Steve
Cohen’s Point72 says it has perfect U.S. compliance
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[March 18, 2016]
By Lawrence Delevingne and Jennifer Ablan
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Billionaire Steve
Cohen's investment firm, a family office that took over managing his
fortune in 2014 after his hedge fund pleaded guilty to securities fraud,
has a perfect regulatory compliance record, its president said on
Thursday.
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Point72 Asset Management, which manages about $11 billion and took
over after regulators barred Cohen's SAC Capital Advisors from
dealing with the public, has had “zero point zero” compliance and
regulatory problems, Point72 President Doug Haynes said in an
interview.
The firm succeeded SAC Capital Advisors, Cohen's hedge fund firm
which pleaded guilty to securities fraud in an insider-trading
settlement with U.S. regulators that also included a $1.8 billion
fine.
In an interview with Reuters at Point72's Stamford, Connecticut
headquarters, Haynes said the firm's compliance culture goes beyond
strict legal parameters.
“We have professional standards, and you get fired if you violate
them," he said.
Haynes, a veteran of consulting firm McKinsey & Co., said compliance
staff has increased 25 percent since Chief Compliance and
Surveillance Officer Vincent Tortorella was hired in April 2014.
He said Tortorella, a former federal prosecutor, has changed the way
Point72 does surveillance of its investment professionals. The
compliance staff includes former personnel from the Central
Intelligence Agency, Federal Bureau of Investigation and Securities
and Exchange Commission.
It employs technology from the likes of Palantir, a data
analysis-focused company used by government agencies and others.
Even so, Point72’s trading still draws attention.
This week, influential financial blog ZeroHedge asked in a post if
Cohen was "back to his criminal ways," suggesting Point72 might have
had traded on inside information.
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The question came after Celator Pharmaceuticals shares appreciated
Tuesday and Wednesday roughly 458 percent. The surge stemmed from
news of Celator’s successful test of its new leukemia treatment
VYXEOS, which was released on Monday after the market close.
In a filing on Tuesday after the market close, Point72 revealed an
8.3 percent stake in Celator, or over 2.8 million shares.
ZeroHedge asked: "Why did SAC go long Celator Pharmaceuticals in the
days immediately preceding the company's March 14 favorable Phase 3
trial result of Vyxeos for Acute Myeloid Leukemia? What was the
investment thesis/catalyst for this decision."
A spokesman at Point72 said: “The ZeroHedge post is ... false, wrong
and absolutely inaccurate.
“Point72 did not purchase any Celator shares before the company made
its March 14th announcement," the spokesman added. "Point72 only
purchased Celator shares after the March 14 announcement.”
(Reporting by Jennifer Ablan and Lawrence Delevingne; Editing by
Cynthia Osterman)
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