Thursday, April 11, 2013

Reuters: Regulatory News: INSIGHT-When options trading ahead of deals raises eyebrows

Reuters: Regulatory News
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INSIGHT-When options trading ahead of deals raises eyebrows
Apr 12th 2013, 04:59

Fri Apr 12, 2013 12:59am EDT

  By Angela Moon and Doris Frankel      NEW YORK/CHICAGO, April 12 (Reuters) - Within 36 hours of  Warren Buffett's announcement of a deal to buy H.J. Heinz, U.S.  authorities froze an account linked to possible insider trading.      The speed of the crackdown on a lucrative options bet,  combined with successful prosecutions of insider trading rings,  suggested that regulators were quickly jumping on any suspicious  activity.       Yet some veterans of the options business are unconvinced.  They worry that very profitable options trading ahead of big  corporate news is undermining investor confidence in the  fairness of markets.         A study for Reuters by options research firm Schaeffer's  Investment Research of 181 such announcements in the 14 months  to the end of February shows that such activity prior to news of  takeovers, big stock repurchases or a major investment occurs on  a regular basis.        There were 41 examples of companies, or 23 percent of the  sample, where the volume of new call options positions -  effectively bets that the underlying stock would rise - had  risen by at least 50 percent in the five days before the news  when compared with the average of the previous six months. For  33 of these companies, the volume more than doubled.      The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has announced  litigation or enforcement action for alleged insider trading  involving options trading in two of these companies - Heinz   and Shaw Group, a nuclear power plant builder acquired  by Chicago Bridge & Iron for $3 billion. Neither Heinz  nor Chicago Bridge & Iron would comment on the trading.      A sudden increase in bets in a particular stock does not  indicate there was any wrongdoing, as questionable trades often  have innocuous explanations. Some of the bets, while prescient,  may have been due to lucky speculation, smart analysis, or  hedging strategies rather than inside information.       "You can't look at an option trade in a vacuum; it could be  a hedge. The regulator has to look at what the pattern and  practice of trading was in that account," said Thomas Sporkin, a  partner at law firm BuckleySandler LLP and a former senior SEC  enforcement official.      The SEC could also be investigating some of these instances  of "well-timed" trading, as many in the industry term it, but  have made no public announcement. It can sometimes take several  years to build a case and many probes get dropped because  insider trading is difficult to prove.      When asked for comment, an SEC spokesman said the options  market "has been and will continue to be an area of focus,"  adding that a "simple search of the SEC website will show many,  many insider trading enforcement actions involving options."                   Investors use call options - which give the right but not  the obligation to buy a stock at a certain price - as a way of  betting a stock will rise. Speculators often use  "out-of-the-money" call options, which mean they will expire  worthless unless the underlying stock price rises above the  strike price. If the stock surges, the options can be worth many  times their initial cost.      For example, Heinz had been trading around $60 a share, but  an unnamed investor bet on shares rising to more than $65 each  by late June - an investment that cost about $92,000. After the  deal was announced, that bet produced a $1.7 million profit.       Still, without some kind of additional knowledge, many of  these call options are no better than "lottery tickets," said  Randy Frederick, managing director of active trading and  derivatives at Charles Schwab. But with inside information, it  is like knowing what the lottery numbers are before they are  announced, he said.      Public remarks from SEC officials on the Heinz case point to  the potential for more action in the future.       "It may well have been the swiftest enforcement action that  we have ever filed," Sanjay Wadhwa, senior associate director of  enforcement in the SEC's New York office who was involved in the  Heinz case, said at an event in February. As global deal  activity rebounds, "I dare say you will see more of these  actions coming out of the SEC," he said.      Options trading specialists said such trades add to concerns  there isn't a level playing field for smaller investors.  So-called "mom and pop" investors have not returned to the  equities market in large numbers after the battering they took  in the financial crisis and following market disruptions such as  the "flash crash."      "The bigger point is the damage that is done to the  underlying confidence in our market and the perception that  things are not fair," said Ed Boyle, senior vice president of  business development and strategy at the BOX options exchange.       Since the beginning of 2012, the SEC has issued about 90  different releases related to litigation of insider trading, of  which 18 involve the options market. Some of those cases date  back as far as 2006.       Market makers, those who facilitate orderly trading by  providing the market with both buy and sell quotes on a  security, say they find themselves taking the losing side of the  bets made by those with inside information.       When a market maker sells a call option, they are exposing  themselves to the chance the stock will rise sharply or become  more volatile. These firms attempt to offset that risk, but  these hedging strategies won't fully cover a market maker's  exposure to extreme moves in a stock.          "We estimate that insider traders who use the derivatives  market end up being a very significant expense for market-making  firms like ourselves," said Jeff Shaw, head of trading at Timber  Hill, a division of Interactive Brokers Group.       Aside from the damage to market makers, insider trading can  force the prices of takeover deals higher - costing the  shareholders of the acquiring companies - and it can leave the  shareholders of target companies, who sold ahead of a deal  announcement feeling cheated. It can even scuttle a takeover  proposal altogether if the target gets too expensive as a result  of insider trading.      Each of the 181 transactions that Schaeffer's studied for  Reuters had a value of at least $200 million and were revealed  publicly - through the media or a corporate announcement -  between Jan. 1, 2012 and Feb 28, 2013. Schaeffer's only looked  at new call options positions, which are the most often used to  express fresh expectations that a stock will rise, rather than  new put (bearish) positions, or already existing options  contracts.      Schaeffer's surveyed trading on three major options  exchanges accounting for more than half of the market's  activity. The data shows that options for many big names -  including NYSE Euronext, Dollar General and US Airways - saw a  huge increase in bullish bets before major news became public  knowledge. The companies did not comment on the trading  activity.      Of the transactions studied, 43 were excluded because there  was too little trading for meaningful analysis, 85 cases showed  the same or less trading activity, and 12 cases showed increased  activity of less than 50 percent. That left the 41 with more  than 50 percent.       When the ratio of trading over the five days compared with  the previous six months soars, it may raise suspicion that  information has been leaked, said Alan White, quantitative  analyst at Schaeffer's, who conducted the research.         The results of the study are at least partially supported by  another recent analysis by Livevol, a San Francisco-based  options analytics firm, which showed that call and put volume  rose, on average, by 71 percent and 60 percent, respectively, in  the five trading days before M&A activity was announced when  compared to the prior six months. Livevol looked at all opening  and closing options positions for 100 U.S. deals in the first  eight months of 2012.      Some of the timing of the questionable trading looked  shrewd.       According to Schaeffer's, activity in new call options of  NYSE Euronext more than doubled in the five days before  it announced it had agreed to be bought for $8 billion, or  $33.12 per share, by IntercontinentalExchange (ICE) on Dec. 20,  2012.  Neither NYSE nor ICE would  comment on the trading.      There were bets that NYSE's stock would close above $24 by  mid-January. About 9,000 calls at this strike price were bought  for about 60 cents a contract, a total cost of about $540,000.  The price of those contracts jumped to $8 each, or $7.2 million  total, when the deal was announced, for a potential profit of  about $6.6 million, said Ophir Gottlieb, managing director of  Livevol.      In another instance, investors bet on Nov. 9, 2012 that  Titanium Metals Corp, which that day hit three-month lows of  $11.30 a share, would jump to more than $15 by late January.  Hours later, after the close of trading, Precision Castparts   said it would buy Titanium for $16.50 a share, or $2.9  billion.        About 2,300 of those call options were bought that day for  10 cents each, and they rose in value to $1.50 each after the  announcement. Precision Castparts, which completed its purchase  of Titanium in November, declined to comment on the  activity. The SEC declined to say whether there was a probe into  the trading in either the NYSE or Titanium Metals.  
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