Suken Shah and his brother Shimul Shah received confidential tips from Christopher Saridakis, the CEO of the e-commerce company about its proposed acquisition by eBay in March 2011.
The federal regulator Securities and Exchange Commission alleges that Saridakis tipped his friend Suken Shah, a Delaware-based doctor with nonpublic information about the deal following a meeting with eBay executives. Shah earned insider trading profits of USD 9,838 and provided the nonpublic information to his brother and another individual.
He also agreed to pay prejudgment interest of USD 1,007 and a penalty of USD 64,965 for a total of USD 76,418. Shah's penalty is three times the amount of his and his tippees' trading profits.
In a separate settled administrative proceeding, the SEC charged Shimul Shah, a doctor who now resides in Cincinnati, with insider trading on the nonpublic information he received from his brother. Besides trading himself, Shah tipped others with the nonpublic information during a group dinner he attended with several friends from his medical residency.
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The individual who entered the non-prosecution agreement was tipped by Shah at the group dinner. This individual has agreed to disgorge a trading profit of USD 31,777 and pay USD 2,725 in prejudgment interest for a total of USD 34,502.
The SEC alleges that Saridakis violated his duty of trust as CEO of the marketing solutions division of GSI Commerce by providing the nonpublic information about the pending acquisition to his friends and encouraging them to trade on it.
The five traders, including the Shahs, would pay a combined total of more than USD 4,90,000 in their settlements, which range from disgorgement-only or reduced penalties for cooperators to penalties of two or three times the trading profits for other traders.
"Saridakis chose to dole out confidential, market-moving information to enrich relatives and friends, and the nonpublic details then spread further through multiple levels of tippers and tippees. The SEC thoroughly investigates suspicious trading to trace it to the source and pursue all those involved," Enforcement Division associate director Scott Friestad said.