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Dudley Expresses Concern on Leverage Rule

An influential New York bank regulator has privately raised concerns in recent weeks about a proposed rule that seeks to make the nation’s largest banks safer, frustrating other regulators who see it as a centerpiece of a financial system overhaul and want it to take effect swiftly.

William C. Dudley, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, expressed his concerns to senior Fed officials in Washington, according to three people who knew about his efforts. The rule, proposed last July and known as the supplementary leverage ratio, would put a stricter cap on the amount of borrowing that the biggest banks can do. Mr. Dudley raised the possibility that the rule could inhibit the Fed’s ability to conduct monetary policy, these people said. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly abot the regulation.

A person familiar with Mr. Dudley’s thinking insisted that he is comfortable with the leverage rule. He took his concerns to Fed officials in Washington merely to help make sure that they had properly considered the rule’s potential effect on monetary policy, this person said. The Fed officials in Washington assessed his concerns but did not think they were serious enough to warrant significant changes to the rule, the three people said.

Still, Mr. Dudley’s concerns played a decisive role in holding up the final version of the rule, two of the people said. Some regulators, including officials at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, were counting on the leverage regulation being completed by the end of last year. Strong supporters of the rule wanted it issued by then to reduce the chances that pressure from bank lobbyists would dilute it. The rule is now expected to come out in April at the earliest.

Since the financial crisis, banking regulators have mostly presented a united front as they have introduced a sweeping overhaul. But tensions have often emerged behind the scenes. And when it comes to commitment to the overhaul, the New York Fed faces greater skepticism than other agencies. It was criticized after the financial crisis of 2008 for failing to stem the huge weaknesses building up under its nose on Wall Street. Its critics said it had become too cozy with the large banks it regulates.

Since the crisis, Mr. Dudley, formerly an economist at Goldman Sachs, has made significant changes at the New York Fed to try to bolster its supervision efforts. He recently said in a hard-edge speech that the string of scandals at large banks suggested the industry might have a widespread ethics problem. And in an interview with The New York Times last year, he disputed the idea that his time at Goldman had made him more tolerant of the institutions he oversees.

“I do not feel that I in any way hold any allegiance or loyalty to the financial industry whatsoever,” he said.

Some of the banks regulated by the New York Fed oppose the leverage rule. Citigroup, for instance, sent a letter criticizing it to the Fed last October. One of the main objections of industry lobbyists is that the rule is harmfully blunt.

Banks have to hold capital against certain assets to absorb potential losses under two approaches, both of which banks have to comply with. One allows them to hold less capital against assets that are deemed less likely to produce losses in the future. But regulators understood there were big shortcomings with that “risk-based” approach, and that banks might find ways to evade such rules. It is also not always possible to predict which assets have the least risk.

In contrast, the other approach â€" the leverage ratio â€" forces banks to hold an equal amount of capital against each type of asset, regardless of its perceived risk. The new supplementary leverage ratio rule merely increases the overall amount of capital that banks must hold against all their assets.

The Fed, the F.D.I.C. and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency are the agencies writing the final rule.

It was not immediately clear exactly why Mr. Dudley thought a small increase in the leverage ratio might interfere with monetary policy. But bankers have often asserted that it could weigh on two types of assets that play a big role in transmitting changes in monetary policy into the wider economy.

One is “repo” loans, which are short-term market loans that are collateralized with bonds provided by the borrower. The other is cash that banks have on deposit at the central bank. In theory, banks may hold less cash and engage in fewer repo loans if the leverage ratio goes up. In turn, that might make it harder for the Fed to conduct monetary policy smoothly and effectively.

But the increase in the leverage ratio may have little to no effect on markets. Most large banks already comply with the higher ratio demanded in the new rule. And repo markets have already been shrinking for some time, for various reasons. Moreover, banks have been criticized for leaving cash idling at the Fed that they could be using to make loans.

“This rule has been debated ad nauseum, like too many rules that are stuck at the Fed,” said Dennis Kelleher, president of Better Markets, an advocacy group that often favors stricter regulation of Wall Street. “The New York Fed should not be holding it up when the votes to pass it have been there for some time.”

Ben Protess contributed reporting.



A Mystery: Who Are the Dewey Secret Seven?

They are the mysterious seven: former employees of Dewey & LeBoeuf who pleaded guilty to taking part in a four-year plan to manipulate the financial statements of the once prominent law firm, but whose identities and plea agreements are being kept under wraps by New York prosecutors.

When Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. announced this month the filing of a 106-count indictment against three former top executives at the law firm and a low-level employee, the disclosure that he had also secured pleas and potential cooperation from seven people in the nearly two-year investigation was a surprise.

But the decision to keep their names secret even after the four accused â€" Steven Davis, Dewey’s former chairman; Stephen DiCarmine, its former executive director; Joel Sanders, the former chief financial officer; and Zachary Warren, a former client relations manager â€" had been arrested and charged is striking some in the legal world as even more surprising. Defense lawyers say the continued sealing of those cases is akin to the way prosecutors often handle organized crime cases or an undercover investigation.

“It’s not the typical process,” said Alafair S. Burke, a criminal law professor at the Hofstra University School of Law and a writer of crime novels. Ms. Burke said she could understand the prosecutors wanting to keeping secret the names of people who had pleaded guilty if there was a fear of witness-tampering or witness intimidation. But that seems unlikely in what is essentially a white-collar accounting fraud case, she said.

“It is unusual to have the pleas sealed at this juncture and in the context of this case,” said Christopher E. Chang, a defense lawyer and a former Manhattan assistant prosecutor.

Defense lawyers said Mr. Vance’s approach to unsealing guilty pleas was markedly different from the one employed by Preet Bharara, the United States attorney for Manhattan, in the government’s insider trading investigation. These lawyers said that federal prosecutors would move swiftly to unseal cooperation agreements once the target of an insider trading investigation had been arrested and charged.

The New York Times has filed motions in New York State Supreme Court to unseal the criminal cases of four “John Does” and two “Jane Does,” who are believed to be six of the seven former employees to have pleaded guilty in the case. The case for the seventh person could not be identified from the state court’s online docketing service.

In court papers, The Times said news organizations and the public have a right of access to criminal proceedings that “can be abridged only in carefully defined circumstances.”

Erin Duggan Kramer, a spokeswoman for Mr. Vance, declined to comment, noting that the state prosecutors would explain their reasons for keeping the matters sealed in their reply to the unsealing motion.

The number of pleas secured by Mr. Vance from people who waived the right to a trial is striking for a financial crimes case. In the nearly 10-year insider trading investigation of SAC Capital Advisors, for instance, federal prosecutors secured guilty pleas from six traders and analysts who once worked for Steven A. Cohen’s hedge fund.

The seven pleas from former Dewey employees would suggest that the accusations of financial manipulation at the law firm, which at its peak employed more than 1,300 lawyers before collapsing in bankruptcy in May 2012, were not isolated incidents. The pleas also indicate that authorities have put together a case that will not rest solely on emails, in which some of the defendants openly talked about “cooking the books” at the law firm.

It is expected that some of the seven people who have pleaded will testify against the defendants at trial, said people briefed on the matter who spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to discuss the case publicly. These people said the identities of any cooperating witness and any plea deals they had reached with prosecutors would eventually need to be turned over to lawyers for the defendants.

But some lawyers have suggested Mr. Vance may be trying to keep the pleas under wraps as long as possible to avoid having to reveal whether his office agreed to any sweetheart deals with cooperators who might have avoided prison time, or allowed them to plead to a misdemeanor as opposed to a felony.

Three of the seven people whom Mr. Vance’s office has taken pleas from are Francis Canellas, the firm’s former finance director; Thomas Mullikin, the firm’s former controller; and Ilya Alter, who was the firm’s director of budgeting and planning, said the people briefed on the matter.

Mr. Canellas and Mr. Mullikin were named as defendants in a parallel civil case filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission in connection with a 2010 sale of $150 million in bonds by the law firm. Regulators contend that the former Dewey executives participated in a scheme to mislead investors in the bond offering about the financial health of the law firm.

Mr. Mullikin, until a few days ago, was the controller for another large law firm, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison. Lisa Green, a spokeswoman for the firm, said Mr. Mullikin no longer worked there.

Lawyers for Mr. Canellas, Mr. Mullikin and Mr. Alter declined to comment.

The people briefed on the matter said the two women who had taken pleas and were identified as “Jane Doe” on the court docketing service both worked in the firm’s billing and revenue departments.

