Friday, October 18, 2013

Morgan Stanley to Face Group Suit by Singapore Investors

A group of Singapore investors who

lost money on $154.7 million in credit-linked notes were allowed

by a U.S. judge to pursue their lawsuit against Morgan Stanley (MS)

as a group.


U.S. District Judge Jesse Furman in Manhattan said

yesterday the 18 plaintiffs may represent a class of all

investors who bought any of seven series of Pinnacle Notes

issued in 2006 and 2007. The investors including the Singapore

Government Staff Credit Cooperative Society Ltd. sued in 2010,

claiming the notes were a “bait and switch” scheme designed to

benefit Morgan Stanley at the expense of customers.


They claim New York-based Morgan Stanley invested their

principal in high-risk collateralized debt obligations, against

which Morgan Stanley made short bets. Morgan Stanley didn’t

disclose that it was a counter-party to the agreements, meaning

that for every dollar the investors lost, the bank gained a

dollar, the investors claim.


Mark Lake, a Morgan Stanley spokesman, declined to comment

on the ruling. The firm has denied all wrongdoing in connection

with the Pinnacle notes.


In 2011 Morgan Stanley failed to win a Singapore court

order blocking the investors from suing outside the Asian city.


The bank is facing a separate lawsuit in New York by

Singapore’s Hong Leong Finance Ltd. (HLF) over claims it deceptively

sold the Pinnacle notes. Hong Leong had a distribution agreement

with Morgan Stanley to sell about $72.4 million of the notes.


Singapore’s financial regulator in 2009 banned 10 firms

from selling structured investments such as Pinnacle Notes after

investors claimed they were misled about products tied to Lehman

Brothers Holdings Inc. The ban was lifted in 2010 after the

institutions boosted internal procedures of their advisory

services across all investment products.


The case is Dandong v. Pinnacle Performance Ltd., 10-cv-08086, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York

(Manhattan).


To contact the reporters on this story:

Bob Van Voris in federal court in Manhattan at

rvanvoris@bloomberg.net;

Andrea Tan in Singapore at

atan17@bloomberg.net


To contact the editors responsible for this story:

Michael Hytha at

mhytha@bloomberg.net;

Douglas Wong at

dwong19@bloomberg.net



Enlarge image
8af90 i.n kjk6czAs Las Vegas Sands Again Reports Record Quarterly Results


Morgan Stanley headquarters


8af90 izcR8GhzgzCw Las Vegas Sands Again Reports Record Quarterly Results


Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg


A group of investors claim New York-based Morgan Stanley invested their principal in high-risk collateralized debt obligations, against which Morgan Stanley made short bets.


A group of investors claim New York-based Morgan Stanley invested their principal in high-risk collateralized debt obligations, against which Morgan Stanley made short bets. Photographer: Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg



Morgan Stanley to Face Group Suit by Singapore Investors

0 comments:

Post a Comment