aid and abet.

I know, I know, Knight also pays handsomely to keep the revenue stream alive.

Tic Toc

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AlanC AlanC 8 years ago
I hope it is not removed by administration.
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janice shell janice shell 8 years ago
As you say, it won't have any effect on KCG. Why not? Because it's the same ten year old conspiracy stuff. Rubbish then, rubbish now.

The author should have done some actual research.
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 8 years ago
KCG - This is the Part that should send KCG tanking...

But that won't happen because these clowns are protected.

Or will it finally be the end of the line for the collaborating parties?

https://theintercept.com/2016/09/28/the-half-billion-dollar-glitch/

Tic Toc
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AlanC AlanC 8 years ago
THE MONEY IS GONE
David Dayen
Sep. 22 2016, 12:49 p.m.

The Penny Stock Chronicles
Part 1

After a stock analyst lost $1 million on one penny stock, he set off to find out how — and soon discovered signs of a far bigger scheme than he had ever imagined.


CHRIS DIIORIO HAD just lost a million dollars.

This was back in 2006. DiIorio, who was 39 at the time, had recently moved with his new wife from Boston to Castle Pines, Colorado, a leafy suburb of Denver, and was toiling in finance as a market researcher, analyzing the financial statements of public companies and giving recommendations to portfolio managers.

He had previously worked on Wall Street as an institutional equity trader and research analyst for a subsidiary of the now-defunct investment bank Donaldson, Lufkin, and Jenrette. He had 13 years experience executing massive trades for large mutual fund clients like Fidelity and Putnam.

But in his new life, DiIorio happened upon a technology company called E Mobile (symbol: EMTK ), a small computer chipmaker that claimed to hold patents on an antenna-type Wi-Fi router and other products. He reviewed company press releases, as well as investor chatter online claiming that E Mobile’s chips were provoking interest from Chinese content companies.

E Mobile didn’t trade on the New York Stock Exchange or Nasdaq, however. It was an over-the-counter stock, traded on an electronic exchange called the Pink Sheets that is home to what are commonly called “penny stocks.”

A penny stock is actually any equity that trades for $5 a share or less. But many shares can be had for a literal penny, or even a fraction of one. They are purchased on the Pink Sheets and the over-the-counter Bulletin Board market, through your regular brokerage account.


Not every penny stock is suspect; some are simply startup companies working their way to larger exchanges. But they do lurk on the dark edges of the financial markets, with sudden volumes and massive volatility. Regulation and reporting vary from light to nonexistent.

“They don’t have the same standards,” said Joseph Borg, director of the Alabama Securities Commission, who achieved fame by investigating Jordan “The Wolf of Wall Street” Belfort’s company Stratton Oakmont for penny stock fraud in the 1990s. “Willie Sutton said he robbed banks because that’s where the money is. This is the easiest place to manipulate something.”

The Pink Sheets’ own website warns that it “offers trading in a wide spectrum of securities” and that “With no minimum financial standards, this market includes foreign companies that limit their disclosure, penny stocks and shells, as well as distressed, delinquent, and dark companies not willing or able to provide adequate information to investors. As Pink requires the least in terms of company disclosure, investors are strongly advised to proceed with caution and thoroughly research companies before making any investment decisions.”

But DiIorio didn’t know that at the time.

On Wall Street, he had executed multimillion share trades, usually of blue chip companies that make up the Dow Jones Industrial Average, like IBM or General Electric.

“I had never invested in a penny stock before,” DiIorio said. “I was not super sophisticated in this world.” But he decided to take a flyer on E Mobile, based on its promising news. “I bought this company on hype.”

Between February and May 2005, DiIorio bought over 3.7 million shares of E Mobile, mostly through his rollover IRA account with TD Ameritrade . The total cost: $100,000, or a little over 3 cents a share. It was a big position, but this was retirement money he was trying to grow, and if it paid off, the payday would be tremendous.

E Mobile bounced around for a year, not doing much. The CEO, Nan Hu, personally called DiIorio, asking him to invest more through a “private placement”: an off-market offering of stock to select investors.

