SEC Charges State Street
for Misleading Investors About Subprime Mortgage Investments
Boston-Based Firm to
Settle Charges by Repaying Fund Investors More Than $300 Million
The Securities and Exchange
Commission today charged Boston-based State Street Bank and Trust Company with
misleading its investors about their exposure to subprime investments while
selectively disclosing more complete information to specific investors.
State
Street has agreed to settle the SEC’s charges by paying more than $300 million
that will be distributed to
investors who lost
money during the subprime market meltdown in 2007. This payment is in addition
to nearly $350 million that State Street previously agreed to pay to investors
in State Street funds to settle private claims.
"State Street led investors
to believe that their investments were more diversified than a typical money
market portfolio, when instead they were invested almost entirely in subprime
investments that ultimately caused hundreds of millions of dollars in losses,"
said Robert Khuzami, Director of the SEC's Division of Enforcement.
"Investigating potential securities law violations arising out of the credit
crisis remains a high priority for the SEC Enforcement Division."
The enforcement action is the
result of joint efforts by the SEC with the Massachusetts Securities Division
and the Massachusetts Attorney General's office, which both announced related
charges against State Street today.
David P. Bergers, Director of
the SEC's Boston Regional Office, said, "State Street informed certain investors
and left others in the dark about their subprime mortgage exposure. This global
settlement will ensure that harmed investors are compensated."
According to the SEC's
complaint filed in federal court in Boston and a related administrative order
issued by the Commission, State Street established its Limited Duration Bond
Fund in 2002 and marketed it as an "enhanced cash" investment strategy that was
an alternative to a money market fund for certain types of investors.
By 2007, however, the fund
was almost entirely invested in subprime residential mortgage-backed securities
and derivatives that magnified its exposure to subprime securities. But State
Street continued to describe the fund to prospective and current investors as
having better sector diversification than a typical money market fund, and
failed to disclose the extent of the fund's concentration in subprime
investments.
According to the SEC's
complaint and order, State Street sent investors a series of misleading
communications beginning in July 2007 concerning the effect of the turmoil in
the subprime market on the Limited Duration Bond Fund and other State Street
funds that invested in it. At the same time, however, State Street provided
particular investors with more complete information about the fund's subprime
concentration and other problems with the fund. These other investors included
clients of State Street's internal advisory groups, which provided advisory
services to some investors in this fund and related funds.
The SEC alleges that, based
on this more complete information, State Street's internal advisory groups
subsequently decided to recommend that all of their clients including the
pension plan of State Street's publicly-traded parent company (State Street
Corporation) redeem their investments from the fund and the related funds. The
SEC alleges that State Street sold the fund's most liquid holdings and used the
cash it received from these sales to meet the redemption demands of better
informed investors, leaving the fund and its remaining investors with largely
illiquid holdings.
Under the terms of the
settlement, State Street agreed to pay a $50 million penalty, more than $8.3
million in disgorgement and prejudgment interest, and more than $255 million in
additional payments to compensate investors. Combined with nearly $350 million
that State Street has already paid or agreed to pay some investors through
settlements of private lawsuits, the total compensation to harmed State Street
investors is approximately $663 million.
State Street also was ordered
to cease and desist from any further violations of certain securities laws. The
SEC's enforcement action took into account the company's remediation and its
cooperation, including:
ð
Replacement of key senior personnel and portfolio managers.
ð
Conducting a review of its procedures and revised its risk
controls.
ð
Entering into private settlements with harmed investors.
ð
Recent agreement — pursuant to a limited privilege waiver — to
provide information it was not otherwise obligated to provide to enable the SEC
to assess the potential liability of individuals with respect to certain
investor communications.
The SEC's investigation is
ongoing. The Commission appreciates the assistance of the offices of Secretary
of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts William F. Galvin and Massachusetts
Attorney General Martha Coakley.
|
Preservation Monthly "Inside the News"
Subscribe today,
for your daily subscription of Preservation Monthly "Inside the News"
get delivered to your mailbox daily – it’s free, keep
updated on the news this way you will stay informed and won’t be
left out on the news.
|
|
|