There are a lot of creative and amusing investment frauds in the world, but there is one great simple investment fraud, one original source from which all the others developed:
- Tell people that you have a risk-free investment that will give them their money back, with 15 percent interest, any time they want. 1
- Take their money.
Why don't people do this all the time? Well, I mean, they do. It's a pretty popular fraud. But it is usually a fairly small-scale and labor-intensive fraud, because most investors who are at all sophisticated realize that the risk-free 15 percent return is itself a red flag. Real investments are risky or uncertain or at least illiquid; the proper response to a guaranteed liquid 15 percent return is "what's the catch?"
So the charges that the Securities and Exchange Commission and federal prosecutors brought today against Andrew Caspersen are surprising in that Caspersen allegedly used exactly that pitch to take $25 million from a single hedge fund,2 which is a level of size and sophistication where you wouldn't expect people to fall for it.3 But here's what Caspersen's investor allegedly bought:
The November Note stated, in part, that: (i) the SPV would pay the Foundation the principal sum of $25 million "in immediately available funds" together with interest on the unpaid principal; (ii) interest on the outstanding unpaid balance shall accrue at an annual rate of 15%; (iii) interest shall be paid quarterly; (iv) upon 90 days' notice to the SPV, the Foundation may redeem the principal sum of $25 million; (v) the SPV "shall maintain cash or cash equivalents in an amount equal to or greater than" the total of the outstanding principal and accrued but unpaid interest.
So the investor — a charitable foundation affiliated with "a multi-national hedge fund, headquartered in New York" — was expecting a 15 percent annual return on an investment with 90-day liquidity fully collateralized by cash. That promise is itself pretty suspicious, and Caspersen's alleged explanation of why this too-good-to-be-true opportunity was available was even weirder: Supposedly Coller Capital, a firm that buys secondary stakes in private-equity funds, had agreed to take out a loan to buy a secondary stake in a private-equity fund run by Irving Place Capital, but turned out not to need the loan, but "was obligated to pay interest" anyway because it "had already agreed to the Loan," so Caspersen was raising money to lend to Coller to just park it and pay 15 percent interest.4 That … doesn't really happen?
Any sophisticated investor might suspect that something was amiss, except that Caspersen himself was impeccably credentialed to pull it off. Caspersen was a managing director in the Park Hill Group, a unit of PJT Partners (and formerly of Blackstone) that really was in the business of marketing and funding secondary transactions in private-equity stakes. Irving Place investors really were selling stakes in their fund, and Coller really was reported to be a buyer. Caspersen allegedly told the investor that his own family office was investing in the loan, and the Caspersen family office really did at one point manage $1 billion.5 The loan was — according to the complaint — fictitious, and Park Hill, Coller and Irving Place all had nothing to do with what Caspersen was selling. But, besides the silliness of the investment opportunity itself, the other details had the ring of truth.
I mean, not all the other details. After Caspersen hooked the foundation for $25 million, he tried for another score, and earlier this month he allegedly asked the foundation for another $20 million. Again the pitch was pretty ridiculous — another (fictitious) investor had redeemed out of the magical 15 percent notes, but Caspersen "had convinced Firm-1 [i.e. Coller6] to re-issue the other investor's promissory note to new investors." That is, Coller had taken out a loan at 15 percent interest, realized that it didn't need the money, paid back part of the loan – and then Caspersen convinced Coller to take out another loan that it didn't need? Come on.
The investor was, I guess, suspicious at this point, and told Caspersen that he wanted to speak to "Individual-3," supposedly a Coller employee who had signed the documents for the first loan:
In response, CASPERSEN sent an email to Individual-1 [the hedge-fund employee who had invested the $25 million] and to an email address containing both the name of Individual-3 [the supposed Coller employee] and the name of Firm-1 [Coller Capital] (the "Email Address"), to set up a conference call for later that day.
You can probably guess where the Justice Department is going with this:
Later that day, a representative of Firm-3 (Individual-1′s employer) informed Individual-1 that the domain name of the Email Address had been registered that same morning, approximately 20 minutes after Individual-1 requested a telephone call with Individual-3, and that the domain name was not the same as Firm-1′s actual domain name. Individual-1 also was told that a representative of Firm-3 had called Firm-1′s New York office and was told that no one named Individual-3 worked at Firm-1.
Coller's actual domain name is collercapital.com. I hope the fake e-mail address was, like, [email protected]. On learning it was fake, the investor called Caspersen, who I have to say handled it with aplomb: He "responded that he found the information 'strange,' and that CASPERSEN would get to the bottom of it and call Individual-1 back." And then, instead of running to the airport like I would have, he really did call the investor back:
CASPERSEN further stated that an analyst at Firm-2 [Park Hill] had provided CASPERSEN with contact information for Individual-3, and that things "don't look very good" for a colleague of CASPERSEN's.