Prosecutors say the accounting games at Dewey began in November 2008, not long after the merger was completed, and continued until March 7, 2012, shortly before Dewey filed for bankruptcy. The firm found it could not meet provisions in bank loans that required it to meet certain cash-flow projections as revenue slumped badly during the financial crisis. To make it appear as though Dewey was meeting those loan conditions, the top executives schemed to make a series of fraudulent accounting entries that either increased revenue, decreased expenses or appeared to rein in distribution payments to partners, prosecutors said.

Mr. Vance’s office contends that Mr. Davis and Mr. DiCarmine, known as “the Steves” within the law firm, and Mr. Sanders were the architects of that plan, which was intended to keep the law firm afloat long enough for the economy to turn around and revenue to began to pick-up.

One person who has not taken a plea and apparently will not be charged with participating in the accounting scheme is Dennis D’Alessandro, the former chief operating officer at Dewey and part of the executive team that oversaw the firm’s financial operation along with Mr. Davis, Mr. DiCarmine and Mr. Sanders.

Bruce Barket, the lawyer for Mr. D’Alessandro, said his client “didn’t commit a crime and didn’t plead guilty.” He added that Mr. D’Alessandro had been extensively interviewed by authorities and would be prepared to testify at trial if subpoenaed.

Still, not all lawyers were critical of Mr. Vance’s decision to keep the seven guilty pleas sealed. Marc Mukasey, the lawyer for Dr. Sidney Gilman, the crucial witness in the federal government’s successful insider trading prosecution of the former SAC Capital portfolio manager Mathew Martoma, said cooperating witnesses are never eager to see their names in the news.

“In the absence of damage to an ongoing undercover operation, it is highly unusual for the actual guilty plea and the documents that go along with it to remain under seal,” said Mr. Mukasey, who heads the white-collar defense practice at Bracewell & Giuliani. “But as a defense lawyer, the longer I can keep my client’s name out of the public disclosure, usually the better.”



In Hong Kong, Betting Big on Bitcoin

HONG KONG â€" By day, David Shin is an investment banker at a major financial firm. By night and in pretty much every other free minute, he is an entrepreneur looking to break into Hong Kong’s growing Bitcoin scene.

Even as concerns swirl about the long-term viability of the virtual currency, Mr. Shin is raising money, courting clients and hiring staff to build a sort of stock exchange for Bitcoin-oriented companies. Mr. Shin, 38, plans to start his venture, CryptoMex, at the end of April.

“I believe Bitcoin will bring about a brave new world of money,” he said. “The Internet started out as a revolutionary protocol, became more easy to use over time, and saw an explosive growth rate. The same is happening with Bitcoin.”

Mr. Shin joins a growing field of technology experts, financial players and crypto-geeks who are betting that an unfavorable regulatory environment in mainland China has put this special administrative region â€" with its more laissez-faire attitude â€" on the edge of something big.

Bitcoins, digital money backed by no government and “mined” by computers performing complex algorithms, have been largely unregulated, creating a virtual Wild West of programmers and speculators. But as Bitcoin tries to gain greater mainstream acceptance, authorities around the world have begun eyeing it more cautiously, as they might a currency. The spectacular collapse of Mt. Gox, the Tokyo-based Bitcoin exchange, has only fanned regulators’ concerns.

The regulatory moves in China have been among the more aggressive to date. In December, the Chinese authorities curtailed the use of Bitcoin by banks and payment processors, which helped halve the value of the virtual currency in two weeks. While the government said the general public was free to trade Bitcoin online, the broad fear is that China may eventually impose a sweeping ban on its use offline, as it did in 2009 to Q Coin, a virtual currency issued by Tencent.

But Hong Kong has so far remained relatively passive on the regulatory front. The former British colony has retained a separate political and economic system since it returned to Chinese rule, and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the city’s de facto central bank, says it is not directly regulating Bitcoin, at least for now.

Entrepreneurs in Hong Kong are essentially playing regulatory arbitrage. Although firm data is scarce, China is widely seen as the world’s second-largest market for Bitcoin, after the United States, and the restrictions have cooled its nascent Bitcoin scene. By virtue of proximity, businesses in Hong Kong are hoping to capture some of the demand.

“Like water, Bitcoin may take the path of least resistance and find its way into Hong Kong,” said Michael Chau, a business professor at the University of Hong Kong. “Because of the city’s proximity to China â€" and because it has become part of the country since 1997 â€" Hong Kong has the potential to absorb part of China’s Bitcoin market.”

The Chinese customer base of Laser Yuan, the founder of the Hong Kong-based exchange BitCashOut, doubled after the December notice. Three weeks ago, ANX, Hong Kong’s largest Bitcoin exchange, opened what it said was the world’s first brick-and-mortar store for the virtual currency, where customers can buy Bitcoin over the counter. It also set up a Bitcoin vending machine last week. Robocoin, a maker of Bitcoin automated teller machines, will set up its first A.T.M. in Hong Kong this spring, and plans 100 more around the world, none in China, said the company’s chief executive, Jordan Kelley.

“We have hundreds and hundreds of Chinese businessmen and entrepreneurs contact us with the purpose of becoming Robocoin operators,” Mr. Kelley said, adding that if China gave him the green light, the company would “have 200 A.T.M.s in China before the end of the year, if not more.”

Mr. Shin said he first saw the promise of Bitcoin last year, when the coins were worth $25 apiece, compared with about $620 now. After raising $2.5 million, he and his business partners built IceDrill, an operation in Montreal where racks of speedy computers race to generate Bitcoin.

But he is now selling part of his stake in the Canadian mine and focusing on his start-up in Hong Kong, which he said could be “the capital of Bitcoin in Asia.” Mr. Shin recently hired Jake Smith, a well-connected Bitcoin enthusiast who worked for Li Xiaolai â€" a Chinese investor who reportedly holds 100,000 coins â€" to get Chinese to buy into the companies listed on his platform.

“When the government comes out and puts constraints on Bitcoin in China, investors naturally look at Hong Kong â€" not Singapore, not Korea â€" for substitution,” said Mr. Shin.

Hong Kong operates in a type of regulatory limbo, so uncertainty reigns as much as opportunity. If China clamps down further, Hong Kong may be forced to rethink its stance.

John Greenwood, chief economist at Invesco and architect of Hong Kong’s exchange-rate system, said that whether the Chinese authorities would toughen measures depended on whether Bitcoin became so prevalent that it undermined China’s capital controls.

“China’s mainland residents can buy things with Bitcoin from Europe or North America or anywhere else in the world, or make transfers,” Mr. Greenwood said. “It’s a hole in the dike, a leakage from China’s system of foreign-exchange control.”

Entrepreneurs like Mr. Shin also face a legacy of past ventures that have proved problematic.

Two once-prominent Bitcoin crowdfunding platforms, BTCST and Bitfunder, are now defunct. BTCST, which offered Bitcoin-denominated securities that claimed to return up to 7 percent a week, has been charged by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission with fraud and with running a Ponzi scheme.

“The operating environment is much clearer,” said Mr. Shin. “The Hong Kong government has acknowledged Bitcoin as a commodity, so we have clarity on both fronts here as well.”

Then there is the need for better basic infrastructure and consumer awareness, a challenge for Bitcoin around the world.

For example, few businesses let customers make payments with the currency. In Hong Kong, they largely amount to a boutique hotel, a flower shop, a tailor, a music teacher and a Beijing-style crepe restaurant.

On the eve of the Chinese New Year in January, the three co-founders of the Bitcoin exchange ANX took to the bustling streets of the Lan Kwai Fong entertainment district to hand out 50,000 red envelopes, each carrying a little more than a dollar’s worth of Bitcoin.

“I use Bitcoin to buy stuff online all the time,” Ben Lau, an online marketer, said as he stood on the sidewalk using his smartphone to scan the QR code â€" an image that works like a bar code â€" on the voucher he had just received.

But Mr. Lau was in the minority. Even months after Bitcoin leapt into the limelight, most passers-by had little idea about what it does, and some associated it with drugs and scams.

When the after-work crowd diminished, the co-founders went to a nearby bar to check on rumors that it had recently started accepting Bitcoin. A few beers later, Ken Lo, managing director of ANX, waved for the bill and asked to pay in the virtual currency.

“A customer’s friend thought our bar had a matching name â€" Bit Point â€" with Bitcoin, so he helped us set this up,” said Gaga Lam, the bar’s manager. “We haven’t really tried it out yet.”

Her iPad Mini displayed the website of BitPay, the Bitcoin payment processor in which Asian billionaire Li Ka-shing was an early investor. But the group ended up paying with a credit card after a few unsuccessful tries.

