Hexagon's CEO pleads not guilty at Norway insider
trading trial
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[October 30, 2017]
By Ole Petter Skonnord and Gwladys Fouche
OSLO (Reuters) - Hexagon AB Chief Executive
Ola Rollen, one of Sweden's best known business leaders, pleaded not
guilty on Monday at the start of a trial for suspected insider share
trading in Norway.
If convicted, Rollen faces up to six years in prison for an investment
in Next Biometrics made in 2015. The transaction did not involve Hexagon
itself.
"I have a strong desire to testify," he told the Oslo District Court.
Asked by the judge whether he was guilty as charged, a stern-looking
Rollen answered "No".
In charge of Hexagon since 2000, Rollen discarded its old businesses and
turned the company into a force in measurement technology and related
software, making it one of Sweden's biggest firms worth $17 billion.
In 2016, shortly before his initial detention by police, he was ranked
among the world's 100 best-performing CEOs by the Harvard Business
Review.
A purchase of shares in Next Biometrics on Oct. 6 and 7, 2015, made by
Rollen's investment firm, amounted to illegal insider trading, police
said, as the firm was also involved in negotiations with Next to take a
larger stake at a higher price.
When a cash infusion was announced a few days later, Next's shares
surged.
"Anyone trading shares must have access to the same information as a
basis for deciding whether or not it's wise to buy or sell," prosecutor
Marianne Bender said.
"When someone has access to secret information about what's happening at
a company, and other investors don't, there is a risk that this
information could be abused," she added.
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Lead prosecutor Marianne Bender in Ola Rollen insider trading case
trial arrives at the district court in Oslo, Norway October 30,
2017. REUTERS/Gwladys Fouche
Rollen and his lawyers have argued that he did not possess privileged
information about Next Biometrics at the time of the share purchase, and that
the transactions were motivated by his own independent analysis of the Norwegian
company.
His knowledge of his own forthcoming investment in Next did not make it illegal
to buy shares when he did, they added.
A verdict in the case will most likely come some time after the turn of the
year, the Oslo court said on Monday. Hexagon's shares, which have risen by 32
percent this year, traded 2.0 percent lower for the day at 0930 GMT.
Some investors are betting on a further drop, including hedge fund manager David
Einhorn's Greenlight Capital, which holds a short position of 0.85 percent of
Hexagon's stock according to the Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority.
Greenlight has increased its position this year, but the last change was
reported in June, the data showed.
(Additional reporting by Johannes Hellstom in Stockholm, writing by Terje
Solsvik; editing by Jason Neely/Keith Weir)
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