DiIorio declined. “I was already up to my eyeballs. I said, ‘I’m good with my position.’” Attempts to reach Hu for comment were unsuccessful.

Then, in March 2006, E Mobile announced a “reverse merger” with Best Rate Travel, a private company specializing in online vacation booking. Adrian Stone replaced Hu as CEO. To DiIorio, it was a puzzling maneuver for a chipmaker. “They announced a merger with a travel company?” he said. “What the fuck?”

As part of the merger, E Mobile changed its name to Best Rate Travel, altered its stock ticker symbol to BTVL , and did a 1-1,000 “reverse stock split.”

You’ve probably heard of a stock split; it can happen when a company’s share price gets unmanageably high. So when a stock hits, say, $200, investors who owned one share receive two, each priced at $100.

Well, the opposite can happen, too. Best Rate Travel’s reverse split gave existing investors like DiIorio way fewer shares — at a way higher price.

As a major shareholder, DiIorio was offered a slightly better deal: a conversion to preferred shares of E Mobile at a lower reverse split rate of 1-to-30, and then a conversion at 3-to-1 to Best Rate Travel. After all that, he was left with 373,599 BTVL shares.

The merger hype, repeated in a feedback loop of positive press releases, moved the stock. DiIorio recalls it peaking at $3.50 by September 2006, giving his holdings a value of around $1.3 million.

“I thought this was the exception to everything I knew about the markets,” DiIorio said. “Cheap stocks are cheap for a reason.” But the success fed DiIorio’s ego. He felt like he beat the odds, vindicating his stock-picking acumen.

There was a problem, however. Best Rate Travel structured the conversion with a “lock-up” agreement, restricting shareholders like DiIorio from selling the stock for a year . This is common for newly public companies.

But it left DiIorio helpless when the stock plummeted from $3.50 to $0.06 a share within two months.

DiIorio initially saw it as a classic “pump-and-dump” scheme, where major investors in a company lure in other investors with overhyped claims, raising the stock price, and then sell their shares, leading to a drop. Pump-and-dumps have proliferated with the rise of internet message boards. “It’s not just promoters calling you on the phone anymore,” said Laura Posner, bureau chief of the New Jersey Bureau of Securities. “People pretend to be other people, pretend to have inside information.”

But to DiIorio, BTVL’s drop didn’t make sense, because prior shareholders were prohibited from trading the stock. “I called the CEO regularly and said: ‘Who’s selling the stock? How is this happening? The stock is not for sale.’ He told me that he was locked up too.” Phone numbers and email addresses listed for CEO Adrian Stone no longer function, so he could not be reached for comment.

By the end, DiIorio took a loss from the peak stock value of well over $1 million. “I never saw such devastation in a stock before,” he said.


A Real Head-Scratcher

DiIorio prided himself on being a savvy trader.

And the implosion of Best Rate Travel, given the lock-up period, shouldn’t have occurred. DiIorio wanted to understand what really happened to crush his investment so completely. And he had the background in financial market analysis to see it through.

So DiIorio started learning what firms traded Best Rate Travel. The biggest two by far were the giant Swiss bank UBS and a massive New Jersey-based company named Knight Capital.

He thought these were very big names to be involved in such an obscure penny stock.

Something fishy was going on, but DiIorio had no idea what. “I just thought, what the hell, I’m going to figure this out.”



The Penny Stock Chronicles
David Dayen, a persistent chronicler of how oligarchs exploit the financial system to enrich themselves at the expense of others, writes about Chris DiIorio, a stock analyst who for 10 years has obsessively investigated how exactly he came to lose $1 million on one penny stock. A remarkable story ensues.


https://theintercept.com/2016/09/22/the-money-is-gone/


===================


BIG PLAYERS, LITTLE STOCKS, AND NAKED SHORTS
David Dayen
Sep. 23 2016, 12:16 p.m.

The Penny Stock Chronicles
Part 2

A self-appointed stock sleuth finds financial giants trading extensively in little penny stocks like the one he owned that tanked. And he learns something amazing: Some brokers can sell shares that don’t actually exist.