“We can do better than that,” Mr. Lo said, referring to his company’s Bitcoin payment solution. “We clear faster than the banks, our transaction fee is lower than credit card companies, and there would be no chargebacks. And Bitcoin fans will flock to your bar in droves.”



Toyota Settlement Blazes Path for G.M.

Toyota’s settlement with the Justice Department on vehicle defects is yet another example of how covering up misconduct results in far greater penalties than the underlying violation. For General Motors, the settlement provides a template for resolving a burgeoning investigation into faulty ignition switches that caused a number of deaths.

Although the Toyota case centers on defects that drivers say caused sudden acceleration in its cars, the criminal charge is for violating the federal wire fraud statute. The Justice Department focused not so much on the defects themselves, which are not subject to criminal prosecution in most cases, as it did on how Toyota lied to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Congress and the general public about how it was addressing problems in its cars.

For example, the statement of facts, which the company acknowledged as true, notes that Toyota announced in November 2009 that it was “very, very confident that we have addressed” problems caused by floor mats interfering with accelerators in vehicles it had recalled. But the next day, it canceled a design improvement in vehicles that had the same problem but were not subject to the recall because it would “most likely mislead the concerned authorities and consumers and such to believe that we have admitted having defective vehicles.”

Unlike the typical fraud in which the perpetrator steals property from the victim, the government’s theory is that Toyota bought good public relations by making misleading statements about how it was addressing the defects so that it could continue to sell cars without nagging questions about their safety. That is a creative theory of fraud and one that might not have prevailed if Toyota had chosen to fight the case in court.

But it did not, and as is the norm in most corporate criminal cases these days, the company agreed to a deferred prosecution agreement rather than plead guilty. The statement of facts goes into great detail about how Toyota repeatedly issued misleading information to protect its image in the face of significant design defects in several models.

Toyota agreed to pay $1.2 billion and install an outside monitor for three years to ensure that it properly follows up on any reports of accidents caused by vehicle defects. In exchange, the government agreed to suspend prosecution on the criminal charge, which will be dismissed if Toyota complies with the terms of the agreement.

Vehicle defects are rarely the subject of a criminal prosecution. One of the most famous cases was in 1978, when Ford was accused of manslaughter in the death of three teenagers in Indiana who were driving a Pinto that exploded because of a defect that the company refused to fix. Ford was acquitted, although information about its decision not to correct the problem because it would have cost too much money was a serious embarrassment.

By charging wire fraud in the Toyota case, the Justice Department obtained a much larger financial penalty than would have been available to N.H.T.S.A. in a regulatory proceeding, which is capped at $35 million under the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act passed by Congress in 2012. The $1.2 billion payment is structured as a civil asset forfeiture based on the wire fraud, which authorizes the government to obtain any ill-gotten gains the company received from the criminal violation and not just an arbitrary civil penalty.

A criminal fine simply goes into the United States Treasury as a form of punishment, but property forfeited by a defendant can be used by the government to set up a fund to compensate victims of the vehicle defects. So the agreement gives the Justice Department much greater flexibility in how it will handle the money.

Toyota also agreed not to deduct the $1.2 billion from its taxes, an increasingly common provision in deferred prosecution agreements. This allows the Justice Department to avoid the criticism that the government is effectively financing part of a settlement if a company can simply write it off.

As for the monitor, companies don’t care for prying eyes, but the extent of Toyota’s dissembling in response to reported defects calls out for some form of outside supervision that will most likely cost it millions of dollars more.

The parallels between Toyota and G.M. are striking. Eric H. Holder Jr., the attorney general, made it quite clear in a statement that “Other car companies should not repeat Toyota’s mistake; a recall may damage a company’s reputation, but deceiving your customers makes that damage far more lasting.”

The use of the wire fraud statute means that any G.M. statements regarding ignition switch problems that were less than truthful can be the basis for a criminal charge. And those statements are not limited to what was said to N.H.T.S.A. or in an official filing but can include statements issued by the public relations department or interviews given to the news media.

An interesting question is whether the Justice Department will go a step further and pursue cases against individuals based on their statements. No one at Toyota was charged, and the fact that many of the employees involved may be in Japan could be a deterrent to pursuing a case further. Pursuing a case against individuals from G.M. would not face the same hurdle.

But in recent years foreign executives have been brought to this country to fact antitrust and tax evasion charges, so it is possible foreigners could be singled out in the Toyota case.

G.M. is still in the early stages of its internal investigation, which will take months to complete. The company knows now what it is likely facing once that process is complete: a hefty financial penalty and an outside monitor in exchange for avoiding a criminal conviction.



In Hong Kong, Betting Big on Bitcoin

HONG KONG â€" By day, David Shin is an investment banker at a major financial firm. By night and in pretty much every other free minute, he is an entrepreneur looking to break into Hong Kong’s growing Bitcoin scene.

Even as concerns swirl about the long-term viability of the virtual currency, Mr. Shin is raising money, courting clients and hiring staff to build a sort of stock exchange for Bitcoin-oriented companies. Mr. Shin, 38, plans to start his venture, CryptoMex, at the end of April.

“I believe Bitcoin will bring about a brave new world of money,” he said. “The Internet started out as a revolutionary protocol, became more easy to use over time, and saw an explosive growth rate. The same is happening with Bitcoin.”

Mr. Shin joins a growing field of technology experts, financial players and crypto-geeks who are betting that an unfavorable regulatory environment in mainland China has put this special administrative region â€" with its more laissez-faire attitude â€" on the edge of something big.

Bitcoins, digital money backed by no government and “mined” by computers performing complex algorithms, have been largely unregulated, creating a virtual Wild West of programmers and speculators. But as Bitcoin tries to gain greater mainstream acceptance, authorities around the world have begun eyeing it more cautiously, as they might a currency. The spectacular collapse of Mt. Gox, the Tokyo-based Bitcoin exchange, has only fanned regulators’ concerns.

The regulatory moves in China have been among the more aggressive to date. In December, the Chinese authorities curtailed the use of Bitcoin by banks and payment processors, which helped halve the value of the virtual currency in two weeks. While the government said the general public was free to trade Bitcoin online, the broad fear is that China may eventually impose a sweeping ban on its use offline, as it did in 2009 to Q Coin, a virtual currency issued by Tencent.

But Hong Kong has so far remained relatively passive on the regulatory front. The former British colony has retained a separate political and economic system since it returned to Chinese rule, and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the city’s de facto central bank, says it is not directly regulating Bitcoin, at least for now.

Entrepreneurs in Hong Kong are essentially playing regulatory arbitrage. Although firm data is scarce, China is widely seen as the world’s second-largest market for Bitcoin, after the United States, and the restrictions have cooled its nascent Bitcoin scene. By virtue of proximity, businesses in Hong Kong are hoping to capture some of the demand.

“Like water, Bitcoin may take the path of least resistance and find its way into Hong Kong,” said Michael Chau, a business professor at the University of Hong Kong. “Because of the city’s proximity to China â€" and because it has become part of the country since 1997 â€" Hong Kong has the potential to absorb part of China’s Bitcoin market.”

The Chinese customer base of Laser Yuan, the founder of the Hong Kong-based exchange BitCashOut, doubled after the December notice. Three weeks ago, ANX, Hong Kong’s largest Bitcoin exchange, opened what it said was the world’s first brick-and-mortar store for the virtual currency, where customers can buy Bitcoin over the counter. It also set up a Bitcoin vending machine last week. Robocoin, a maker of Bitcoin automated teller machines, will set up its first A.T.M. in Hong Kong this spring, and plans 100 more around the world, none in China, said the company’s chief executive, Jordan Kelley.

“We have hundreds and hundreds of Chinese businessmen and entrepreneurs contact us with the purpose of becoming Robocoin operators,” Mr. Kelley said, adding that if China gave him the green light, the company would “have 200 A.T.M.s in China before the end of the year, if not more.”

Mr. Shin said he first saw the promise of Bitcoin last year, when the coins were worth $25 apiece, compared with about $620 now. After raising $2.5 million, he and his business partners built IceDrill, an operation in Montreal where racks of speedy computers race to generate Bitcoin.

But he is now selling part of his stake in the Canadian mine and focusing on his start-up in Hong Kong, which he said could be “the capital of Bitcoin in Asia.” Mr. Shin recently hired Jake Smith, a well-connected Bitcoin enthusiast who worked for Li Xiaolai â€" a Chinese investor who reportedly holds 100,000 coins â€" to get Chinese to buy into the companies listed on his platform.

“When the government comes out and puts constraints on Bitcoin in China, investors naturally look at Hong Kong â€" not Singapore, not Korea â€" for substitution,” said Mr. Shin.

