Hedge Fund Manager Gets Nearly 12 Years in Prison for Fraud

Nicholas Genovese pleads guilty to lying about credentials and hiding a criminal background.

Hedge fund manager Nicholas Genovese has been sentenced to nearly 12 years in federal prison after pleading guilty to committing securities fraud by convincing investors to entrust him with more than $11 million dollars based on false and misleading information, according to the US Justice Department. He had also concealed the fact that he had prior felony convictions for fraud-related crimes.

According to court records, Genovese began soliciting individuals in 2015 to invest in his New York-based hedge fund Willow Creek. He said he was part of the Genovese family that had owned the Genovese Drug Store chain in the New York area. The chain had been bought out by Eckerd Drugs in 1998 for $492 million, and he told investors he was an heir to the family’s fortune.

He also said he had graduated from Dartmouth College’s Tuck School of Business and that he had been a partner at Goldman Sachs and a portfolio manager at Bear Stearns before creating Willow Creek. However, the Justice Department said that none of these representations was true. Genovese is not related to the family that owned the Genovese Drug Store chain, did not attend the Tuck School of Business, and had never worked for either Goldman Sachs or Bear Stearns. He also failed to tell his investors that he had multiple prior felony convictions for charges that include forgery, identity theft, and grand larceny.

Genovese also falsely claimed that Willow Creek had as many as 60 employees, when it had fewer than 10, and that it had been raking in investment gains of 30% to 40% per year and had as much as $39 billion in assets under management (AUM), when in reality it had less than $10 million.  

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According to the hedge fund’s private placement memorandum, investors were required to invest a minimum of $1 million each and were told that there would be a 12-month lock-up period during which investors could not withdraw any capital.  

Things began to unravel for Genovese when his investors began to ask for their money back. The Justice Department said Genovese avoided returning money to investors, even telling one that he would only return their funds after “the stars have aligned,” otherwise there would be a risk that almost all the money would be lost as a result of the purported impracticalities of unwinding unspecified trading positions. Records show that that Genovese lost approximately $8 million trading in TD Ameritrade accounts between January 2015 and December 2017 and that he used the proceeds of his fraud to purchase various luxuries for himself.

“Genovese brazenly lied to his victims, falsely claiming that he was an heir to a multimillion-dollar fortune, that he had an Ivy League MBA, and that he had served in senior roles at major Wall Street firms,” US Attorney Geoffrey Berman said in a statement. “In reality, Genovese was a repeat offender with nine prior criminal convictions for fraud-related and other crimes. Genovese now faces more than a decade in prison for defrauding his victims.”

In addition to the prison term, Genovese, 54, was sentenced to three years of supervised release and ordered to pay restitution to his victims in the amount of more than $11.2 million in addition to forfeiture of the proceeds of his crime.

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Canadian DB Plans Rebound in 2019, Return 14%

Strong comeback from 2018 losses provides second-highest return in 10 years.

Canadian defined benefit (DB) pension plans returned a robust 14% in 2019, which was the second-highest annual return in the past 10 years, thanks to a surge in Canadian and global equity markets, according to a report from the RBC Investor & Treasury Services All Plan Universe. The returns rebounded strongly from 2018, when Canadian defined benefit plans lost 0.7% for the year.

RBC’s third annual Canadian Defined Benefit Pension Survey found that plan sponsors are particularly concerned about the economy, including persistent low interest rates and market volatility. It said this is compounded by a rising number of aging pensioners, which the firm refers to as the “silver tsunami,” as well as a working-age population that is increasing at a much lower rate.

RBC said alternative investments remain popular among pension plans as they search for higher returns to compensate for increasing pension obligations and a low-return environment. Despite significant challenges, the funded status of these plans has continued to improve.

“Over the past 10 years, the average Canadian defined benefits plan has generated an annualized return of 8% on its assets,” said David Linds, RBC’s head of asset servicing, Canada, in a statement. “These results are quite impressive, though we can’t discount the impact of global uncertainty and trade tensions in the years ahead. While the performance of equity markets suggests that investors expect to see continued growth, plan sponsors need to continue building robust strategies to prepare for higher volatility as earnings and fundamentals begin to slow.”

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According to the survey, economic factors are weighing on pension plans as 20% of respondents said that low interest rates were the most pressing challenge, while 13% said market volatility was their biggest concern, and another 13%  said aligning future liabilities with assets remains one of their biggest challenges. Economic and geopolitical uncertainty and demographic changes were cited by 7%.

In regard to de-risking strategies, the popularity of liability-driven investments has declined to 30% from 39%, while buy-out annuities (18%) surpassed shared risk plans (17%) as the second-most popular de-risking option among Canadian defined benefit plans.

RBC’s survey also found that 71% of pension plans now hold alternative investments within their portfolios, with real estate and infrastructure as the most popular at 95% and 91% respectively, which are expected to rise even further in the coming years. Additionally, 72% of respondents said they expect to increase their alternative allocations in the near term, while few said they intend to reduce their alternative allocations, which ranged from 0% for real estate to 7% for hedge funds.

Two-thirds (66%) of the plans surveyed reported that their pension plans were fully funded in 2019, up from 56% in 2018.

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