CHRIS DIIORIO HAD lost a million dollars when the penny stock he was betting on shed 98 percent of its value in a matter of weeks. But when he looked deeper, he found this wasn’t a typical penny stock pump-and-dump scheme. He was determined to get to the bottom of it.

For one thing, there were two huge companies involved.

UBS , one of the world’s largest private banks, seemed to have no business trading in penny stocks. “This was a $50 billion-plus bank, it didn’t seem like penny stocks would move the needle,” DiIorio said. But just in December 2011, UBS’s trades in 32 penny stocks represented over half of the firm’s total share volume, according to his calculations.
In a one-line response to a series of detailed questions from The Intercept, UBS media relations director Peter Stack wrote in an email: “UBS applies strict due diligence and anti-money-laundering standards to all its business.”

After some research, DiIorio became even more disturbed by the presence of the other company, Knight Capita l, which has traded an average of more than 2 billion shares of penny stocks daily for the past three years.

Based in Jersey City, N.J., Knight is what is called a “market maker,” a dealer that facilitates trading by actually holding shares itself, if ever so briefly, so investors can buy and sell without any delay. “They’re selling the service of convenience to investors, like a car dealer makes it easier to buy or sell a car quickly,” said Jim Angel, an associate professor specializing in market structure at Georgetown University.

Knight Capital is a giant in the field; it alone was responsible for 11 percent of all trading in U.S. stocks by volume as of 2012. It’s known in particular for speed. The ability to jump in and out of stocks quickly through electronic markets is attractive to customers and enables Knight to trade nearly $30 billion every single day. “Market making is a business where the spreads are small but the volumes are large,” Angel said. The spread is the difference between the buy price and the sell price, and it’s how Knight makes money.

DiIorio looked closely at how Knight operated. He determined that between 80 and 90 percent of its share volumes came from penny and fractional penny stocks . According to DiIorio’s calculations, Knight traded over 10 trillion shares of OTC and Pink Sheets securities from 2004 to 2012.

This level of volume persists — the most recent statistics show that 73 percent of the company’s equity share volumes in August 2016 came from penny stocks, and 81 percent as recently as May.

A share in a penny stock is worth magnitudes less than a share in Google or Apple. But the spreads — where the market makers cash in — are proportionately bigger on a penny stock. For example, if the market maker earns a penny per share of a $50 stock, that’s only a spread of .02 percent. But a stock worth 25 cents where a market maker sees even a tenth of a penny in profit represents a spread of 2 percent — a 100-fold increase.

Still, DiIorio wondered how much volume a broker would need to make any money through penny stock trading. “You would have to move hundreds of millions of shares per trade,” he said.

And, because his personal investigation had started after his shares in a company called Best Rate Travel tanked precipitously, he also wondered: Why was Knight so involved with them in particular?

While DiIorio was mulling that, he started talking to his fellow traders and reading rumors online from owners of dozens of small companies who blamed the rapid destruction of their penny stocks on a practice known as naked short selling.

Let’s take that step by step. A short sale, generally speaking, is a bet that a stock price will drop over time. Typically, short sellers borrow shares of a stock from a broker and sell them on the open market, hoping to buy them back at a cheaper price in the future and make money on the exchange. This can become a self-fulfilling prophecy, if done right. Short selling can cause a market panic, and the prices drop in the frenzy.

But in naked short selling, you don’t even borrow the stock. You sell additional, phantom shares. This is even more likely to drive down the price than regular shorting, because suddenly the supply is larger but the demand is the same. “I can think of a number of stocks where the shares on the short exceeded the shares ever issued by the company,” said Alabama Securities Commission Director Joseph Borg. “You can’t do that unless it’s naked.”

Naked short selling is, not surprisingly, illegal in most circumstances.

But market makers like Knight have an exemption from naked short selling restrictions, on the grounds that they use the practice to maintain liquidity in markets. For example, if there’s high demand for a stock, the market maker can fill orders even if it doesn’t have the shares available.

