SEC Halts Trading on Spam Driven Stocks 139
goombah99 writes "The SEC has taken action to halt transactions on spam-touted stocks. Presumably this opens an opportunity for denial of service attacks on stocks. However, to be effective spam generally must target penny stocks with historically low volumes and thus the actual capitalized market impact or effect on the companies for a temporary shutdown can be expected to be negligible and transient. One example was given of a touted apparel stock jumping from 6 cents to 45 cents over a period of days before settling down to ten cents a share and near 65,000 or about $6500 in transactions (an eighth of the peak share volume, and a 50th of the peak transaction value). In other words, the market distortion of a brief shutdown, even if it were a DOS attack, would be massively less than the integrated spam surge. The thing I found surprising was that for this to be an effective measure with human oversight then the number of such events must be relatively small in number. From the amount of spam I get I'd have guessed it was a tidal wave."
Readability? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Can someone please lend cowboyneal some punctuation marks?
Check out how this summary scored [ilovejackdaniels.com] on the Flesch-Kincaid Reading Level [ilovejackdaniels.com]:
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Ideally, you should have an IQ in the triple digits to understand
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I had no problems with the sentence you had troubles with. I also fail to see why making it hard for all the 12 year olds (and adults with similar language skills) is such a bad thing for Slashdot.
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And not only because you're aiming at innocent children.
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MOD PARENT UP. Story impossible to understand. (Score:1, Troll)
Comments about poor editing are always on-topic.
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You must be new here...
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Can someone please lend cowboyneal some punctuation marks?
Check out how this summary scored [ilovejackdaniels.com] on the Flesch-Kincaid Reading Level [ilovejackdaniels.com]:
What spam? (Score:3, Funny)
And if we're going to halt transactions during periods of heavy spam for a particular stock, why not halt transactions during periods in which pundits in print, radio and television are promoting or demoting particular stocks? Or, even better, how about we just not worry about it in the first place because anyone that is stupid enough to base their investment decisions on email campaigns should suffer their own stupidity.
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If traders wanted to setup technological means, they could entice investors to play a part in what would amount to a botnet interacting with the stock exchange, except that it would be perfectly legal. Just one text message and 500Million in trades is made in the next 20 minutes. Spam is
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Can we make up our minds here? I'm getting confused what I should be a zealot about...
Re:What spam? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Who is to say that others aren't taking advantage of the spammer's work? If you can buy early and sell a day later, I imagine there'd be a lot of profit to be had.
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That involves knowing which stocks are going to be spammed on the next day. Good in theory, but while IANASB (stock broker) I don't think portfolios of penny stocks are very common, so it'd require a lot of guesswork unless you're in the loop
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Re:What spam? (Score:4, Interesting)
There was a story on the economics of these scams a few months ago. One conclusion: no, you can't profit riding on the coat-tails. One reason is that penny stocks are very thinly traded, you can't instantly buy shares. By the time your order is processed, it's too late. You're buying from the pumpers as they cash out (of course, they bought in days before). And they only average about 5% gain.
http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/01/21/202 9210 [slashdot.org]
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Not politically incorrect. Impossible.
http://www.investopedia.com/university/shortsell ing/shortselling1.asp
"There are many restrictions on the size, price and types of stocks you are able to short sell. For example, you can't short sell penny stocks and most short sales need to be done in round lots."
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Actually, you do have to get in before the spam hits if you want to be sure to get rid of all your shares & cover fees.
If anyone profits from theese things without knowing they will happen beforehand, it's an amazing stroke of luck.
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Re:What spam? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Given how many of the pump n dump boiler room schemes are Mob-backed, I'm surprised that this bank hasn't been visited by goons protecting their turf. Getting between the mafia and the
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But what if the baby bear has it coming? It takes a forest to raise a bear, or so they say...
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Who is to say that others aren't taking advantage of the spammer's work? If you can buy early and sell a day later, I imagine there'd be a lot of profit to be had.