Hong Kong operates in a type of regulatory limbo, so uncertainty reigns as much as opportunity. If China clamps down further, Hong Kong may be forced to rethink its stance.

John Greenwood, chief economist at Invesco and architect of Hong Kong’s exchange-rate system, said that whether the Chinese authorities would toughen measures depended on whether Bitcoin became so prevalent that it undermined China’s capital controls.

“China’s mainland residents can buy things with Bitcoin from Europe or North America or anywhere else in the world, or make transfers,” Mr. Greenwood said. “It’s a hole in the dike, a leakage from China’s system of foreign-exchange control.”

Entrepreneurs like Mr. Shin also face a legacy of past ventures that have proved problematic.

Two once-prominent Bitcoin crowdfunding platforms, BTCST and Bitfunder, are now defunct. BTCST, which offered Bitcoin-denominated securities that claimed to return up to 7 percent a week, has been charged by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission with fraud and with running a Ponzi scheme.

“The operating environment is much clearer,” said Mr. Shin. “The Hong Kong government has acknowledged Bitcoin as a commodity, so we have clarity on both fronts here as well.”

Then there is the need for better basic infrastructure and consumer awareness, a challenge for Bitcoin around the world.

For example, few businesses let customers make payments with the currency. In Hong Kong, they largely amount to a boutique hotel, a flower shop, a tailor, a music teacher and a Beijing-style crepe restaurant.

On the eve of the Chinese New Year in January, the three co-founders of the Bitcoin exchange ANX took to the bustling streets of the Lan Kwai Fong entertainment district to hand out 50,000 red envelopes, each carrying a little more than a dollar’s worth of Bitcoin.

“I use Bitcoin to buy stuff online all the time,” Ben Lau, an online marketer, said as he stood on the sidewalk using his smartphone to scan the QR code â€" an image that works like a bar code â€" on the voucher he had just received.

But Mr. Lau was in the minority. Even months after Bitcoin leapt into the limelight, most passers-by had little idea about what it does, and some associated it with drugs and scams.

When the after-work crowd diminished, the co-founders went to a nearby bar to check on rumors that it had recently started accepting Bitcoin. A few beers later, Ken Lo, managing director of ANX, waved for the bill and asked to pay in the virtual currency.

“A customer’s friend thought our bar had a matching name â€" Bit Point â€" with Bitcoin, so he helped us set this up,” said Gaga Lam, the bar’s manager. “We haven’t really tried it out yet.”

Her iPad Mini displayed the website of BitPay, the Bitcoin payment processor in which Asian billionaire Li Ka-shing was an early investor. But the group ended up paying with a credit card after a few unsuccessful tries.

“We can do better than that,” Mr. Lo said, referring to his company’s Bitcoin payment solution. “We clear faster than the banks, our transaction fee is lower than credit card companies, and there would be no chargebacks. And Bitcoin fans will flock to your bar in droves.”



Toyota Settlement Blazes Path for G.M.

Toyota’s settlement with the Justice Department on vehicle defects is yet another example of how covering up misconduct results in far greater penalties than the underlying violation. For General Motors, the settlement provides a template for resolving a burgeoning investigation into faulty ignition switches that caused a number of deaths.

Although the Toyota case centers on defects that drivers say caused sudden acceleration in its cars, the criminal charge is for violating the federal wire fraud statute. The Justice Department focused not so much on the defects themselves, which are not subject to criminal prosecution in most cases, as it did on how Toyota lied to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Congress and the general public about how it was addressing problems in its cars.

For example, the statement of facts, which the company acknowledged as true, notes that Toyota announced in November 2009 that it was “very, very confident that we have addressed” problems caused by floor mats interfering with accelerators in vehicles it had recalled. But the next day, it canceled a design improvement in vehicles that had the same problem but were not subject to the recall because it would “most likely mislead the concerned authorities and consumers and such to believe that we have admitted having defective vehicles.”

Unlike the typical fraud in which the perpetrator steals property from the victim, the government’s theory is that Toyota bought good public relations by making misleading statements about how it was addressing the defects so that it could continue to sell cars without nagging questions about their safety. That is a creative theory of fraud and one that might not have prevailed if Toyota had chosen to fight the case in court.

But it did not, and as is the norm in most corporate criminal cases these days, the company agreed to a deferred prosecution agreement rather than plead guilty. The statement of facts goes into great detail about how Toyota repeatedly issued misleading information to protect its image in the face of significant design defects in several models.

Toyota agreed to pay $1.2 billion and install an outside monitor for three years to ensure that it properly follows up on any reports of accidents caused by vehicle defects. In exchange, the government agreed to suspend prosecution on the criminal charge, which will be dismissed if Toyota complies with the terms of the agreement.

Vehicle defects are rarely the subject of a criminal prosecution. One of the most famous cases was in 1978, when Ford was accused of manslaughter in the death of three teenagers in Indiana who were driving a Pinto that exploded because of a defect that the company refused to fix. Ford was acquitted, although information about its decision not to correct the problem because it would have cost too much money was a serious embarrassment.

By charging wire fraud in the Toyota case, the Justice Department obtained a much larger financial penalty than would have been available to N.H.T.S.A. in a regulatory proceeding, which is capped at $35 million under the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act passed by Congress in 2012. The $1.2 billion payment is structured as a civil asset forfeiture based on the wire fraud, which authorizes the government to obtain any ill-gotten gains the company received from the criminal violation and not just an arbitrary civil penalty.

A criminal fine simply goes into the United States Treasury as a form of punishment, but property forfeited by a defendant can be used by the government to set up a fund to compensate victims of the vehicle defects. So the agreement gives the Justice Department much greater flexibility in how it will handle the money.

Toyota also agreed not to deduct the $1.2 billion from its taxes, an increasingly common provision in deferred prosecution agreements. This allows the Justice Department to avoid the criticism that the government is effectively financing part of a settlement if a company can simply write it off.

As for the monitor, companies don’t care for prying eyes, but the extent of Toyota’s dissembling in response to reported defects calls out for some form of outside supervision that will most likely cost it millions of dollars more.

The parallels between Toyota and G.M. are striking. Eric H. Holder Jr., the attorney general, made it quite clear in a statement that “Other car companies should not repeat Toyota’s mistake; a recall may damage a company’s reputation, but deceiving your customers makes that damage far more lasting.”

The use of the wire fraud statute means that any G.M. statements regarding ignition switch problems that were less than truthful can be the basis for a criminal charge. And those statements are not limited to what was said to N.H.T.S.A. or in an official filing but can include statements issued by the public relations department or interviews given to the news media.

An interesting question is whether the Justice Department will go a step further and pursue cases against individuals based on their statements. No one at Toyota was charged, and the fact that many of the employees involved may be in Japan could be a deterrent to pursuing a case further. Pursuing a case against individuals from G.M. would not face the same hurdle.

But in recent years foreign executives have been brought to this country to fact antitrust and tax evasion charges, so it is possible foreigners could be singled out in the Toyota case.

G.M. is still in the early stages of its internal investigation, which will take months to complete. The company knows now what it is likely facing once that process is complete: a hefty financial penalty and an outside monitor in exchange for avoiding a criminal conviction.



Judge Sides with F.T.C. in Payday Lending Case


A United States District Court judge has reinforced the Federal Trade Commission’s authority to go after payday lenders that claim their ties to Native American tribes make them immune to laws restricting high-cost loans.

The judge, Gloria M. Navarro of the Federal District Court in Nevada, said that the agency was within its rights to pursue its case against one such lender, AMG Services, which the commission accused of misleading borrowers desperate for cash.

The decision comes as federal and state authorities are increasingly cracking down on payday lenders, which issue short-term loans tied to a borrower’s paycheck.

Earlier this week, for example, the Illinois attorney general filed a lawsuit against All Credit Lenders, a short-term lender that the office accused of violating state usury laws that cap interest rates at 36 percent.

The payday loan industry has argued that it provides credit for people who would otherwise be shut out of the mainstream financial system, but some authorities worry that hidden fees and other costs can make interest rates skyrocket above 300 percent, trapping consumers in a long cycle of debt.

As a growing number of states have looked to rein in payday lenders with interest caps and other restrictions, lenders have found creative ways to skirt those rules and make loans to residents even in states where they are banned.

The companies affiliated with tribes have been a particularly tough challenge to regulators.

Regulators in at least 21 states have tried to go after lenders connected to tribes. New York State’s financial regulator, Benjamin M. Lawsky, for example, sent letters to 35 online lenders, including some with tribal affiliations, ordering them to “cease and desist” from offering loans that violate the state’s 25 percent interest rate cap.