As the Securities and Exchange Commission explains, “A market maker engaged in bona fide market making, particularly in a fast-moving market, may need to sell the security short without having arranged to borrow shares.” This often occurs in thinly traded stocks, like penny stocks.

DiIorio reasoned that naked short selling would explain where all the trades were coming from on Best Rate Travel; while he and his counterparts were locked into their investments for a year after the company’s merger, maybe someone was flooding the market with shares and battering the stock with ease.

At this point, DiIorio had no evidence that Knight did anything but facilitate trades. But he began to suspect that Knight somehow used naked short selling for its own devices. DiIorio’s attempts to get some explanations from Knight were brushed off — as were The Intercept’s during the reporting of this series.

Did Knight manipulate the stock price of Best Rate Travel, costing DiIorio and other investors millions? If so, why? Who benefited? Who needed this obscure, tiny penny stock to tank?

The Penny Stock Chronicles
David Dayen, a persistent chronicler of how oligarchs exploit the financial system to enrich themselves at the expense of others, writes about Chris DiIorio, a stock analyst who for 10 years has obsessively investigated how exactly he came to lose $1 million on one penny stock. A remarkable story ensues.


https://theintercept.com/2016/09/23/big-playe...ed-shorts/

===========================

NAKED SHORTS CAN’T STAY NAKED FOREVER
David Dayen
Sep. 24 2016, 12:49 p.m.

The Penny Stock Chronicles
Part 3

Who engages in massive trades in penny stocks on the industry’s own “chill list”? And what happens when you sell a stock you don’t have? Victimized investor Chris DiIorio finds the answers in plain sight and wonders why no one else seems to care.


A FEW YEARS into his personal quest to understand how he had lost a million dollars on a penny stock, Chris DiIorio developed a sweeping hypothesis involving Knight Capital, the mammoth brokerage company that frequently traded in them.

Knight earned $333 million in pre-tax profits in 2008, and another $232 million in 2009. But DiIorio didn’t think Knight was making that kind of money simply from executing transactions for clients.

As a market maker, Knight was in the rare position of being able to legally sell a stock it didn’t have (the principle being that it will get that stock soon, so no worries). That’s called naked shorting. It’s illegal when regular people do it.

DiIorio suspected that Knight, either on its own behalf or on behalf of clients, made a practice of artificially increasing the number of shares available in a stock through naked shorting, thereby depressing the price.

His suspicion grew when he noticed that Knight often traded in securities that were red-flagged on the Depository Trust Company’s “chill list.”

The DTC is an obscure financial industry-owned company that manages the custody of more than $1 quadrillion in securities annually, recording the transfers with journal entries and guaranteeing the trade. The company makes it easy for people to buy and sell securities without needing to exchange paper stock.

But when the DTC senses trouble, it will stop clearing trades on a stock temporarily.

A chilled stock can still trade — as long as the market participants handle the physical certificates themselves. But it can be a sign that something is gravely wrong. The DTC states on its website that it chills stocks “when there are questions about an issuer’s compliance with applicable law.”

That doesn’t stop Knight from buying and selling them, though. Its chief legal officer, Thomas Merritt, acknowledged at a 2011 Securities and Exchange Commission roundtable that the company actively traded chilled stocks, saying that as long as the security still trades, “we are going to be involved in that business.” And DiIorio found numerous examples of Knight trading chilled penny stocks.

“I didn’t know they did that,” said Jim Angel, a Georgetown University business school professor. “I’m kind of shocked to think that Knight would be working with paper stock certificates.”

He suggested that Knight might simply want to accommodate customers trying to get out of chilled stocks. “Or maybe they feel there’s enough interest in a security that they can trade profitably, even if they have to shuffle the certificates.”

Because most other market makers flee chilled stocks, however, this means Knight can assume even more control over the stock price.

Naked Manipulation

The thing about naked short sales is they can’t stay naked forever.

Even if you don’t have the stock when you sell it, at some point it is expected that you hand it over.