Congratulations. You're the kind of idiot that loses money chasing these penny stocks and makes the spam profitable. Next time, be sure to suggest short selling to get double retard points.
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Some people might be playing the penny market and could be oblivious to the fact that one particular stock is being pumped and dumped by the spammers. I know someone that invested several million shares in one of these companies only to find it frozen for the next 10 days while the SEC investigates.
Just because we wouldn't buy the stock after seeing the
Re:What spam? (Score:5, Informative)
The best scams are those that make the sucker think he's pulling a fast one. It doesn't work. The "smart" people trying to cash in on this lose.
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id =920553 [ssrn.com]
"Before brokerage fees, the average investor who buys a stock on the day it is most heavily touted and sells it 2 days after the touting ends will lose approximately 5.5%. For the top half of most thoroughly touted stocks, a spammer who buys at the ask price on the day before unleashing touts and sells at the bid price on the day his or her touting is the heaviest will, on average, earn 5.79%."
You think you can squeeze a profit while the spammer is cashing out and the price is falling, good luck. They know the game, you don't.
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Sure you could, by shorting the stock while the spammer is trying to cash out. Unfortunately (as I learned the last time this was discussed on Slashdot) you're not actually allowed to short-sell penny stocks (or something like that).
Re:What spam? (Score:4, Informative)
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So what's your point?
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The CAN-SPAM Act didn't eliminate spam. Most people still get spam.
*please mod informative, please mod informative*
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I'd use the hell out of it when I had points, along with a "-1, idiot"
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in any event I hadn't heard 'sarchasm' before so it's all worth it.
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Pro-spam server (Score:2)
Re:Pro-spam server (Score:5, Funny)
Funny thing about Karma (Score:2)
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It's about time... (Score:4, Informative)
The current amount of stocks advertised by spam is human-manageable (see http://www.spamnation.info/stocks/ [spamnation.info] for a list of about 15 spamvertised symbols), and it will probably stay that way, because there are not that many companies that have the volume and the price such that spam will have an influence on the price; I think that is a very sensible solution for the spam-problem in that domain; I wish they could do something like that for medication-spam as well...
Re:It's about time... (Score:4, Interesting)
Maybe yes, but according to the fine article:
Rather funny, if you think about it; at one level, this could be a case of the Spamming the Wrong Guy. What isn't so funny is reading the trading volume numbers and being reminded that there's people out there who do read their spam.
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Or, as I like to say: "A one in a million shot isn no big deal when you've got 25million bullets".
It is really unfortunate (Score:2)
If we could, the Spam buying morons would drink it and log off.
<idea>...
some things to remember re: microcap/pink sheets: (Score:5, Informative)
2) this is a big one: the market makers may not report every single transaction and every price change, or every minute or hour. You're used to seeing the market change, and having updated info pretty quickly after a trade. "Real time level 2 quotes" and all that. Guess what? These are thinly traded. Some report daily. Some report every couple of days. Some report weekly. Unless you check, you don't know. If you see stock trading for 5 cents one week and 25 cents the next week, you don't know if it really is going up, or if it went to 10 dollars in the middle of the week, and all the pumpers jumped, and 25 cents is the reported figure on the way back down. You just don't know.
Go here [sec.gov] for some more information. Really. Don't think about these without being sure you know the risks.
(Also, I have to say, while the information I gave in #2 was deemed correct when I worked for a broker, I was never a licensed broker myself. So don't take my word for it still being completely true. I see that a company called pinksheets.com offers what they say are real time quotes now for dealers, but they're neither a NASD broker-dealer nor SEC-registered, so... who knows what that means? Ask your broker and do your own research. Be sure and ask your broker what it means when you try to sell "at market" on a pink sheet, too, if you're assuming you're going to be able to get out quickly
In a race between weapons and armor ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Two platitudes:
- In a race between weapons and armor the weapons eventually win.
- To end a war you must defeat the enemy.
