Legal
SAC Portfolio Manager Faces Criminal Charges Over Illegal Stock Trading - Report

A portfolio manager at SAC, which this month agreed to plead guilty to insider trading allegations, faces charges that he illegally traded in technology stocks, Reuters reports.
A portfolio manager at SAC, which this month agreed to
plead
guilty to insider trading allegations, faces charges that he
illegally traded
in technology stocks, Reuters
reports.
Michael Steinberg’s trial will start tomorrow and comes
two weeks after Steven Cohen’s hedge fund agreed to pay a total
fine of $1.8
billion to settle the long-running insider trading inquiry.
Steinberg is reportedly on leave from SAC and faces criminal
charges after he was arrested on Good Friday this year, the
report said. Since
the first charges were announced in October 2009, 76 people have
been
convicted, it added.
It was reported that Steinberg’s lawyer declined to comment
on the case but that in the past has said his client did
“absolutely nothing wrong”
and his “trading decisions were based on detailed analysis.”
Reuters also
highlighted that, while several SAC employees have been charged,
most have
pleaded guilty. Steinberg is the first to fight his case before a
jury, the news service said.
The SAC case
The settlement, reached at the start of this month, brought to an
end a
seven-year-long investigation by US prosecutors and fuels months
of speculation
as regards whether Cohen might turn the remainder of his business
into a family
office-type structure (view a related article here).
Court filings outline that portfolio managers and research
analysts from
across the SAC entity “engaged in a pattern of obtaining inside
information
from dozens of publicly-traded companies across multiple industry
sectors.”
The
documents add that the “relentless pursuit of an information
‘edge’ fostered a
business culture within SAC in which there was no meaningful
commitment to
ensure that such ‘edge’ came from legitimate research and not
inside
information.”
View full article here.