And even with its market-maker exemption, Knight is required by SEC rules to eventually deliver the shares in a naked short transaction to the buyer and close out the trade.

Not doing so results in a “fail to deliver,” which DiIorio describes as the securities version of an IOU. And that IOU comes with rules: Under the SEC’s Regulation SHO, short sellers have to cough up the stock within one day of incurring the fail. Routine failures to deliver can lead to fines by the SEC, or even a ban from the securities markets.

Instead of complying with the rule, however, DiIorio alleges that Knight circumvented it by manipulating an obscure process within the machinery of the nation’s clearing system known as the “Obligation Warehouse.”

This service facilitates the matching of self-cleared trades ( often known as “ex-clearing” ) that don’t go through the DTC — for instance if the stock was chilled.

The Obligation Warehouse instead simply asks the buyer and seller of these ex-cleared trades if they “know” the transaction. If they both agree, the trade gets confirmed with a journal entry — and the buyer receives their stock purchase. It actually shows up in the buyer’s brokerage account.

The trades still have active IOUs, but according to DiIorio’s theory, buyers wouldn’t clamor for the trades to be closed because they would’ve already received their purchase.

If true, this would allow Knight to bury its naked short trades.

“They set up a shadow clearing system,” DiIorio said.

Furthermore, DiIorio recognized what he considered a persistent cycle in the stocks Knight traded. After being beaten down through what he suspected was naked shorting, they would often engage in a reverse stock split or reverse merger, like E Mobile did with Best Rate Travel in the trade that ended up losing DiIorio over $1 million.

This, he observed, could enable Knight to rerun the scheme over and over again, pummeling the stock price and then letting it move back up like a yo-yo.

Laura Posner of the New Jersey Securities Commission said constant reverse splits would require a coordinated relationship between the penny stock issuer and the broker-dealer. “I know that there are situations in which fraudsters will take advantage of a stock split to commit fraud,” Posner said. “But it’s different than a typical pump-and-dump, where you don’t have to have a personal relationship.”

Alternately, the cycle could be a cat-and-mouse game playing out between the short sellers and the stock issuers. Hawk Associates, a consulting firm to small companies, recommends that penny stock issuers victimized by naked shorting engage in reverse mergers and/or reverse splits to stop the rapid degradation of their stock price. “It may be useful as part of a larger strategy to deter naked shorting,” the firm writes on its website. “This may be more trouble than it’s worth, however. Once the new shares are in circulation, there’s nothing to stop a new round of naked shorting by determined parties.”
Knight’s involvement with suspicious stocks following this same pattern kept cropping up.

For example, NewLead Holdings ( NEWL ) — a shipping company with a mining concern on the side that was accused in federal court of having “no coal mines, no coal, and no ability whatsoever to engage in the coal business” — engaged in 1-1,125,000 worth of reverse splits over nine months in 2013 and 2014, meaning that 1,000 shares prior to the splits were equivalent to 0.0008 shares afterward. NewLead did another 1-300 stock split just this spring; it now trades as NEWLF, at 0.00030 as of August 23. Its 2015 annual report admits, “There is substantial doubt about our ability to continue as a going concern.”

FreeSeas ( FREE ), another penny stock, did a 1-60 reverse split on January 15 of this year, and then another 1-200 split on April 13, changing its stock symbol to FREEF. The company has engaged in seven reverse splits in the last five years; someone with 900 million shares five years ago would have one share today, trading at less than a penny. The company’s annual report says it currently has no employees. Private equity firm Havensight Capital made an alleged bid to purchase FreeSeas in June at $0.43 a share, about 80 times its price at the time of this writing, which FreeSeas called “false and misleading.”

While one might think this cycle of splits and price declines would trigger red flags with federal regulators, Joseph Borg of the Alabama Securities Commission doubted they would pay attention. “It’s like asking the SEC, of all the 35,000 private placements issued, you look at how many? And if they were telling the truth they would say we’re putting them in a drawer,” Borg said. “Anything like that on miniscule levels, they just get filed away.”