My bet: Once this goes into effect the spammers will adapt. Expect the result to be a bigger problem.
Re:In a race between weapons and armor ... (Score:4, Insightful)
1. Pump N Dump Spam goes away
2. Spam volume increases, but the SEC's system halts trading of those companies
3. Spam volumes are tailored to raise prices in a more natural fashion and the SEC doesn't catch the new behavior
Of those results, #3 is the only one in which the Dumpers will make money and even then, it won't be nearly as profitable.
Platitudes are nice, but honestly, you're going to have to do better than that to backup your conclusion. Especially since your second platitude isn't 100% supported by history. Two examples off the top of my head are The Korean War [wikipedia.org] & The Six Days War [wikipedia.org]
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Israel is still at war also. Every country that was in the Six Day War still has a no-trade policy with Israel and pretty much is supporting people killing Israeli civilians and soldiers.
Sounds like to unresolved, continuing wars to me.
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Hey, YKNZ corp... we at SpamHell Inc. were just about to pump 'n dump your penny stock, but this would cause an immediate SEC trading halt! So, we'll offer to cease and desist for the low, low price of....
instead of banning everything (Score:2)
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Stupid is sitting watching Big Brother on tv all day. Stupid and greedy is applying for every get rich quick book, going to every talk, etc.
Re:instead of banning everything (Score:4, Insightful)
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That would be a great idea if everyone were completely independent. When someone declares bankruptcy, it affects me.
Too late. (Score:5, Interesting)
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It's not very likely that the companies are completely innocent. All sorts of crap goes on. Often the entire company exists only to try to fleece unsophisticated investors.
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Blocking trading on a group of stocks that have already been pumped and dumped is futile
I don't understand this. Given that nobody will buy the stock until they recieve the email, the SEC could easily monitor the spam and shut down trading after they see it. I'm guessing they could be faster at stopping the trade than grandpa is in buying it. Or am I missing something?
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Hopefully, when the spammers then try to sell the ton of
The .com bubble is over (Score:2)
Ready to explode (Score:3, Funny)
The SEC said it launched an enforcement effort to protect investors from potentially fraudulent spam e-mail promoting small company stocks with phrases like, "Ready to Explode," "Ride the Bull" and "Fast Money."
Now, Fast Money I get. But if I saw the phrase "Ready to Explode" in spam, to me that would suggest something pretty far from small company stocks.
And "Ride the Bull" is something else entirely...
Fax Spam (Score:2)
This seems to be the biggest driver for fax spammers - the old pump-n-dump
Its popular with them because they don't have to ID themselves with a real callback number(s) - they don't want any calls they just want you to bid up that stock.
I am also hoping that they use this as a means for trapping and busting spammers (both email and fax)
Shouldn't the SEC (or whatever) be able to look at all the perfectly timed trades on the victim stock and tra
Wrong answer to problem (Score:5, Insightful)
The right answer is to unroll these trades and see who is profiting. Then start doing some analysis on the brokerages associated with these trades, because I'm willing to bet we're talking about "less reputable" brokerages. Now pull their securities dealer's license. Do you think that would cause other brokerages to look more carefully at sudden large volume trades on previously thinly-traded stocks? I do.
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Why should the CEO care, unless he's about to cash out himself?
Does the U.S. enforce securities laws anymore? (Score:4, Insightful)
So why can't they track these guys down and prosecute them? The SEC has a pretty good investigative force. They tracked down Martha Stewart. They subpoenaed her phone records and everything.
You have to buy these stocks from a broker, so that leaves a paper trail. They have to report stock purchases to the IRS, if nothing else. You can't buy stocks with stacks of currency, can you?
The guys who are behind the pump and dump schemes by definition will buy the stock at the beginning, send out 10 million spam to get the suckers buying, dump the stock when the price goes up, and leave the suckers holding the bag.
So why can't the SEC track these guys down through the brokers, and prosecute them for this pattern of buy and sell that is obviously fraudulent?