In one example cited by the F.T.C., the defendants are said to have told one consumer that a $500 loan would cost him $650 to repay. But the company tried to charge him $1,925 to pay off the $500 loan, and threatened him with arrest when he balked at paying that amount, the F.T.C. said in its initial complaint in 2012.

In the case against AMG, Judge Navarro said that the Federal Trade Commission Act, a federal law preventing unfair or deceptive competition and commerce, “grants the F.T.C. authority to regulate arms of Indian tribes, their employees, and their contractors.”

The decision upholds an earlier opinion on the case from a magistrate judge last year.

“This ruling makes it crystal clear that the F.T.C.’s consumer protection laws apply to businesses that are affiliated with tribes,” Jessica Rich, the director of the agency’s bureau of consumer protection, said in a statement on Wednesday. “It’s a strong signal to deceptive payday lenders that their days of hiding behind a tribal affiliation are over.”

In its announcement, the commission called AMG Services’ ties to American Indian tribes in Oklahoma and Nebraska “tenuous.” The F.T.C. said that the company violated federal rules by “piling on undisclosed and inflated fees, and by threatening borrowers in debt collection calls with arrest and lawsuits.”

A representative for AMG could not be immediately reached for comment.

Last year, the agency reached a partial settlement with AMG that included barring the company from threatening to sue borrowers or have them arrested in order to collect on loans.



News Release Distributor to Stop Selling to High-Speed Traders

Eric T. Schneiderman, the New York attorney general, can count another victory in his quest to curb some of the advantages enjoyed by the fastest traders on Wall Street.

Mr. Schneiderman’s office announced on Wednesday that Marketwired, a Canadian company that distributes press releases on behalf of public companies, had agreed to end its practice of selling its information feeds directly to high-frequency traders. The arrangement had given these computer-driven traders a split-second advantage over investors who received the releases through news wires, the attorney general’s office said.

Marketwired, however, said in a statement that it had made the decision to end these sales “prior to any discussions with the New York attorney general” and that it “subsequently notified them of our decision.”

Still, the announcement comes a day after Mr. Schneiderman stepped up the pressure on high-frequency traders and the companies that serve them. In a speech on Tuesday, he said he was scrutinizing services provided by stock exchanges, which permit the high-speed traders to pay to put their computer servers within the exchanges’ data centers.

Such services help the traders see market information milliseconds before other investors, supporting what Mr. Schneiderman calls “insider trading 2.0.”

“My office is committed to ensuring a fair, stable, and transparent market,” Mr. Schneiderman said in a statement on Wednesday. “I applaud Marketwired for doing the right thing and strongly encourage other industry participants to follow their lead.”

Another distributor of news releases, Business Wire, agreed in February to stop selling the information directly to high-speed traders. Last year, under pressure from Mr. Schneiderman, the financial information company Thomson Reuters said it would end its practice of selling speedy traders an early look at a closely watched survey of consumer confidence.

Marketwired, which is based in Toronto with offices in the United States, distributes the type of information that could potentially move stocks, including financial disclosures. It has more than 15,000 clients, including Google, Microsoft, Coca-Cola and Nike, according to its website. The company also does social media monitoring and analytics.

“We will now eliminate any perceived advantages gained through technology by certain customers,” Marketwired said in its statement. “As such, Marketwired will no longer provide its distribution service to high-frequency trading firms. Our decision enables us to continue serving our customers under the highest ethical standards that Marketwired holds.”



What Is Mercuria?

Two men set on creating one of the world’s leading commodities trading houses got a little closer to their goal on Wednesday.

The Mercuria Energy Group, a privately held trading house founded by two former Wall Street oil traders, agreed on Wednesday to buy JPMorgan Chase’s physical commodities arm for $3.5 billion. Mercuria, begun in 2004 by the two traders, Marco Dunand and Daniel Jaeggi, was already one of the four leading independent commodity traders in the world.

The pair worked at various firms for years before deciding to go it alone in 2004. Mercuria started out with a focus on oil trading, but has since expanded to other products and assets, including coal and infrastructure. It owns a stake in an iron ore product supplier in Malaysia, for example, and minority interests in companies building oil infrastructure in China.

Oil, however, remains the company’s core focus.

Mr. Dunand and Mr. Jaeggi met as university students in Geneva, according to an article in The Wall Street Journal, and later went on to trade oil at Goldman Sachs. At one point, the pair became known as Bambi and Godzilla for their good cop/bad cop routine on the trading floor, according to the article.

A representative for Mercuria could not be reached immediately for comment on Wednesday.

From the start, it appears the pair was bent on building Mercuria into a global commodities enterprise. The company’s name derives from Mercury, the Roman god of merchants, commerce and trade, according to one report.

Since it began, the company has built up an army of energy traders around the world. According to Mercuria’s website, the company now employs more than 1,000 people in 28 countries, and conducts trading in more than 50 nations.

Mercuria had $98 billion in turnover in 2012, according to its website, more than double the figures reported in 2010.



Insider Case Nets Employees at Top Law Firm and Bank


Two Wall Street insiders, one a broker at a big bank and the other a clerk at a prestigious law firm, were arrested and charged on Wednesday for an insider trading scheme that spanned nearly four years and involved more than a dozen corporate secrets.

Federal prosecutors in New Jersey and the Securities and Exchange Commission announced the case against Vladimir Eydelman and Steven Metro, claiming their scheme reaped about $5.6 million in illicit profits. Mr. Eydelman works at Morgan Stanley and Mr. Metro at the law firm Simpson Thacher & Bartlett.

A third participant in the scheme â€" and unnamed 40-year-old mutual friend who was described in court papers as the “middle man” â€" was not charged. Prosecutors characterized him as a “cooperating witness” in the case against Mr. Eydelman, his broker at Morgan Stanley, and Mr. Metro, an old friend from law school.

The criminal and civil complaints laid bare an elaborate, if somewhat old-fashioned, scheme. It began with Mr. Metro, who is accused of gleaning secret details of corporate deals from the internal computer system at Simpson Thacher, whose clients were involved in the deals. Mr. Metro, who earned a law degree but works as a clerk rather than a lawyer, leaked the details of the deals to the “middle man” during covert meetings at a New York City coffee shop, according to the government.

In a scene that seems ripped from a television drama, the middleman would then head to Grand Central Terminal’s signature four-faced clock, where he would relay the tips to Mr. Eydelman on a Post-it note or napkin. Mr. Eydelman â€" who, according to the government, used the tips to place well-timed trades on behalf of himself, family and other clients â€" would watch as the middle man “chewed up and sometimes even ate the note or napkin.”

The case represents the latest chapter in the government’s crackdown on leaks flowing from trusted players, including lawyers and accountants, at the center of the deal-making universe. In a 2011 case that echoes the current one, the S.E.C. and prosecutors in New Jersey accused a lawyer of sharing corporate secrets with a trader in a scheme that netted more than $32 million.

“Law firms are sanctuaries for the confidential treatment of client information, and this scheme victimized not only a law firm but also its corporate clients and ultimately the investors in those companies,” Daniel M. Hawke, the senior S.E.C. official who oversaw the case, said in a statement. “We are continuing to combat serial insider trading schemes, particularly by law firm employees and other professionals who are entrusted with extremely sensitive market-moving information.”

Lawyers for Mr. Eydelman and Mr. Metro could not be immediately identified, suggesting that the case appeared to come as a surprise to both men. F.B.I. agents arrested Mr. Metro, 40, and Mr, Eydelman, 42, on Wednesday morning. They were expected to appear in court later on Wednesday.

In a statement, a Morgan Stanley spokesman said: “We were just informed of the arrest this morning and will cooperate fully with the authorities as they pursue this matter. Obviously, we do not tolerate insider trading and will take appropriate action based on the facts.”

The bank, the spokesman said, placed Mr. Eydelman on leave “pending further review.”

Simpson Thacher did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The tips at the center of the case touched some of the firm’s biggest clients, a list that reads like a who’s who of corporate America. The deals, the government said, involved Sealy, Tyco and Office Depot.

“They allegedly rigged the system by exploiting sensitive information that was not available to other investors,” Paul Fishman, the United States attorney in New Jersey, said in a statement. “This kind of activity undermines the integrity of our financial markets and weakens investor confidence.”



Japan Display Slides 15% in Market Debut

TOKYO - A high-stakes bid by Japan to breathe life back into its electronics sector got a tepid response from investors on Wednesday after Japan Display, fused from the struggling display units of Sony, Toshiba and Hitachi two years ago, slid 15 percent in its debut on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

The $3.3 billion listing of Japan Display, a major supplier to Apple, comes after a government-backed restructuring effort that sought to bring bigger economies of scale to Japanese manufacturing and to sharpen its competitive edge against fast-rising Asian rivals.