Furthermore, while there are “circuit breaker” rules preventing short sales when a stock loses more than 10 percent of its value in a day, these swings were more gradual. Knight made a lot of money on these plays, not just from the spread in trading profits, but because it often traded on its own account rather than on behalf of customers, DiIorio concluded. When the stock dropped, Knight got rich from the short. And it could rerun this repeatedly.

“He’s got a theory that, without studying it, I see theoretically where he’s going with it,” concluded Borg. “It’s an interesting idea.”

Knight is now known as KCG . Its spokesperson Sophie Sohn declined to comment when asked about this and other matters.

Attempts to reach spokespeople at FreeSeas have proven unsuccessful. Elisa Gerouki, corporate communications manager at NewLead, asked me to prove he wrote for The Intercept; after I did so, Gerouki failed to respond to questions.

Where Naked Shorts Go to Die

DiIorio also spotted a significant, seemingly toxic byproduct of this sort of activity.

The Intercept.Reverse mergers and reverse splits typically result in a change in the CUSIP, the nine-digit identification symbol assigned to a public stock.
Once that CUSIP changes, the naked shorter has no apparent way to close out the naked short position. No stock under the old CUSIP number exists anymore; it all automatically converts to the new CUSIP.

Those trades can sit in the Obligation Warehouse forever, in theory. But the “aged fails” — essentially orphaned naked short transactions — remain on the naked shorter’s balance sheet as a liability to be paid later.

By DiIorio’s reckoning, then, the cycle of naked shorting and reverse splits would inevitably result in an ever-increasing number of aged fails. And if that was happening, and those liabilities grew bigger and bigger, then federal regulators could see the outlines of the scheme on any financial statement.

DiIorio believed Knight accounted for its aged fails in the “sold not yet purchased” liability on its balance sheet. That’s supposed to be an inventory of stocks for use in future market making, which goes up and down as orders are filled. But DiIorio says it was a hiding place for a billowing structural liability.

And consider this: According to its own financial reports, Knight’s “sold not yet purchased” liability jumped from $385 million at the beginning of 2008 to $1.9 billion by mid-2011 .

Jim Angel, the business professor, said there could be other explanations — such as Knight’s growth as a company during that period — for why the “sold not yet purchased” liability ballooned. But, he said, market makers are typically “in the moving, not storing, business, and like to keep their inventories as small as possible.”

DiIorio had no such doubts. He saw the fact that Knight was blowing a hole in its own balance sheet as undeniable evidence of the naked shorting play.

KCG spokesperson Sophie Sohn was asked specifically about that claim and declined to comment.

If DiIorio was correct, Knight was driving penny stocks down over and over again with naked shorting, then not actually closing the trades, and racking up enormous paper liabilities.

This was even more complicated than he thought. It was time to call the cops.

The Penny Stock Chronicles
David Dayen, a persistent chronicler of how oligarchs exploit the financial system to enrich themselves at the expense of others, writes about Chris DiIorio, a stock analyst who for 10 years has obsessively investigated how exactly he came to lose $1 million on one penny stock. A remarkable story ensues.


https://theintercept.com/2016/09/24/naked-sho...d-forever/


====

original link courtesy of basserdan

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fourkids_9pets fourkids_9pets 9 years ago
interesting to note terms *utilized* and assigned by *others* ..
were *NEVER* posted by this *alias* .. rather in 2009 i noted
that the *street* (et al) recognized the *opportunities* on offer .. ;)

http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=43461365

and proceeded to cut NN's PPS in half .. i also noted elsewhere
the planned implosions and rolling resets forwarded on by those who collude ..
my refrain back then was 2 down .. 2 to go .. now it's 3 down and 1 to go

note the timing of NN's 52 week high ..

