Mobile banking apps typically allow customers to view their account details and carry out transactions such as funds transfers. Singapore's OCBC Bank's Android app, released last month, also offers users the ability to scan selected bill barcodes effectively automation payment transactions (and helping ensure STP).
Saturday, 9 April 2011
Friday, 8 April 2011
Corporate attorney and Wall Street trader charged in $32 million insider trading ring
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has charged a corporate attorney and a Wall Street trader with insider trading in advance of at least 11 merger and acquisition announcements involving clients of the law firm where the attorney worked.
The SEC alleges that Matthew H. Kluger, who formerly worked at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, and Garrett D. Bauer did not have a direct relationship with each other, but were linked only through a mutual friend who acted as a middleman to facilitate the illegal scheme. Kluger and Bauer communicated with the middleman using public telephones and prepaid disposable mobile phones in order to avoid detection. According to the SEC’s complaint, Kluger accessed information on 11 mergers and acquisitions involving the law firm’s clients and then tipped the middleman. In at least nine instances, the middleman passed the information on to Bauer, who illegally traded for illicit profits totaling nearly $32 million.
In a parallel criminal action, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey announced the arrests of Kluger and Bauer.
“They plotted to fly under law enforcement radar by using disposable phones to hide their communications, cash withdrawals to obscure the flow of tainted money, and a middleman to conceal Kluger as the secret source of inside information,” said Robert Khuzami, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. “Now, those same schemes and devices serve only to make it clear beyond any doubt that Kluger and Bauer were involved in an illegal scheme.”
Daniel M. Hawke, Chief of the SEC’s Market Abuse Unit and Director of its Philadelphia Regional Office, added “This was a brazen and deplorable scheme in which Kluger, a lawyer, repeatedly abused his access to confidential client information. As this and recent cases demonstrate, the Division of Enforcement is working aggressively to root out and identify hard-to-detect insider trading by connecting patterns of trading to sources of material non-public information - whether those sources are law firms or others who are under a duty to keep such information confidential.”
According to the SEC’s complaint filed in federal court in Newark, N.J., Kluger, Bauer and the middleman deliberately structured their communications and trading so that Kluger and the middleman could share in the insider trading proceeds while Bauer could illegally trade and profit without being connected to Kluger as a possible source of information. Bauer withdrew cash from his bank accounts and kicked back hundreds of thousands of dollars to the middleman, who in turn delivered at least $500,000 to Kluger for his role in the scheme.
According to the SEC’s complaint, over the past five years Kluger accessed and then tipped confidential information in advance of 11 mergers and acquisitions between April 2006 and March 2011:
The middleman traded in two deals on the basis of information that he received from Kluger and profited at least $690,000.
The SEC’s investigation is continuing.
The SEC alleges that Matthew H. Kluger, who formerly worked at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, and Garrett D. Bauer did not have a direct relationship with each other, but were linked only through a mutual friend who acted as a middleman to facilitate the illegal scheme. Kluger and Bauer communicated with the middleman using public telephones and prepaid disposable mobile phones in order to avoid detection. According to the SEC’s complaint, Kluger accessed information on 11 mergers and acquisitions involving the law firm’s clients and then tipped the middleman. In at least nine instances, the middleman passed the information on to Bauer, who illegally traded for illicit profits totaling nearly $32 million.
In a parallel criminal action, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey announced the arrests of Kluger and Bauer.
“They plotted to fly under law enforcement radar by using disposable phones to hide their communications, cash withdrawals to obscure the flow of tainted money, and a middleman to conceal Kluger as the secret source of inside information,” said Robert Khuzami, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. “Now, those same schemes and devices serve only to make it clear beyond any doubt that Kluger and Bauer were involved in an illegal scheme.”
Daniel M. Hawke, Chief of the SEC’s Market Abuse Unit and Director of its Philadelphia Regional Office, added “This was a brazen and deplorable scheme in which Kluger, a lawyer, repeatedly abused his access to confidential client information. As this and recent cases demonstrate, the Division of Enforcement is working aggressively to root out and identify hard-to-detect insider trading by connecting patterns of trading to sources of material non-public information - whether those sources are law firms or others who are under a duty to keep such information confidential.”
According to the SEC’s complaint filed in federal court in Newark, N.J., Kluger, Bauer and the middleman deliberately structured their communications and trading so that Kluger and the middleman could share in the insider trading proceeds while Bauer could illegally trade and profit without being connected to Kluger as a possible source of information. Bauer withdrew cash from his bank accounts and kicked back hundreds of thousands of dollars to the middleman, who in turn delivered at least $500,000 to Kluger for his role in the scheme.
According to the SEC’s complaint, over the past five years Kluger accessed and then tipped confidential information in advance of 11 mergers and acquisitions between April 2006 and March 2011:
The middleman traded in two deals on the basis of information that he received from Kluger and profited at least $690,000.
The SEC’s investigation is continuing.