But the offering, Japan’s largest this year, has been met with lukewarm interest, especially from foreign investors, who remain unconvinced of the company’s prospects against rivals in South Korea and Taiwan. That skepticism prompted Japan Display to price its offer at the bottom of its marketed range, and also scaled back the overseas part of its offer to 37.5 percent from 45 percent.

Japan Display’s offering plans have also been weighed down by a sluggish domestic stock market this year, as investors grow more wary of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s commitment to promised market reforms.

“It’s a disappointing I.P.O. It would seem that the company would have liked a more stable investor base, especially since it’s looking to build a growing business and invest in new capacity,” said Damian Thong, a Macquarie Capital Securities technology analyst based here.

“It could be interpreted as the market lacking confidence in the company’s position within the industry,” Mr. Thong said. “But in the end, they did get their money. They got their I.P.O. done. That’s a positive. They can now use this money to invest in their technology, and to increase scale.”

Shares of Japan Display closed at 763 yen on Wednesday, down from the offering price of 900 yen, even as the Nikkei average rose 0.4 percent. On Tuesday, Hitachi Maxell, which makes Blu-ray discs and other storage media, also had a less-than-stellar debut, slumping 14 percent below its I.P.O. price on its first day of trading in Tokyo.

Japan Display’s offering included $1.25 billion worth of new shares issued to raise capital to invest in new factories. The government-backed Innovation Network Corporation of Japan, which led the restructuring and is the company’s biggest shareholder, sold off much of its stake, bringing its holdings down to 35.6 percent from 86.7 percent.

Other restructuring efforts backed by the Japanese government have fared poorly. Elpida Memory and Renesas Electronics, created from the chip-making operations of some of Japan’s largest electronics companies, have since failed to stand on their own: Elpida filed for bankruptcy protection in 2012 before being bought by Micron Technology last year. Renesas was taken over by the Innovation Network Corporation for restructuring after it could not stem years of losses.

Japan Display, forged in 2011 from the display units of Sony, Hitachi and Toshiba, has focused on high-resolution screens to supply to smartphone makers. The company expects to post a net income of $360 million for the financial year through March 31, more than 10 times the profit it booked last year.



JPMorgan to Sell Commodities Unit for $3.5 Billion

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Goldman’s Former Leader Appears Among Warriors and Dragons

Two decades ago, Stephen Friedman navigated challenging markets as the head of Goldman Sachs.

These days, he can be seen traversing a fantastical realm populated by bloodthirsty warriors and screeching dragons.

Mr. Friedman, 76, a former senior partner of Goldman who later worked in the White House under President George W. Bush, has a brief cameo in the upcoming season of the HBO series “Game of Thrones.”

His appearance lasts only a few seconds. But one eagle-eyed viewer at the series premiere Tuesday evening in New York, the author William D. Cohan, spotted Mr. Friedman, whom he had interviewed for a book on Goldman.

Indeed, as a review by DealBook confirmed, the onetime titan of Wall Street appears in humble garb near the beginning of the episode. Dressed in peasant’s robes with a stern look on his face, Mr. Friedman walks down a dirt path, carrying a basket, accompanied by a woman.

Then, as quickly as he appears, he is gone.

The cameo by Mr. Friedman might not come as a surprise to die-hard fans of series. His son, David Benioff, is a creator of the show.

Mr. Benioff, who is also a novelist and is married to the actress Amanda Peet, was in attendance on Tuesday at the Season 4 premiere, which was held at Lincoln Center in Manhattan. (The premiere airs on television on April 6.)

Some in the audience clapped when Mr. Friedman appeared on screen, according to Mr. Cohan. Mr. Friedman, who is currently the chairman of the private equity firm Stone Point Capital, could not immediately be reached for comment on Wednesday.

Speaking by phone on Wednesday, Mr. Cohan explained why Mr. Friedman and his son have different last names. According to Mr. Cohan, Mr. Friedman said that his son changed his name as an adult, when “he didn’t want to be known as the 50th David Friedman in Hollywood.”

But Mr. Benioff’s family is present in his work.

“It just shows you,” Mr. Cohan joked, “Goldman’s tentacles are everywhere.”



Questions Over Goldman Deal as Investors Sit in the Dark

The “revolt of the Muppets” is heating up.

That’s how a Georgetown finance professor, James J. Angel, characterizes the combat by him and other investors over Goldman Sachs’ takeover of a hotel company a few years ago. (The phrase comes from a former Goldman employee, Greg Smith, who wrote that Goldman bankers referred to clients as the famous Henson puppets, a charge the bank disputed.)

The fight raises such a cornucopia of financial issues that it could shoulder an entire business school course. The holders of preferred stock in the company have taken to commenting to the Securities and Exchange Commission in outrage. Professor Angel accuses Goldman of multiple securities law violations. In essence, the question is: In these post-financial crisis days, what constitutes improper conflicts of interest?

First, some back story (and a friendly warning to readers: Goldman plays more roles in this than Joanne Woodward in “The Three Faces of Eve.”)

In 2007, a Goldman private equity fund called Whitehall took a company that runs franchised motels, like Residence Inn, private in a $2.2 billion transaction. It renamed the company W2007 Grace Acquisition. A Goldman entity, Goldman Sachs Mortgage Company, was the main lender for the leveraged buyout. Grace is run by current Goldman employees.

Goldman did not buy the publicly traded preferred shares, however. Instead, Grace went “dark,” as Floyd Norris explained last year. That meant it no longer filed financials with the Securities and Exchange Commission, a move allowed for companies with fewer than 300 shareholders. Grace delisted from the New York Stock Exchange and stopped paying dividends. It took other steps to make it difficult for anyone, including the preferred hoders, to get any information about the company. Shareholders had to request the financials from the company and, at one point, had to pay 10 cents a page for the privilege of finding out how their investment was doing. They also had to sign a nondisclosure agreement.

All of this made it onerous for a shareholder to sell the stock to another investor. Not surprisingly, the preferred shares plummeted in value. They had a value of $25 a share, but sank to a low of 5 cents. (The real estate slump and the dividend cessation probably accelerated the drop, but the opacity surely hurt, too.)

In 2012 and 2013, a mysterious entity named PFD Holdings started buying those battered-down preferred shares. In 2012, PFD was paying $3 to a little more than $5 a share. Soon after, the preferred doubled in price, and now the shares trade at about $12. As of its last announcement, PFD owns 58 percent of the preferred shares. Nice trade!

So, what is PFD Holdings? Few outsiders really know because there’s little information out there about PFD. In Grace’s news releases, the company calls it a “sister company.” In other words, Goldman is ultimately behind PFD. I asked a former Goldman executive. He hadn’t heard of it but jokingly suggested the initials stood for Pretty Fishy and Dodgy. Well, in truth he used another “F” word, but you get the idea.

A Goldman spokeswoman wrote to me that “PFD acquired those shares in two privately negotiated transactions from two groups of shareholders who approached us to sell. Any assertion we acted inappropriately is unfounded.” She added, “The claims made by the preferred shareholders are without merit. They are a matter of ongoing litigation and we are defending ourselves vigorously. We have no further comment at this time.”

If all Goldman had done was take steps to suppress information about the shares to snap them up on the cheap, that might have been troubling enough. But just wait, there’s more.

For one, Grace has not filled spots for independent directors on its board. Grace has announced meetings to hold votes on those directors, but then said the meetings failed to reach quorums. In the latest attempt last August, Grace said it was delaying yet another special meeting to vote for seats. This time, the issue was that the mysterious PFD had told the company “of its intention to consider a tender offer“ for the remaining shares it did not own “later in 2013,” according to a Grace news release.

That was good timing because this one may just have reached a quorum, given all the angry preferred holders. And then, guess what? No tender offer materialized in 2013, and hasn’t yet.

Here’s another issue: In 2009, Goldman Sachs Mortgage forgave $545 million in Whitehall’s debt, receiving mainly an option to buy control of about 80 percent of most of Grace’s hotels. Grace was in trouble, and this may have saved the company.

In 2012, Goldman Sachs Mortgage sold that option back to Whitehall for $175 million. Were these deals, in which Goldman negotiated with Goldman, fair? There do not appear to have been any independent, third-party voices involved (Goldman had ceased to be the controlling lender in 2008 and says that Whitehall’s outside investors approved the 2009 transaction). The end result of these transactions is that Goldman’s Whitehall appears to have ended up recreating its ownership in most of the hotels at a cheap price. Also, some preferred holders fear their interest in the company has been subordinated to that of Goldman’s private equity fund.

