The Dr. Will See You Now – Skowron’s Bad Diagnosis for FrontPoint and Galleon

GoodGuys Skowron The Dr. Will See You Now   Skowrons Bad Diagnosis for FrontPoint and Galleon

A hedge fund manager for FrontPoint Partners was sentenced to five years in prison on Friday, November 18th. Joseph Skowron pled guilty in the summer of 2011 to insider trading which resulted in Morgan Stanley avoiding $30 million in trading losses. According to the New York Times, Skowron enticed French doctor,  Yves Benhamou, to give him “confidential results about clinical drug trials.” In addition to selling HGSI Human Genome Sciences stock before the news of its downfall was made public, Skowron and Benhamou agreed to deceive the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) by withholding information from them regarding their endeavors. Dr. Benhamou also pled guilty to charges he was brought up on, and will be sentenced next month.

Here is a video about the arrest:

Because Skowron obtained access to material non-public information and took advantage of it to benefit himself, he caused many people to lose their jobs and money. Although it is possible to receive non-public information legally, it is what you choose to do with that information that can become a potential problem. In the case of  The Dr. Will See You Now   Skowrons Bad Diagnosis for FrontPoint and Galleon Skowron, not only did he go searching for insider information, but he also acted upon the information he received. It was the action he chose to take, that led him down the path he is now traveling. Ironically, Chip, as he is referred to in the industry, made Galleon Group one of his victims. Galleon Group was the hedge fund managed by Raj Rajaratnam, who was sentenced to 11 years in prison for insider trading not long ago. The charges that surrounded Skowron destroyed FrontPoint, which was one of the most prestigious firms on Wall Street. Skowron is forced to pay $8 million in forfeiture and fines to the government.

This is a perfect example of the need for operational due diligence firms. A simple list of investigative procedures, if properly executed, could have prevented Skowron, and several others, from committing this white-collar crime. By conducting a comprehensive review of a hedge funds’ exposure to, operational strengths and weaknesses regarding the hedge fund manager, and a hedge fund’s exposure to material nonpublic information, it will decrease the chance of insider trading as well as other operational risks. It is with due diligence that we can identify any below-the-surface issues within a fund, and find out about people like Skowron, so that investors can make more informed decisions before investing.

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