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US War Drive
Suspicious trading points to advance knowledge by big investors
of September 11 attacks
By Barry Grey
5 October 2001
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In the two weeks preceding the September 11 terror attacks
on New York and Washington, there was a sudden and unaccountable
rush of speculative trades on the US stock and bond markets that
indicate some wealthy and well-connected investors had advance
knowledge of the impending catastrophe.
Those involved bet large sums on the prospect of a major crisis
that would drive down the value of stocks in the airline, tourism
and insurance industries, and undermine confidence in the US economy
as a whole. Investigations are currently under way by the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC), the federal watchdog agency for
the stock and bond markets, the Secret Service and the FBI. These
probes have been given little prominence by the media, in stark
contrast to the round-the-clock warnings of new terrorist plots
and reports of suspects detained in the US and Europe.
The SEC has issued terse acknowledgements that it is looking
into suspicious financial transactions to see if they are connected
to terrorist organizations. But the scale of the stock and bond
activity under scrutiny belies the notion that it could be the
work of Osama bin Ladens guerrilla band, let alone the fanatics
who carried out the September 11 atrocities.
Over the past several days the Wall Street Journal has
carried reports of the SEC and Secret Service probes, and dispatches
have been published by the Associated Press and USA Today.
But the New York Times and the Washington Post have
remained strangely silent, and the network news outlets have said
nothing.
The Wall Street Journal reported on October 2 that the
ongoing investigation by the SEC into suspicious stock trades
had been joined by a Secret Service probe into an unusually high
volume of five-year US Treasury note purchases prior to the attacks.
The Treasury note transactions included a single $5 billion trade.
As the Journal explained: Five-year Treasury notes
are among the best investments in the event of a world crisis,
especially one that hits the US. The notes are prized for their
safety and their backing by the US government, and usually rally
when investors flee riskier investments, such as stocks.
The value of these notes, the Journal pointed out, has
risen sharply since the events of September 11.
The article went on to quote Michael Shamosh, a bond-market
strategist for Tucker Anthony Inc., who said, If they were
going to do something like this they would do it in the five-year
part of the market. Its extremely liquid, and the tracks
would be hard to spot.
The SEC is investigating a surge in short-selling activity
in a variety of stocks in the days preceding the attacks. It has
asked US securities firms to produce customer accounts and stock-trading
records involving short selling prior to September 11.
Short sellers borrow shares and then sell them at the current
price. They wager that at the future date by which they must pay
for the borrowed shares, the price will have fallen, enabling
them to pocket the difference.
In the week prior to September 11, shares in airlines, insurance
firms, tourism-related businesses and financial companies with
offices in the World Trade Center suffered disproportionate drops
in their prices, arousing the suspicion of the SEC following the
hijack-bombings. After the attacks, these stocks were hit particularly
hard by the sell-off on Wall Street.
The SEC has been extremely tight-lipped about its probe, in
which it has enlisted securities firms and government agencies
in Europe, Canada and other countries. But on Tuesday the Investment
Dealers Association, a trade association for the Canadian securities
industry, posted on its web site a list sent by the American SEC
of 38 stocks. The US agency had asked the Canadians to look into
trading in these stocks between August 27 and September 11.
As soon as US officials became aware of the Internet posting,
they demanded that the Investment Dealers Association yank it
from the web site, and the Canadian organization complied. However,
reporters and others were able to copy the list before it was
pulled.
The list includes the parent companies of American, Continental,
Delta, Northwest, Southwest, United and US Airways, as well as
Carnival and Royal Caribbean cruise lines, aircraft maker Boeing
and defense contractor Lockheed Martin. Several insurance companies
are on the listAmerican International Group, Axa, Chubb,
Cigna, CNA Financial, John Hancock and MetLife.
The SEC list also includes several big companies that were
tenants in the collapsed Twin Towers of the World Trade Center:
investment firms Morgan Stanley, the complexs largest occupant;
Lehman Brothers; Bank of America; and the financial firm Marsh
& McLennan.
Other major companies listed include General Motors, Raytheon,
LTV, WR Grace, Lone Star Technologies, American Express, Bank
of New York, Bank One, Citigroup and Bear Stearns.
Testifying on Wednesday before the House Committee on Financial
Services, Dennis Lormel, chief of the FBI Financial Crimes Section,
said, To date, there are no flags or indicators ... that
people took advantage of this. However USA Today quoted
co-founder of PTI Securities Jon Najarian, described as an active
player on the Chicago Board Options Exchange, who said,
The volumes were exceptional versus the norm.
It is impossible at this point to say which individuals, groups
or corporate entities had advance knowledge of the September 11
attacks and used this knowledge to cash in, or whether any of
them were based inside the US. But the otherwise inexplicable
rush of Treasury note buys and short-selling in specific stocks
is a further indication that those involved in the planning of
the attacks included highly sophisticated and well-endowed people
with a deep understanding of many facets of American society.
See Also:
White House reneges on proof
of bin Ladens guilt
[29 September 2001]
White House lied about threat
to Air Force One
[28 September 2001]
Where is the Bush administration
taking the American people?
[22 September 2001]
Why the Bush administration
wants war
[14 September 2001]
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