BrokerDealers and Bankers Using James Bond Strategies

Brokerdealer.com blog update courtesy of extract from today’s WSJ story profiling James Bond style schemes used by bankers and brokers in effort to wrap pending deals and transactions under a cone of silence.

wsj logo“Project Swift” sounds like the name of a military invasion or an Olympic marathoner’s training plan. But it is actually the code name for a corporate buyout, inspired by a private-equity associate’s fondness for singer Taylor Swift.

Labels like Project Token, the name Apollo Global Management APO +0.41% LLC used to mask its purchase of children’s restaurant favorite Chuck E. Cheese, or Project Fusion, the code for Kinder Morgan Inc. KMI +1.23% ‘s consolidation of its oil-and-gas holdings into a single company, are designed to keep reporters, traders and even rival companies from sniffing out deal news before formal announcements are made.

For the young bankers who get to choose them, code names are an amusing diversion from the financial modeling and PowerPoint presentations that fill their days.

But one deal-making powerhouse is putting an end to the name game, opting instead to automate the process to avoid the pitfalls that go with the territory.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. GS +0.82% now requires bankers to use name-generating software that offers 10 random options like Project Calculator or Project Daniel. The new system has been phased in across the bank over the past two years, according to people familiar with it.

Though bankers can refresh the options as often as they like, some say the new naming process has taken some fun out of the game. And they say people involved in their deals often forget the random names generated by the software.

For the full story from the WSJ, please click here.

Ex-LPL broker pays up defrauding clients

Brokerdealer.com blog post courtesy of InvestmentNews.com and Mason Bradwell 

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A former LPL Financial broker has been ordered to pay nearly $2 million in disgorgement and penalties after being accused of bilking clients of nearly $1.7 million. Continue reading

Rhythm BioPharma prepping for IPO

BrokerDealer.com blog post courtesy of extract from MarketWatch.com 

MarketWatchLogoBOSTON, Aug. 27, 2014 /PRNewswire/ — Rhythm, a biopharmaceutical company developing peptide therapeutics that address gastrointestinal diseases and genetic deficiencies that result in metabolic disorders, announced today that it has filed a registration statement on Form S-1 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) relating to the proposed initial public offering of shares of its common stock. The number of shares to be offered and the price range for the offering have not yet been determined. Continue reading

LendingClub IPO to benefit Silicon Valley Banking Style

BrokerDealer.com blog post courtesy of extract from cnbc.com and Ari Levy 

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Alibaba has dominated the IPO headlines since the Chinese e-commerce and digital marketplace behemoth filed for a U.S. initial public offering in May. But it’s the coming share sale of another online marketplace that likely has greater relevance to Americans.

LendingClub, the largest U.S. provider of peer-to-peer loans announced plans Wednesday to raise $500 million in an IPO. Located in San Francisco, clear across the country from the nation’s money hub of Wall Street, Lending Club has gained popularity by focusing on a piece of the financial universe that the banking industry has long neglected: consumer loans. Continue reading

Tel Aviv Disrupt may carry Israel to MSCI Europe ETFs

BrokerDealer.com blog post courtesy of extract from ETFTrends.com and Tom Lydon

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In an attempt to gain acceptance into broad MSCI Inc. (NYSE: MSCI) Europe indices, and potentially into related exchange traded funds, Israel’s Tel Aviv Stock Exchange could end its Sunday open schedule and switch over to Western trading days.

Julien Assous, chief executive officer of Israel Brokerage & Investments and a member of the TASE board of directors, revealed that the bourse is considering changing the exchange’s Sunday-to-Thursday trading days, following feedback from MSCI about potential hurdles for wider acceptance, reports Gabrielle Coppola for Bloomberg.

The TASE board is contemplating shifting open days to a Monday-through-Friday schedule. Continue reading