Current:Home > NewsHedge fund operators go on trial after multibillion-dollar Archegos collapse -Capitatum
Hedge fund operators go on trial after multibillion-dollar Archegos collapse
Poinbank View
Date:2025-04-06 06:46:25
NEW YORK (AP) — A federal fraud trial began Monday for the owner and chief financial officer of a hedge fund that collapsed when it defaulted on margin calls, costing leading global investment banks and brokerages billions of dollars.
Bill Hwang, the founder of Archegos Capital Management, and his former CFO Patrick Halligan, are being tried together. Prosecutors have accused Hwang of lying to banks to get billions of dollars that his New York-based private investment firm then used to inflate the stock price of publicly traded companies and grow its portfolio from $10 billion to $160 billion.
Their scheme involved secret trading in stock derivatives that made their private investment fund “a house of cards, built on manipulation and lies,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Alexandra Rothman told jurors.
“These two men made fraud their business,” Rothman said. “All because the defendant, Bill Hwang, wanted to be a legend on Wall Street.”
Hwang’s attorney, Barry Berke, countered that Hwang is not guilty, and he’ll prove the prosecutor’s “theory is wrong.”
“It doesn’t make any sense and you will find that,” Berke said. “He didn’t live the life of a billionaire.”
The indictment said that Hwang led market participants to believe the prices of stocks in the fund’s portfolio were the product of natural forces of supply and demand, when in reality, they resulted from manipulative trading and deceptive conduct that caused others to trade.
Hwang and Halligan pleaded not guilty, while the head trader for Archegos and its chief risk officer have pleaded guilty and are cooperating with prosecutors.
According to the indictment, Hwang first invested his personal fortune, which grew from $1.5 billion to over $35 billion, and later borrowed funds from major banks and brokerages, vastly expanding the scheme.
The alleged fraud began as Hwang worked remotely during the coronavirus pandemic in the spring of 2020. COVID-related market losses prompted Hwang to reduce or sell many of Archegos’s previous investment positions, so he “began to build extraordinarily large positions in a handful of securities,” the indictment said.
The indictment said the investment public did not know Archegos had come to dominate the trading and stock ownership of multiple companies because it used derivative securities that had no public disclosure requirement to build its positions.
At one point, Hwang and his firm secretly controlled over 50 percent of the shares of ViacomCBS, prosecutors said.
But the risky maneuvers made the firm’s portfolio highly vulnerable to price fluctuations in a handful of stocks, leading to margin calls in late March 2021 that wiped out more than $100 million in market value in days, the indictment said.
Nearly a dozen companies as well as banks and prime brokers duped by Archegos lost billions as a result, the indictment said.
Hwang, of Tenafly, New Jersey, has been free on $100 million bail while Halligan, of Syosset, was free on $1 million bail.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Taylor Swift Cancels Austria Concerts After Confirmation of Planned Terrorist Attack
- Lakers GM Rob Pelinka after drafting Bronny James: 'He's worked for everything'
- At 61, ballerina Alessandra Ferri is giving her pointe shoes one last — maybe? — glorious whirl
- Supreme Court strips SEC of key enforcement power to penalize fraud
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Review says U.S. Tennis Association can do more to protect players from abuse, including sexual misconduct
- Review says U.S. Tennis Association can do more to protect players from abuse, including sexual misconduct
- Walgreens plans to close a significant amount of underperforming stores in the US
- Kehlani Responds to Hurtful Accusation She’s in a Cult
- Shootings at Las Vegas-area apartments that left 5 dead stemmed from domestic dispute, police say
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Kourtney Kardashians Details Her Attachment Parenting Approach for Baby Rocky
- NHL mock draft 2024: Who's taken after Macklin Celebrini?
- Trump and Biden mix it up over policy and each other in a debate that turns deeply personal at times
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- New law guarantees domestic workers minimum wage in Rhode Island
- J.D. Power 2024 U.S. Initial Quality Study: American car makers fare well in major study
- California voters to weigh proposal to ban forced prison labor in state constitution
Recommendation
Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
Police in Texas examining 20+ deaths after boarding home operator charged with murder
Justice John Roberts says the Supreme Court’s last decisions of this term are coming on Monday
US Sen. Dick Durbin, 79, undergoes hip replacement surgery in home state of Illinois
Immigration issues sorted, Guatemala runner Luis Grijalva can now focus solely on sports
Oklahoma to execute Richard Rojem Jr. for murder of ex-stepdaughter. What to know.
How to watch the first presidential debate between Biden and Trump
AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon confirm service outages for customers abroad