Leon Cooperman's Omega Advisors said to get Wells notice

SEC said to look into trading in a single security in 2010
FEB 19, 2016
Hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman said regulators are considering taking action against him and his firm Omega Advisors over trading in certain securities, according to a person familiar with the matter. Mr. Cooperman told clients in a letter dated March 21 that he and his firm received a Wells notice regarding an investment in a single issuer that it had since 2007, said the person, asking not to be identified because the information isn't public. Regulators are looking at trading in the security in 2010, the investor wrote, according to the person. Mr. Cooperman, 72, declined to comment on the Wells notice when reached by phone. He later told CNBC that the probe centers on trading of Atlas Pipeline Partners LP, a midstream operator that ran networks in Oklahoma, southern Kansas, Texas and Tennessee before merging with a Targa Resources Partners LP unit about a year ago. Ryan White, a spokesman for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, declined to comment on the investigation. The SEC sends a Wells notice to a company or an individual after its staff has determined that sufficient wrongdoing has occurred to warrant civil claims being filed. Mr. Cooperman told clients about a year ago that his firm was subpoenaed by the SEC and the U.S. Attorney's Office in New Jersey over trading in certain securities. Mr. Cooperman told clients in the letter Monday that he'd been asked to speak with regulators on March 11 and had declined at the advice of his lawyers, invoking his Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate himself. LOSING YEARS He added that the firm strongly disagreed with regulators that it had violated securities laws, according to the person. Mr. Cooperman said that the notice also covered trading in the same issuer by a third party. Mr. Cooperman first established a stake in Atlas Pipeline in the fourth quarter of 2007, according to SEC filings. The position increased substantially in late 2010 and again in late 2013, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Omega also showed a stake in Targa Resources Partners after it bought Atlas last year. In February, Targa Resources Corp. “rolled up” Targa Resources Partners, buying the units of the limited partnership that it didn't already own. Omega held stakes worth $33.9 million and $8.7 million in Targa Resources Corp. and Targa Resources Partners, respectively, as of Dec. 31. Omega, based in New York, returned an annual average of 11% from inception in 1991 through 2014, according to an investor letter. After Omega declined 2.8% in 2014, Mr. Cooperman said he was embarrassed by the losses. Performance has gotten worse since then. The fund lost 10.4% in 2015 and was down 10% in the first two months of 2016. The Wells notice comes as the U.S. investigates wrongdoing on Wall Street, including a multiyear crackdown on insider trading. Some of the government's early victories in that effort have recently been overturned in court. Mr. Cooperman is a regular guest on financial news television and speaks frequently at investment conferences. He is the son of a plumber and learned to analyze securities from the late Roger Murray, a professor at Columbia Business School, where Mr. Cooperman graduated. He went on to spend 25 years at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. before starting Omega in 1991.

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