So where does the Muppet Revolt stand? Grace may have to start making its financials public again, which could bring out more detail about Goldman’s various dealings with itself. An investment adviser from Wedbush Securities requested a shareholder list from the end of the year and tallied them up. In a letter he sent to the S.E.C., he says he has counted 418 shareholders of record. That would be enough to revive the requirement to file financials.

Now we are in what Professor Angel calls the “Florida vote-counting” stage, trying to determine who should count as a “shareholder,” with Goldman’s lawyers battling against the preferred holders.

Another issue â€" I warned you that I was packing an entire semester into one column â€" is how this all comports with the Volcker Rule. Under the rule, banks are not allowed to own more than 3 percent of a private equity firm. They are not allowed speculate in securities. But there is a merchant banking exemption that allows banks to take over companies directly on a temporary basis. Is PFD permitted by the Volcker Rule? It might be helpful if some regulator asked some pointed questions.

Speaking of which, where is the S.E.C. in all this? So far, the agency hasn’t been heard from on the question of how many shareholders there are or in response to any of the allegations from the preferred holders.

When deals like this go down, I feel like we are nation of Jake Gitteses, watching big bank deals with incomprehension. In “Chinatown,” the private detective asks the wealthy baron Noah Cross: “Why are you doing it? How much better can you eat? What could you buy that you can’t already afford?”

The scary thing about this Grace deal is that the money is so small (well, relative to Goldman, at least). The preferred shares amounted to about $146 million initially. It’s almost as if Goldman does it because it can.



After Derivatives, Betting on Crispy Seaweed Chips

Until last year, Robert Mock sold financial derivatives at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Today, he sells something completely different: seaweed chips.

The crispy snacks, which he developed with three other fathers of young children, have been flying off the shelves since Whole Foods and other stores picked them up in January. The start-up, known as Ocean’s Halo, has now attracted prominent backers, including Jerry Yang, a co-founder of Yahoo.

Mr. Yang is participating in a $2 million financing round for Ocean’s Halo that is expected to close this week. Robert F. Sharpe Jr., a former ConAgra executive, is leading the investment round and has joined the company as its chairman.

For Mr. Mock, the chief executive, the venture is a far cry from his previous line of work selling credit-default swaps and subprime-mortgage derivatives. He spent five years based in San Francisco managing Bank of America’s rates and currencies origination for commercial clients on the West Coast. He worked at JPMorgan Chase in Dallas before that.

“I would just describe it as complete opposite ends of the spectrum,” Mr. Mock, 42, said in an interview on Tuesday. After resigning from finance last March, he said, “I haven’t missed it yet.”

He is now betting on the viability of a quirky chip that counts health benefits and environmental sustainability as two of its selling points. To fine-tune the chip and tweak its level of seaweed flavor, the four founders, and a food scientist they hired last year, went through more than 50 variations.

Venture capital investors have opened their wallets recently for a number of food-related start-ups, which are trying to bring Silicon Valley’s ethos of “disruption” to the kitchen. These have included brick-and-mortar chains, like Sweetgreen and Blue Bottle Coffee, and also companies creating new concoctions to be sold in grocery stores.

The founders of Ocean’s Halo arrived at the idea while discussing how much their children loved eating sheets of seaweed. Mr. Mock, who grew up eating potato chips in Texas, said he was surprised at how much he enjoyed seaweed’s taste.

“The idea was, what if we put this in a form that Americans are more used to, i.e., a chip?” said Michael Buckley, 45, one of the founders, who works in communications at Facebook.

The company, based in Burlingame, Calif., got going in 2011, but the founders started taking it more seriously in late 2012 and last year. At one point, while experimenting with recipes, they started a fire in the kitchen of Michael Shim, one of the founders, who formerly was an executive at Groupon and Yahoo.

It was through Mr. Shim that Ocean’s Halo was introduced to Mr. Yang.

“These guys are passionate and smart, but they’re also applying some of the principles of technology innovation to food,” Mr. Yang said in a statement by email. “They have a real chance to develop a global brand that perfectly fits a number of broader societal trends including healthier living and sustainability.”

To source the ingredients, the company met with seaweed farmers in Korea. One of the founders, Shin Rhee, who is the president of the company’s international operations, is based in Beijing.

They unveiled their product last October, raising an initial $1.7 million financing round and selling the chips in a handful of stores. But this year, after Whole Foods started selling the chips in several regions, more specialty stores signed on. Other major retailers are expected to start selling the chips soon, including Safeway stores starting next month.

Since January, orders have tripled, according to Mr. Mock. The company says it recently sold its 100,000th bag of chips.

Mr. Mock is not sentimental about his days in finance, pointing out that the derivatives business has come under scrutiny since the financial crisis. But in certain ways, he is using his financial experience in his seaweed venture.

“We definitely formed this business model based on having hedges, like backups, in place,” Mr. Mock said. “Secondary suppliers, secondary distributors, secondary bakeries. We’ve treated business decisions with hedging in mind.”

His former colleagues at Bank of America and JPMorgan initially thought he was crazy when he went to sell seaweed chips, Mr. Mock recalled. But many are now fans of the product.

“The guys in San Francisco say, ‘Hey these are great,’” Mr. Mock said. “The guys in Texas say, ‘Dang, these aren’t so bad.’”



Morning Agenda: More Scrutiny for Payday Lenders

The battle is heating up against payday lenders and their practice of offering fast money to borrowers so desperate for cash that they are often willing to accept it at almost any terms, Jessica Silver-Greenberg and Rachel Abrams write in DealBook.

The crackdown, which is playing out state by state, gained momentum on Tuesday when the Illinois attorney general, Lisa Madigan, accused All Credit Lenders of misleading borrowers into buying a product pitched as a way to protect them from falling behind on payments in the event of a job loss. But the lawsuit contends that the protections never materialize and the fee is simply a way to raise interest rates that circumvent the state’s usury cap.

The payday loan industry has long argued that it provides a valuable product to borrowers who might otherwise lack access to credit â€" with the high interest rates a reflection of the riskiness of the loans â€" but federal and state authorities remain unconvinced. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and regulators across the country are currently investigating a range of lenders, including online lenders and lenders tied to Native American tribes, in the hopes of shielding Americans from interest rates that can exceed 300 percent.

NEW ALLIANCES IN BATTLE FOR CORPORATE CONTROL  |  Institutional investors like mutual funds and pension funds used to be happy to take stakes in public companies and let their management do their thing. In turn, companies trusted that these investors would be passive shareholders and not rock the boat. But the abrupt rise and increasing success of activist investors is challenging these long-held assumptions, David Gelles and Michael J. de la Merced write in DealBook. Now, mutual funds and other big money managers are working alongside activist hedge funds behind the scenes to agitate for change.

Several factors are contributing to the more robust dialogue between traditional investors and activists. For one, many activist hedge funds have outperformed traditional index funds in recent years, emboldening activists and causing traditional money managers to take note. Activists have also been cleaning up their image, with many prominent agitators no longer issuing management-bashing poison-pen letters that once characterized the industry. And though it is rare, institutional investors are “even taking the next step and effectively starting activist campaigns of their own,” Mr. Gelles and Mr. de la Merced write.

EXAMINING UNEQUAL TREATMENT IN PENALIZING CORPORATE WRONGDOERS  |  Bankers these days would probably not win a popularity contest. Even so, a recent court ruling calls into question whether it is right for an investment bank to pay the bill in a legal settlement while directors escape with nary a scratch, Steven M. Davidoff writes in the Deal Professor column.

Earlier this month, a Delaware judge ruled that the Royal Bank of Canada’s investment bank was liable for up to $250 million based on a claim that it aided wrongdoing by the board of the ambulance services company Rural/Metro Corporation by selling the company on the cheap. At the same time, Rural/Metro’s board was able to settle a shareholder lawsuit over the sale for just $6.6 million, most of which was paid by insurance. So why the apparent discrepancy?

Mr. Davidoff writes: “It goes back to Delaware laws, which allow companies to limit the liability of directors, rules that Rural/Metro adopted. But these laws don’t apply to investment bankers, so you have the strange situation where the R.B.C. bankers who did wrong pay for their liability but the directors move on without any real penalty.”

ON THE AGENDA  |  The Mortgage Bankers’ Association purchase applications index is out at 7 a.m. The Federal Reserve’s policy-making committee makes an announcement at 2 p.m. after concluding its two-day meeting. Janet L. Yellen holds her first news conference as Fed chairwoman at 2:30 p.m. Stephen A. Schwarzman, the head of the Blackstone Group, is on CNBC at 8 a.m. William H. Gross, the founder of Pimco, is on CNBC at 1:55 p.m. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is on Bloomberg TV at 5 p.m.

