Monday, April 13, 2026
ADVT 
International

Indian-origin Hedge Fund Manager Sanjay Valvani Charged With Insider Trading

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Jun, 2016 01:43 PM
    A hedge fund manager of Indian origin has been charged with participating in a stock market insider trading scam involving generic drugs that allegedly netted him at least $25 million in profits, according to US authorities.
     
    New York federal prosecutor Preet Bharara, who announced the charges on Wednesday, said that Sanjay Valvani made a deal with a former US drug regulatory official to get "highly confidential" information about pending approval of generic drug applications and used them to make trades, "reaping millions of dollars in illegal profits".
     
    This is the latest instance of Wall Street fraud prosecutions involving Indians, several of whom have faced charges or sentenced to prison terms in recent years.
     
    Valvani, who surrendered to authorities on Wednesday, was a partner at Investment Adviser-A and focused on health care portfolios.
     
    As part of their deal, Gordon Johnston, a former deputy director at the US Food and Drug Administration (USFDA) dealing with generic drugs, gave Valvani inside information about the approval of the generic version of the drug enoxaparin that is used to treat deep vein thrombosis, authorities alleged.
     
    Using that information, Valvani traded on the shares of two companies likely to profit from the USFDA approval and made $25 million in profits and also shared the information with Christopher Plaford, a former portfolio manager at Investment Adviser-A, authorities said.
     
     
    Both Johnston, who is now a political intelligence consultant, and Plaford have pleaded guilty to the charges against them and are cooperating with the government investigation, officials said. The alleged scam ran from 2005 to 2011, according to them.
     
    The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has separately filed civil charges against Valvani, Johnston and Plaford.
     
    Enoxaparin was originally made by Sanofi-Aventis and marketed under the brand name Lovenox. By 2005, three groups of publicly traded pharmaceutical companies had sought USFDA and one of them was "by a publicly traded pharmaceutical company that had partnered with Momenta Pharmaceuticals, Inc.," prosecutors said.
     
    Momenta said on its website that it had collaborated with Sandoz to produce a generic version of Lovenox, which received USFDA approval in 2010.
     
    Prosecutors said that Johnston was retained by Valvani to provide "political intelligence" about the timing of USFDA's approval of generic drugs and was paid hundreds of thousands of dollars for his consulting work. Johnston used his contacts as a former USFDA official to get the information, officials said.
     
     
    Valvani is the latest person of Indian origin to face insider trading charges. Rajat Gupta, former CEO of the consultancy company, McKinsey, is the best known of them and was convicted in 2012 on insider trading with Raj Rajaratnam, a hedge fund operator of Sri Lankan origin. Anil Kumar, a former McKinsey employee, pleaded guilty in the same case.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    North Korean Court Sentences Canadian Pastor To Life For Anti-State Activities

    North Korean Court Sentences Canadian Pastor To Life For Anti-State Activities
    PYONGYANG, Korea, Democratic People's Republic Of — North Korea's Supreme Court sentenced a Canadian pastor to life in prison with hard labour on Wednesday for what it called crimes against the state.

    North Korean Court Sentences Canadian Pastor To Life For Anti-State Activities

    US Central Bank Raises Interest Rates By 0.25 Points

    US Central Bank Raises Interest Rates By 0.25 Points
    For the first time in nearly a decade, America's central bank, the US Federal Reserve raised its key interest rate on Wednesday from a range of 0 percent to 0.25 percent to a range of 0.25 percent to 0.5 percent.

    US Central Bank Raises Interest Rates By 0.25 Points

    The Cost Of Power: Presidents, Prime Ministers May Age Quicker And Die Sooner, New Study Says

    The Cost Of Power: Presidents, Prime Ministers May Age Quicker And Die Sooner, New Study Says
    Leading a country comes with extraordinary privileges but also, apparently, a price: new research suggests that heads of state age faster than normal and that the stress of the job may shave almost three years off their life expectancy.

    The Cost Of Power: Presidents, Prime Ministers May Age Quicker And Die Sooner, New Study Says

    Canadian Sentenced To Nine Months For Smuggling Immigrants Into The U.S.

    Canadian Sentenced To Nine Months For Smuggling Immigrants Into The U.S.
    The U.S. Attorney's Office in Albany says 29-year-old Christopher Square of Kahnawake (kah-nah-WAH'-kee), Que., was sentenced to nine months in prison.

    Canadian Sentenced To Nine Months For Smuggling Immigrants Into The U.S.

    Case Of Canadian Teen Charged In Florida Double Murder Put Over To February

    Case Of Canadian Teen Charged In Florida Double Murder Put Over To February
    The 15-year-old, originally from Ottawa, is the son of longtime diplomat Roxanne Dube, Canada's former consul general to Miami.

    Case Of Canadian Teen Charged In Florida Double Murder Put Over To February

    Troops On The Canadian Border: U.S. President Candidate Ben Carson Calls For Some

    Troops On The Canadian Border: U.S. President Candidate Ben Carson Calls For Some
    WASHINGTON — A U.S. presidential candidate has called for troops along the Canadian border, as the American election becomes consumed by national-security fears.

    Troops On The Canadian Border: U.S. President Candidate Ben Carson Calls For Some