Insider trading: Shaikh’s former associate in trouble

Rajat Gupta’s woes add up after a billionaire hedge fund manager is convicted.


Farooq Tirmizi May 13, 2011
Insider trading: Shaikh’s former associate in trouble

KARACHI:


Rajat Gupta, a former associate of Finance Minister Hafeez Shaikh, is in deeper trouble after the conviction in a US court of Raj Rajaratnam, a hedge fund manager, on 14 counts of insider trading. The trial relied heavily on tapes that recorded several people including Gupta passing information to Rajaratnam.


Gupta was the founding partner of New Silk Route Partners, a Dubai-based private equity fund at which Shaikh was an operating partner before becoming Pakistan’s finance minister in 2010. Shaikh is not associated with the trial and his name has not been mentioned in any of the evidence that was used against Rajaratnam or Gupta.

The insider trading trial in New York, one of the largest in US history, revolved around Raj Rajaratnam, a Sri Lankan-born billionaire who ran one of the largest hedge funds in the world, the Galleon Group, which at its peak managed over $7 billion in assets.

Rajaratnam was convicted of using several insider contacts at various firms for illegally acquiring non-public information about the companies and making money by trading ahead of the market. The US government estimates that the 53-year-old billionaire made $63.8 million off those trades. Rajaratnam was convicted on all 14 counts of insider trading and is expected to be sentenced in July.

Most of Rajaratnam’s sources are American professionals of South Asian origin, including some Pakistani Americans. One of the key pieces of the prosecution’s evidence, however, was the tape of a conversation between Rajaratnam and Gupta, who was then a member of the board of directors at Goldman Sachs, the largest and most profitable investment bank in the world.

Gupta is accused of having passed on material information about Goldman Sachs to Rajaratnam, though he has not been charged with a crime. The US Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a civil suit against Gupta, who denies wrongdoing and has filed a countersuit against SEC.

New Silk Route lists Gupta as being “on leave” on its website. The private equity firm primarily makes investments in South Asia and the Middle East and is one of the largest shareholders of the Beaconhouse School System, the largest chain of private schools in Pakistan.



Published in The Express Tribune, May 14th, 2011.

COMMENTS (4)

HelloAnyBodyHome | 13 years ago | Reply @YH Thank you @Meekal Ahmed oh from the great IMF are you? Hope you read the news today... From the NYTimes front page I.M.F. Chief, Apprehended at Airport, Is Accused of Sexual Attack "The managing director of the International Monetary Fund, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, was taken off an Air France plane at Kennedy International Airport minutes before it was to depart for Paris on Saturday, in connection with the sexual attack of a maid at a Midtown Manhattan hotel, the authorities said."...
YH | 13 years ago | Reply Meekal Ahmed of IMF fame? Pity that you didn't read the article more carefully as the reader above points out. A pity, really. IMF officials need to read between the lines...it's not only the crooks in the Paki govt who are at fault...
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