Will somebody who understands this better than me explain to me why the SEC can't enforce the law?
Why they have trouble tracking (Score:5, Insightful)
Secondly, many of these folks operate from abroad and the amounts involved - in any single fraud - just aren't large enough to warrant the intervention of The Feds. Sad but true.
Because the market for these shares is so thin - most of the pink sheets companies will have market caps of less than one million dollars - the criminals can't fraudulently run huge amounts of money. So they perform a large number of smaller transactions.
Short of some organised crime indictment, The Feds won't get involved as the individual amounts are so damn small.
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First of all, the fraudsters aren't stupid enough to leave (much) of a paper trail; its common for them to use brokerage accounts compromised by phising. They execute their pump'n'dump via a stolen account, and by the time the dust settles the funds have been transferred.
Secondly, many of these folks operate from abroad and the amounts involved - in any single fraud - just aren't large enough to warrant the intervention of The Feds. Sad but true.... The Feds won't get involved as the individual amounts are so damn small.
Agreed that it's sad but true. But it's obviously serious enough to warrant attention and action by the SEC. There has to be enough evidence there already that this crime is organised. I'm sure they could get international authorities to help, even the IRS too perhaps? They took down Al Capone, surely they could throw their weight about here, maybe lean on a few brokers and banks...
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Sure, the SEC and FBI can get Germany or UK to cough up some information. That doesn't work elsewhere. Russia? Probably not. Russia through A Cayman Islands bank? Forget it.
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Short of some organised crime indictment, The Feds won't get involved as the individual amounts are so damn small.
From TFA:
Paper trail (Score:2)
the fraudsters aren't stupid enough to leave (much) of a paper trail
One might even go so far as to say that the laws are specifically written to leave loopholes in which to hide the paper. The closer you are to the social circles which write the rules the better chance you have of knowing where and how to hide the paper.
Short of some organised crime indictment, The Feds won't get involved
Due to their continued involvement the Feds should be the recipients of organized crime indictments.
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Martha Stewart wasn't convicted of fraud, insider trading, or anything blatantly illegal. She was convicted of lying to a federal investigator (during the investigating of a "crime" for which she was never charged). Just like Libbey, who was convicted of lying (or perhaps misremembering) during the investigation of another non-crime.
Think that over for a minute. It smells an awful lot like entrapment, doesn't it?
ISPs that host zombies need to hurt. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's time to stop tolerating ISPs that tolerate infected PCs. Is spam the only thing a zombie can do? No. Will this stop ddos botnets? Not a chance. One thing at a time, and spam leaves a trail. The Heinlein strategy: ~when you don't know how to solve a problem, do any part of it you do understand, then look at it again.~
Get as many as possible of the major email services - gmail, hotmail, yahoo, aol, all their equivalents in other countries - to backtrack inbound spam envelopes to a retail ISP. Crank up the heat on the worst offenders until they shut off zombies. Private warnings, name and shame, SMTP brownouts and blackouts, BGP blackhole.
The ISPs all have AUPs. Seems simple enough: they warn spam sources, point them at instructions and commercial offers of help for a full disinfect, then if they stay infected shut them off until they pay for an ISP-provided (and expensive) brainwipe. That'll make lots of new niches in which the scum who'd otherwise be sending spam can turn a buck, and take the load off everybody but the clueless.
Now, obviously, this is *too* simple somehow, or otherwise somebody'd be doing this already. What is it?
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1) User 1234 has had 500 smtp connections open in the last hour, trip a flag.
2) If there are x number of flags tripped in y period of time, freeze account until customer calls in.
3) Restore account, include a grace period of z hours. If problem not resolved, freeze account again.
