Omega's Cooperman loses bid
to dismiss SEC insider trading case
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[March 21, 2017]
By Jonathan Stempel
(Reuters) -
A
federal judge on Monday rejected billionaire hedge fund manager Leon
Cooperman's bid to dismiss the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's
insider trading case against him and his firm Omega Advisors Inc.
Without ruling on the merits, U.S. District Judge Juan Sanchez in
Philadelphia said the SEC "pleaded a plausible claim" that Cooperman and
Omega reaped about $4.09 million of profit in 2010 by trading illegally
in Atlas Pipeline Partners LP, based on tips from an Atlas executive.
Monday's decision is a major defeat for Cooperman, 73, and sets up a
possible trial that could further tarnish his legacy.
The case has already hurt New York-based Omega, which has seen assets
under management tumble to $3.5 billion as of Jan. 31 from about $5.4
billion when the SEC sued last September, and about $10.7 billion two
years earlier.
Cooperman and Omega have denied wrongdoing. Neither they nor their
lawyers immediately responded to requests for comment.
SEC spokeswoman Judith Burns declined to comment.
The SEC said Cooperman used his position as one of Atlas' largest
shareholders to obtain nonpublic information from an Atlas executive
about the partnership's plan to sell a gas processing unit.
According to the regulator, Cooperman broke a promise he made to the
executive not to trade on the information, and profited on its stock,
bonds and options when the announcement of the sale caused Atlas' share
price to rise 31 percent.
Cooperman said the case was fatally flawed because the SEC did not say
when his alleged agreement not to trade occurred, a critical omission
because it was only later that he could owe the Atlas executive a duty
not to misappropriate information.
But the judge said letting the SEC pursue its case "comports with the
congressional intent for securities laws to target exactly the type of
deception in which Cooperman engaged, deception that is detrimental to
the rightful owner of the information, investors, and the public."
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Leon G. Cooperman, CEO of Omega Advisors, Inc., speaks on a panel at
the annual Skybridge Alternatives Conference (SALT) in Las Vegas May
7, 2015. REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo
The
allegations, Sanchez added, "sufficiently plead the 'who, what, when, where, and
how' concerning defendants' insider trading, giving rise to a plausible
misappropriation claim."
Sanchez separately dismissed SEC claims that Cooperman failed to file required
reports about his stakes in eight public companies.
The
judge cited a lack of evidence that the defendants did enough business in the
area overseen by the Philadelphia court to justify being sued there.
Along with Galleon Group founder Raj Rajaratnam and billionaire Steven A.
Cohen's SAC Capital Advisors LP, Cooperman is one of the government's most
prominent targets in insider trading cases in recent years.
Cooperman has long been a prominent supporter of U.S. stocks, appearing often on
cable TV and at industry conferences discussing his positions.
The son of a Bronx plumber, Cooperman is now worth $3 billion, according to
Forbes magazine.
Atlas was bought by a unit of Targa Resources Corp in February 2015.
The case is SEC v Cooperman et al, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of
Pennsylvania, No. 16-05043.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel, Suzanne Barlyn and Jennifer Ablan in New York;
Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Bernard Orr)
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