KCG >>


Open 14.00
Day High 14.07
Day Low 13.90
Previous Close
05/27/2016 13.99
52-Week High
04/27/2016 14.20
52-Week Low
08/12/2015 9.75

Price Performance (Last 52 Weeks)
05/27/2016 +3.63%

Volume 135,460
Volume (10 day Average) 560,378
Volume (90 day Average) 521,741

it would appear after almost *7* years .. the passing of the trash is almost complete


that translates in SEC time to 2018 - 2020 *imo*

4kids



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janice shell janice shell 9 years ago
No they haven't. That would be more trouble than it's worth. And since they're both very big MMs, it would be very noticeable.

In addition, they're audited by FINRA every year. FINRA can also walk in and demand records at any time. So it's not a risk they'd take simply to short a bunch of worthless penny stocks naked.

And why would they even want to? They make money by making markets in penny stocks. Why kill the golden goose?
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 9 years ago
KCG - Because the likes of Knight and Citadel have figured out how to game to system.

But that is about to unravel.
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janice shell janice shell 9 years ago
Once again, if there are no threshold fails, there's no NSS. And 99% of all penny junk has no threshold fails.
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 9 years ago
KCG - Of course. We are back to the beginning. No such thing as NSS.

Good Luck!
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janice shell janice shell 9 years ago
Dream on...
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janice shell janice shell 9 years ago
And which ones would "those" be? No threshold fails, no NSS problem. It's really very simple.
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AlanC AlanC 9 years ago
Ajax seems now to have custody of those markers. Will they be in a position to cover/fund damages when the time comes? The US Supreme Court ruling has put a chink in the armor. Stay tuned.
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 9 years ago
KCG - Not yet...

But we all know that those naked short interest positions are all still open.

Tic Toc
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janice shell janice shell 9 years ago
And did any of those longed-for MOASSes result from Penson's demise?

Didn't think so.
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AlanC AlanC 9 years ago
I bet you thought that about Penson as well.
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janice shell janice shell 9 years ago
And that has what to do with not giving best execution, which is what the action in question is actually about?
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janice shell janice shell 9 years ago
Don't be silly, Alan. It's a jurisdictional issue. One that will make no difference at all to junk penny stocks that never even had threshold fails to deliver, let alone problematic naked shorts.

It'll be just anything in a very long list of things that were promised to "make Shorty pay", and didn't, because Shorty wasn't a problem.
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 9 years ago
KCG - Dozens of written accounts and warnings with regard to Nazarali. And hundreds of documented accounts of Citadel and Knight "shadowing" one another on the OTC.

Remember, they are only "fails to deliver" if the broker that your are "selling to" demands or requires that you show proof of a hard locate.

Tic Toc
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AlanC AlanC 9 years ago
This ruling is going to change the way business is done. Some will no doubt go bankrupt because of it: https://aminewswire.com/stories/510724790-naked-short-sellers-squeezed-by-supreme-court
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fourkids_9pets fourkids_9pets 9 years ago
It took the SEC and the DOJ this much time to finally put 2 and 2 together?

telling isn't it ~

4kids
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 9 years ago
KCG - Wait a second...

How many times did we post that Nazarali was a criminal and a fraudster?

In 2012, the head of KCG's electronic trading group, which included its wholesale market making arm, Jamil Nazarali, left the firm to join Citadel. Since then, Citadel's own wholesale market maker has grown substantially under Nazarali.

It took the SEC and the DOJ this much time to finally put 2 and 2 together?

http://www.reuters.com/article/usa-stocks-probe-idUSL2N1871ZV

Nazarali buried all of his naked short interest over at Citadel when he was at NITE. He moved over there to continue the scam. Both market makers made billions off of his criminal activities.

The who system is about to implode. And all of the guilty parties here and abroad will not submit easily.

Tic Toc
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fourkids_9pets fourkids_9pets 9 years ago
time will indeed tell ..

4kids
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AlanC AlanC 9 years ago
I would think today's decision by the Supreme Court will have a huge impact on some players in our markets. Which company will be the first to file?
I received this today by email from a friend:

US Supreme Court ruling today paves way to sue Reg SHO violators (short sellers) at state level!