Labels:
insider trading
Thursday, 7 April 2011
Courses being run in conjunction with Eureka Financial Training
We are delighted to announce that we have scheduled a series of additional training courses with Eureka Financial Training.
These are;
These are;
- 28-29 June - London - OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT
- 4-5 July – Dubai - ERM (Enterprise Risk Management)
- 11-12 July - London - ERM (Enterprise Risk Management)
- 18-20 September – Dubai - OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT AND MITIGATION
- 21-22 September – Dubai - CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
- 25-26 October - New York - OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT
Labels:
training
Wednesday, 6 April 2011
Mobile Payments and small business
A couple of years ago Jack Dorsey helped co-found Twitter. Now he is revolutionizing retail. Jack Dorsey's latest venture, "Square," a small device that turns any mobile phone or tablet into a credit card reader, is now processing more than $1 million a day in mobile payments
Labels:
mobile payments
Protecting your personal and financial information from fraudsters
US bank Wells Fargo is offering tips to help people keep fraud prevention in focus as encouraging findings are released in the new 2011 Identity Fraud Survey Report from Javelin Strategy & Research, an independent industry research firm. The study found that the number of reported identity fraud incidents in the US during 2010 had declined 28 percent over 2009.
"Wells Fargo has a long commitment of educating people about fraud and helping them protect themselves,” said Secil Watson, senior vice president, Wells Fargo Internet Services Group. “We offer tips, the Fraud Information Center, and we co-sponsor the Javelin Strategy & Research Identity Fraud Survey Report as part of this commitment. We'd like to see continued declines in reported fraud and we want to underscore the importance of people's continued vigilance in protecting their accounts and personal financial information.”
Online and Mobile Fraud Prevention Tips
Stay Current:
"Wells Fargo has a long commitment of educating people about fraud and helping them protect themselves,” said Secil Watson, senior vice president, Wells Fargo Internet Services Group. “We offer tips, the Fraud Information Center, and we co-sponsor the Javelin Strategy & Research Identity Fraud Survey Report as part of this commitment. We'd like to see continued declines in reported fraud and we want to underscore the importance of people's continued vigilance in protecting their accounts and personal financial information.”
Online and Mobile Fraud Prevention Tips
Stay Current:
- Keep updated: Keep your computer operating system up-to-date to ensure the highest level of protection. Help protect your computers with regular anti-virus software updates.
- Change passwords: It’s a good idea to regularly change your online banking passwords. Be sure your online banking username and password differ from those used on other websites.
- Use official apps: Mobile banking applications, or "apps," are programs you can download to your mobile device. To ensure the safety of your personal and account information, download mobile apps from reputable sources only.
- Go paperless and monitor: According to Javelin Strategy & Research, fraudsters continue to use traditional methods to gather information, including paper mail that may contain account numbers or other confidential information.
- Sign up for alerts: Keep a close watch on your finances to quickly spot suspicious activity. Wells Fargo offers many types of alerts, such as a low balance alert that tells you when your account balance falls below your chosen amount. Based on customer preferences, alerts can be sent through email or to a mobile device for quick notification.
- Review credit report: At least once a year, check your credit report for any suspicious or unauthorized activity.
- Be careful what you disclose: If you’re suspicious about a request for your personal information that you've received through an email, text message, website, by mail or phone, first verify the request. Use a legitimate source to confirm the request by calling the number listed on the company's website, billing statement, or on the back of the debit or credit card. Never share your mother’s maiden name, Social Security or Identity number, bank account numbers, or account usernames and passwords. Keep your phone number and home address private so they can't be collected.
- Store a copy of your personal & financial information in a secure location: Take a moment to inventory or photocopy the personal and financial information you carry in your purse or wallet, including items such as your driver’s license and credit cards. Store this list in a secure location. This important step will help you know whom to contact if your wallet or purse is ever lost or stolen.
“The Risk Involved With Trading Foreign Currency”
Foreign exchange trading carries with it some unique risks. These risks may be better understood with a clearer understanding of what foreign exchange trading is and a deeper insight of that nature of the transactions that flow through these systems.
Stanley Epstein, one of our Principal Associates has just published a new article dealing with just this. You can read it HERE.
Stanley Epstein, one of our Principal Associates has just published a new article dealing with just this. You can read it HERE.
Labels:
foreign exchange,
risk
Monday, 4 April 2011
Interactive 3D advertisements from Commonwealth Bank
Australia’s Commonwealth Bank has run a mobile-driven, augmented reality advertisement in key Australian markets. The advertisement, which was placed in a number of Australian newspapers, invited readers to download the bank’s 3D reader app which enabled them to explore “Cherryford Hill”, an interactive virtual town.
In this digital world, users can interact, move around and explore the features of the award-winning CommBank Property Guide app.
Pictures speak louder than words. See for yourself.
In this digital world, users can interact, move around and explore the features of the award-winning CommBank Property Guide app.
Pictures speak louder than words. See for yourself.
Labels:
mobile banking
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