Citron's Andrew Left faces US criminal charges over alleged fraud
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[July 27, 2024] By
Chris Prentice
(Reuters) -U.S. authorities charged prominent activist short seller
Andrew Left and his fund Citron Capital, alleging he had for years
manipulated the market and defrauded investors with misleading claims
about his positions in multiple stocks, including Nvidia and Tesla.
The Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission said on
Friday that Left used his social media platform and cable news
appearances to promote what he said were his long or short trades, only
to quickly reverse his positions, making as much as $20 million in the
process.
Left, 54, also concealed that third-parties, including hedge funds, fed
his commentary and that in return for compensation he alerted them
before publicizing his positions, allowing them to profit or mitigate
losses, the Justice Department alleged.
"To maintain the false pretense that Citron’s recommendations and
positions were sincerely held, defendant Left made false and misleading
representations and half-truths about his economic incentives,
conviction in Citron’s analyses, and valuations of Targeted Securities,"
the DOJ said.
Left's lawyer James Spertus said the investor plans to fight the
charges. "There is no crime here," he said in an emailed statement.
"Mr. Left is a publisher who has taken extraordinary steps to comply
with all laws, and neither the DOJ nor the SEC allege that he ever once
published information he believed was not true when published."
Left is expected to be arraigned in the coming weeks in United States
District Court in downtown Los Angeles.
Known for his sensational and colorful style, Left for more than a
decade has been among the most prominent of a cohort of “short
activists” who say they bet against public companies on the basis they
were over-valued or engaging in outright fraud.
HIGH-PROFILE TARGETS
Among Left’s most high-profile targets were the now defunct China
Evergrande, GameStop, Valeant Pharmaceuticals and Shopify. Proponents of
short activists say they play a crucial role in the market, but critics
have accused them of “short and distort” tactics that have unfairly
damaged public companies.
Friday's charges are the culmination of a years-long probe by criminal
prosecutors in Washington and Los Angeles and SEC investigators, which
began investigating short-sellers and hedge funds in 2019, Reuters and
other media have reported. Bloomberg first reported the DOJ probe in
Dec. 2021.
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The seal of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is seen at
its headquarters in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 12, 2021.
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
The SEC and Justice Department focused on how Left publicly
represented his position in high-profile stocks versus how he was
really trading them, alleging that Left exploited his influence to
manipulate the shares and reap quick profits.
Around Oct. 22, 2018, for example, the Justice Department alleged
that Left took a long position in electric carmaker Tesla and the
next day posted on X, then Twitter, that the firm was "LONG Tesla
for this quarter." Minutes later, Left placed an order to sell more
than half of his position for a profit of at least $1 million, the
Justice Department alleged.
The next month, Left similarly promoted his long trade in Nvidia -
which was trading around $144 - saying he expected the price to hit
$165, only to sell his entire position less than two hours later,
the Justice Department alleged.
An Nvidia spokesperson declined to comment, while Tesla did not
immediately respond to a request for comment.
Left said publicly in 2019 that Citron had never been paid by a
third party to publish research on stocks, but the Justice
Department alleges that Left in 2018 and 2019 received more than $1
million each from two separate hedge funds who held short positions
in stocks targeted by Left.
The novel charges may be challenging to prove in court, legal
experts said.
"Some of the conduct described in the indictment is pretty normal in
the short-seller community," said Robert Frenchman of New York law
firm Dynamis. "You can still run afoul of securities laws when you
lie about your position, your ties to hedge funds and the source of
your search."
If convicted, Left would face a statutory maximum sentence of 25
years in federal prison for the securities fraud scheme count, up to
20 years in federal prison for each count of securities fraud, and
up to five years in federal prison for the false statements count,
the DOJ said.
The SEC is seeking disgorgement, prejudgment interest, civil
monetary penalties and an officer-and-director bar, it said.
(Reporting by Chris Prentice in New York, Niket Nishant in Bengaluru
and Doina Chiacu in Washington; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli, Chizu
Nomiyama, Michelle Price and Nick Zieminski)
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