May 16, 2016

This is EXTREMELY IMPORTANT to the MARKET INTEGRITY of the trading in your's and every other public company in the United States. After years of fighting against "naked short selling" (20 years from our efforts), the United States Supreme Court has blocked Wall Street's attempt to stop companies and its shareholders from suing them at the state level. The Supreme Court ruled this morning that companies and investors CAN SUE at the state level for Federal Securities Laws violations of Regulation SHO (rule governing short selling) and the RICO (anti-racketeering statute) can be applied! This is the beginning of the end for the practice of short stock without disclosing it, locating it, borrowing it, paying the interest rate to borrow it and never covering the short position. RICO violations are punishable as a criminal offense and jail time. We are the only company that has consolidated the tape of all 14 US stock exchanges and the TRADE IDENTIFIERS showing every trade in your stock that was a sell short (on a daily basis back to August 2009 and on a monthly basis back to January 2005). It's time to call us. We can help stop this activity that is going on in your stock!


Call Tom Ronk at 949-230-7680 or email tomronk@gmail.com to discuss.


Click here to download Supreme Court Decision:

www.buyins.com/supremecourt5-16-16.pdf
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janice shell janice shell 9 years ago
Frankly, I wonder if this will even result in the filing of a class action. After all, so far the stock price hasn't taken much of a hit.
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fourkids_9pets fourkids_9pets 9 years ago
it will certainly be interesting to see which *firms* troll for lead plaintiffs .. ;)

Detailed Quote:KCG
KCG HOLDINGS INC
13.03Up 0.03 (0.23 %)AS OF 4:02:02PM ET 05/13/2016


Last Trade 13.03
Trade Time 4:02:02pm ET

Change 0.03
% Change 0.23%

Previous Close
05/12/2016 13.00
52-Week High
04/27/2016 14.20
52-Week Low
08/12/2015 9.75

Price Performance (Last 52 Weeks)
05/12/2016 -2.55%

Volume 529,563
Volume (10 day Average) 708,670
Volume (90 day Average) 523,383

and a trip down memory lane .. .. from 12/1/2009 .. ;)

Detailed Quote:NITE
KNIGHT CAPITAL GROUP, INC.
14.48-0.16 (-1.09%)AS OF 4:00:06PM ET 12/01/2009

Last Trade 14.48
Trade Time 4:00:06PM ET

Today's Change -0.16
Today's % Change -1.09%

Open 14.80
Day High 14.89
Day Low 14.47
Previous Close Price
11/30/2009 14.64
52-Week High
10/14/2009 23.11 .. ;)
52-Week Low
03/30/2009 13.39


Volume 3,465,616
Average Volume (10-Day) 2,008,884
Average Volume (90-Day) 1,896,515


http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=44077765

3 down .. 1 to go .. :)

4kids
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AlanC AlanC 9 years ago
I wonder if Rosen will file a class action?
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janice shell janice shell 9 years ago
been waiting on this for *years*

You've been waiting for *years* for the SEC to announce an investigation into whether NITE consistently offered best execution to clients?

I don't think so. You realize, don't you, that this has nothing to do with the *conspiracy theories* so popular with the penny crowd?
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fourkids_9pets fourkids_9pets 9 years ago
Harwood Feffer LLP Announces Investigation of KCG Holdings, Inc.
Date : 05/13/2016 @ 12:27PM

been waiting on this for *years*

4kids
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AlanC AlanC 9 years ago
Who would have thunk it? Not good news imho:http://www.reuters.com/article/usa-stocks-probe-idUSL2N1871ZV
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ezey ezey 9 years ago
Missed by a smige today
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AlanC AlanC 9 years ago
Anyone know the dirty details of the Citadel deal?
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AlanC AlanC 9 years ago
Well I see some that paid GS huge amounts for borrows are now considering a lawsuit to get those fees back. We are taking big bucks. Going to be interesting to see the outcome.
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SevenTenEleven SevenTenEleven 9 years ago
KCG - NITE about to be exposed for using the F3 Key for every trade?

Never borrowing and never locating?

Or are they the victim of Goldman Sachs wire fraud, securities fraud, and tax fraud?

Tic Toc
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