4) Inform use that the service will not be reactivated until they have cleaned the computer. If they claim it
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Hi, I'm the dipshit with an infected machine that's spewing viruses, spam, and ddos over it's connection. I don't care that my ignorance is damaging to the Internet. I am entitled to be on it. Who cares that it's the most complex thing humanity has ever created, I have a right to use the Internet despite knowing nothing about how to be safe on it. And don't you dare suggest I educate mys
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Personally, I like my ISPs solution. Port 25 is blocked by default, but you can logon to your control panel an
Expand the SEC jurisdiction (Score:2)
SEC Public Affairs officer lost money too? (Score:2)
We need a greater context here (Score:5, Interesting)
Permit me to break it down for you:
The Phishers will phish usernames and passwords for brokerage accounts, or they will collect the information from personal users by means of a trojan. The criminals log into these accounts and schedule sell orders for whatever stocks they are holding, and schedule buy orders for the penny stock they are going to pump-n-dump. Then they walk away.
They execute the spam, eager traders read the spam, look at the account and see that volume of shares purchased have been bought up in the past n-hours and they jump in. The pumpers have bought their stock before hand and once the volume peaks, they dump. The account holders whose accounts were compromised are left holding the pumped-dumped stock...
The criminals are getting GOOD! They don't need to worry about transferring money out of the compromised brokerage accounts, they are stealing the money and laundering it all in the same step.
And it should be no big surprise that the criminal organizations behind the whole operations is the Russians.
Welcome to professional bank robbery in the 21st century.
*NOW* this is not to say that the traditional "boiler rooms" don't exist. They most certainly do and they continue to pose a serious problem which the SEC has addressed for many years. What is new is this most recent innovation that targets retirement accounts, day traders and even the average investor. The "tens of millions of dollars in losses" mentioned in TFA are coming from liquidated brokerage accounts. The SEC is in a panic to shore up or stop this exploit by suspending trading on pump/dump stocks. They're hoping to stem the hijacking of retirement funds by stopping the ability to get the money out.
See, when you view it through the proper perspective, within this greater context, now it makes sense as to why the Russian spammers and bot masters have suddenly gotten involved in the game.
I personally have communicated with the scammers & spammers, some of the conversations I have written about on my site [appiant.com], which includes screenshots of bank accounts that have been compromised by phishing, etc.
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The authorities would just need to look at the owners of these stocks who owned the stock before the hype and then see who sold duri
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...if they're just using the accounts to pump the stock then wouldn't they still leave a trail back to themselves since they would have needed to own the stock in one of their own accounts in the first place?
FiniteElementalist does an excellent job answering the question; I'll just recap in my own words:
The criminals/spammers/phishers purchase up the penny stocks using legit accounts starting at the time of the Pump/Dump email.
They watch the price rise, then sell off their shares.
HappyEngineer's continues:
The authorities would just need to look at the owners of these stocks who owned the stock before the hype and then see who sold during the hype. One time would be a coincidence, but if they were found doing that more than once then it'd be awfully suspicious.
The third key component is disguising their activities, which is mixed in with the thousands of other "day traders" throughout the US and all over the world. No
Why is bullishalerts.com still around? (Score:3, Insightful)
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I am no brain surgeon but (Score:1)
New spam spotted! (Score:2)
My name is Oolong Mgobotu, a large scale SPAM operator from Nigeria. Please remit 100,000$ to the secret numbered 102-3459-949-222 account in Cayman Island. Or we will blast SPAM touting you stock to millions of US email addresses. Your stupid SEC will suspend trading on your stock and you will become a micro-penny stock. sincerely,
Oolong Mgobotu, BAR-at-Law, Adis-A-Baba, Nigeria.
Another scenario would be for the spammers to short the stock and the
all the sec has to do it (Score:2)
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No. Capitalism concerns itself with economical imperatives, not morals. What you're thinking about is Social Darwinism. The two are not the same, despite the attempts of many to blur the distinction.
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That won't happen as long as greed, advertising, inflation, and 'consumer culture' exist in this world.
All 4 are chiefly responsible for the extreme wealth disparity in this world.
The people that suffer the most are the 'working poor' / unemployed in 'first world' nations.
Abundance surrounds them but they don't have the opportunity or resources (if at all