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French court convict two traders over US$23 mil insider coup

Gaspard Sebag / Bloomberg
Gaspard Sebag / Bloomberg • 2 min read
French court convict two traders over US$23 mil insider coup
A French court handed two traders jail terms of three years and one year respectively and combined fines of €43 million for insider trading. (Photo by Bloomberg)
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(April 13): A Paris court convicted two men of insider trading in a secret network that made US$23 million on a tip from a former Societe Generale SA (SocGen) banker about a confidential multibillion-dollar acquisition.

Lucien Selce and Alexis Kuperfis were given jail terms of three years and one year respectively and combined fines of €43 million. Paris judge Gérald Bégranger issued an arrest warrant against the Geneva-based traders, who were absent when he read out the court’s ruling. An ex-wealth manager who placed the suspicious trades on behalf of Kuperfis was also sentenced for his role.

Selce, 63, and Kuperfis, 45, made illegal gains from a confidential tip about Air Liquide SA’s plans to take over US chemical producer Airgas Inc, the court ruled. The information was allegedly shared with the duo by the former banker and via an intermediary in late 2015 using burner phones that the police managed to wiretap by tracing the suspects’ movements.

Ahead of the Airgas trial, the former SocGen banker and the intermediary pleaded guilty, as did two other traders. Between them, the four traders prosecuted over Airgas transactions made about US$23 million. Selce allegedly earned US$13.2 million from his trades, and Kuperfis US$4.6 million

Monday’s sentencing marks the first major insider-trading convictions in France in years. It forms part of a joint effort with US and UK authorities to prosecute members of an international network that they’d been chasing for the better part of two decades. In the US, a one-time Merrill Lynch banker was indicted in November for insider trading and is considered a fugitive.

Uploaded by Felyx Teoh

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