From todays Times
Insider trading must be cast out of City
By Patrick Hosking
IT IS eight days since a director of no fewer than five London-listed companies was judged to be an insider trader by the Financial Services Authority and fined £25,000, the largest-ever personal fine for market abuse. The FSA found that in March Jo Malins, a well known figure in the close-knit community of small mining companies, twice deliberately bought shares in his employer, Cambrian Mining, of which he was finance director, just hours before it was due to make positive announcements that he knew were likely to boost the share price. He consequently made a paper profit of £6,400.
Mr Malins has done the decent thing (or more likely had the loaded revolver shoved into his unwilling hands) and resigned from the boards of two of those companies, Asia Energy and Cambrian Oil & Gas. He has also been punished, stripped of Cambrian Mining share options that were worth £69,000.
But a week on, he remains on the boards of Cambrian Mining, where the board declined his offer to resign, and two other AIM-listed minnows, Zareba and Mincorp Petroleum, of which he is chairman.
It will be interesting to see whether the London Stock Exchange, which regulates AIM, will allow this state of affairs to continue. Mr Malins, 58 and an experienced private investor and company director, must have known he was breaking the rules. And if he had thought it through, he would have realised he was cheating fellow Cambrian shareholders by buying from them when he knew the price was about to rise.
The LSE has to decide whether he is suitable to remain on the boards of three public companies. To give him his due, he made no attempt to disguise his trades and he co-operated with the FSA to the extent that he voluntarily attended two interviews, albeit giving “inconsistent explanations” for his conduct. The LSE has considerable powers, which it can bring to bear on AIM-listed companies through their “nomads”, nominated advisers. It can publicly censure them, fine them or even ban them from conducting future floats. The nomads to Cambrian Mining, Zareba and Mincorp are respectively Williams de Broë, Smith & Williamson and Nabarro Wells.
London has a serious insider dealing problem. Rare is the bid that lands completely unexpectedly. Most offers are presaged by suspiciously high dealing volumes and a tell-tale run-up in the share price.
This is damaging to the integrity and reputation of the market. Outside investors can have no confidence they are trading on a level playing field with directors and company advisers when this happens so routinely.
AIM, in addition, is facing what is likely to be a difficult year for its image. After the flood of new arrivals on the junior market — nearly 500 floated on AIM this year, raising £6 billion — it is unavoidable that a few bad apples will have got through due diligence. There are almost certain to be a number of AIM failures in the coming months. Add in the apparent fraud at AIM-listed Langbar International, where £365 million has mysteriously gone missing, and the market — a huge success in many ways — is going to be under scrutiny as never before.
All the more reason then to respond robustly and quickly when confronted with a clear-cut case of abuse. So far, however, none of the nomads has seen fit either to insist that Mr Malins immediately steps down as a director or to resign from their client. It is Christmas and senior people are away. These are difficult, awkward decisions. But every day that Mr Malins remains on his three boards risks sending the signal that the LSE doesn’t really take insider dealing seriously.