MORE SCRUTINY OF HIGH-SPEED TRADING  |  The New York attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, announced on Tuesday that he was widening his clampdown on the high-frequency traders that dominate financial markets, urging regulators and stock exchanges to curb practices that help foster what he terms “insider trading 2.0,” William Alden writes in DealBook. In particular, Mr. Schneiderman is taking aim at the exchanges, including the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, that permit high-frequency traders to put their computer servers within the exchanges’ data centers, a practice known as co-location.

Among other services being examined, Mr. Schneiderman is looking into the exchanges’ practices of providing extra network bandwidth, special switches and fast connection cables. In redoubling his commitment to police high-frequency trading, Mr. Schneiderman hopes to build on earlier successes by his office, including the decision last summer by the financial information provider Thomson Reuters to end its practice of selling speedy traders an early glimpse at a closely watched survey of consumer confidence.

 

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Société Générale Offers to Buy Outstanding Shares in Online Bank  |  The share purchase would value Boursorama, in which Société Générale owns a 56 percent stake, at about 1 billion euros. After the buyout, the Spanish bank La Caixa would continue to own a 21 percent stake in Boursorama. DealBook »

Vestar to Buy I.S.S., an Influential Shareholder AdviserVestar to Buy I.S.S., an Influential Shareholder Adviser  |  MSCI, the parent company of Institutional Shareholder Services, agreed on Tuesday to sell the business to the private equity firm Vestar Capital Partners for $364 million. DealBook »

Arca Continental of Mexico to Buy Ecuador’s Tonicorp  |  The Mexican bottling and snacks company Arca Continental announced on Tuesday that it would acquire Holding Tonicorp, a dairy products company based in Ecuador, in a deal valued at about $400 million, The Wall Street Journal writes. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Merger Talks Between J. Crew and Japan’s Fast Retailing Collapse  |  Japan’s Fast Retailing, the parent of the apparel chain Uniqlo, is no longer in talks to buy the American clothing retailer J. Crew from its private equity owners, TPG Capital and Leonard Green & Partners, Reuters reports, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. REUTERS

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Barclays Grants $53 Million in Shares to Top ExecutivesBarclays Grants $53 Million in Shares to Top Executives  |  The awards for the year come as Barclays, which is shedding jobs as part of a restructuring, is facing criticism over its pay structure. DealBook »

A Credible Strategy to Fix BarclaysA Credible Strategy to Fix Barclays  |  Barclays’ chief executive needs to pare back in businesses that the bank does not need and shore up several areas that remain, Dominic Elliott writes for Reuters Breakingviews. DealBook »

JPMorgan Agrees to Sell Commodities Business  |  JPMorgan Chase has agreed to sell its physical commodities trading business to the Swiss energy trading company Mercuria Energy Group, The Wall Street Journal writes, citing an unidentified person familiar with the situation. The terms of the deal are not yet clear, but when the bank opened its books to potential buyers last fall, it valued the assets at $3.3 billion. WALL STREET JOURNAL

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Thoma Bravo Agrees to Purchase TravelClick for $930 Million  |  The private equity firm Thoma Bravo has agreed to acquire TravelClick, a hospitality software company, from Genstar Capital for $930 million, The Wall Street Journal writes. People familiar with the situation said Genstar roughly tripled what it paid for the company in 2007. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Paul Capital Said to Be Winding Down  |  Paul Capital, which buys stakes in private equity funds, is winding down its portfolio and closing all but one of its offices after a planned sale to the private equity firm Hamilton Lane collapsed, The Wall Street Journal writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Blackstone Working on Higher Bid for Gates Global  |  The Blackstone Group is working on a higher offer for the industrial conglomerate Gates Global after its owners turned down the firm’s previous bid of about $5.5 billion last week, Reuters reports, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. REUTERS

In Private Equity, Popularity of Co-Investments Soars  |  “Although there’s plenty of reason to think that co-investments have underperformed returns from private equity funds in the past, there’s no reason why co-investments can’t be as lucrative - or perform even better than funds - in the future, provided investors exercise care,” Antoine Drean writes in Forbes. FORBES

HEDGE FUNDS »

Activists Prevail in Campaign to Oust CommonWealth’s Board  |  A shareholder vote set in motion a process that will almost certainly result in the ouster of Barry M. Portnoy and his son, Adam D. Portnoy, who control CommonWealth REIT. DealBook »

Leucadia Raises Stake in Harbinger  |  The share sale to the Leucadia National Corporation is the latest in a series of moves by the embattled hedge fund billionaire Philip A. Falcone to focus on the Harbinger Group after reaching an $18 million settlement with the S.E.C. DealBook »

Hong Kong Hedge Funds Find a Way to Invest in Alibaba Shares Ahead of I.P.O.  |  Some hedge funds in Hong Kong are so eager for the initial public offering of the Chinese Internet giant Alibaba Group that they are purchasing synthetic shares of the company, which are being sold by investment banks as certificates, The Financial Times writes. FINANCIAL TIMES

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

After Accidental Release, ING Group Confirms Stock Sale PlansAfter Accidental Release, ING Group Confirms Stock Sale Plans  |  The Dutch insurance giant ING Group announced that it would, in fact, sell 33.5 million shares in its American insurance unit. DealBook »

N.Y.S.E. Leads Race to Land Alibaba Listing  |  The New York Stock Exchange is leading the pack in a race to win the listing for the shares of the Chinese Internet giant Alibaba Group, The Wall Street Journal writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. The initial public offering is expected to be one of the largest ever in the United States by a Chinese company. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Li Ka-shing Retail Flagship Plans I.P.O.  |  The Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing’s retail flagship, A.S. Watson & Company, is planning to list in both Hong Kong and London by the end of June, The Wall Street Journal Reports. The offering could raise up to $6 billion. WALL STREET JOURNAL

London Holds Onto Internet I.P.O. Rank  |  Though its rank will likely fall in the coming months, Britain has so far raised the most money in Internet-related initial public offerings this year, The Financial Times writes. FINANCIAL TIMES

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Fortress, Benchmark and Ribbit Buy Stake in Pantera Bitcoin  |  The three firms will work together on the digital currency Bitcoin. DealBook »

New Social App Has Juicy Posts, All Anonymous  |  Posts on Secret, an app that allows users to upload anonymous messages, can range from benign to inappropriate and are testing the tech industry’s appetite for sharing, Jenna Wortham writes in The New York Times. NEW YORK TIMES

Cloudera Secures $160 Million in Funding Round  |  Cloudera, which distributes and services Hadoop, the big data file store developed by Yahoo, has raised $160 million in new funding led by T. Rowe Price, bringing its total funding to $300 million. TECHCRUNCH

FunPlus Collects $74 Million  |  FunPlus, a start-up based in Beijing that makes the game Family Fun, has raised $74 million in a Series B funding round led by Orchid Asia Group Management, The Wall Street Journal writes. The funding round is the largest mobile gaming round in nearly a decade. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Content Marketer Percolate Raises $24 Million  |  Percolate, a start-up that aims to help advertisers manage native ads, has raised $24 million in a funding round led by Sequoia Capital, ReCode writes. RECODE

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Murky Path for the Fed as Yellen Takes Reins  |  Observers say Janet L. Yellen, the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, is taking over as the relatively clear decisions of the financial crisis must give way to more complex ones, The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

What to Look for When Yellen Meets the Press  |  Janet L. Yellen will face questions from reporters on Wednesday for the first time as chairwoman of the Federal Reserve. Politico provides five things to watch as she takes the podium. POLITICO

I.M.F. Official to Fill New Oversight Post at Bank of EnglandI.M.F. Official to Fill New Oversight Post at Bank of England  |  Nemat Shafik, the International Monetary Fund’s deputy managing director, will join the Bank of England in August in a new role as deputy governor for markets and banking. DealBook »

Women Lawyers Climb Top Rungs of Corporate America  |  Some 21 percent of the top lawyers at the nation’s Fortune 500 companies are women, an increase from 17 percent five years ago, according to a new tally of corporate counsel ranks. DealBook »

German Court Validates Participation in Euro Zone Bailout Fund  |  The decision allows Germany to contribute to the European Stability Mechanism, provided that lawmakers are consulted on major contributions, The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

Big Banks Fulfill Part of Mortgage Deal  |  The nation’s four largest banks â€" Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Wells Fargo â€" have more than fulfilled their financial obligations toward homeowners under a $25 billion settlement reached in 2012, The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES