Waterloo Region Record

Sino-Forest defrauded investors and misled investigat­ors: OSC

Former executives face capital market bans and fines

- The Canadian Press

TORONTO — Timber company Sino-Forest and several of its top executives defrauded investors, misled investigat­ors and “engaged in deceitful or dishonest conduct,” the Ontario Securities Commission ruled in one of Canada’s largest corporate fraud cases.

In a nearly 300-page decision released Friday, the regulator said the company and former CEO Allen Chan, as well as Albert Ip, Alfred Hung and George Ho defrauded investors by overstatin­g the now defunct company’s timber assets and revenue.

Allegation­s of fraud against Simon Yeung were dismissed, but the regulator concluded he misled staff during their investigat­ion.

The investigat­ion into SinoForest was triggered in 2011 when short seller Carson Block of Muddy Waters Research published a scathing report accusing the company of exaggerati­ng its assets and fabricatin­g sales transactio­ns in what amounted to “a multibilli­on-dollar Ponzi scheme.”

“We applaud the OSC for persisting through an undoubtedl­y complex investigat­ion and hearing to see that justice is served,” Block wrote in an email Friday.

“It’s important to remember that our report was initially quite controvers­ial and met with a good deal of hostility — at a time when the freedom of speech is under threat, this outcome is a reminder of the value of critical voices and freedom of expression.”

The former executives now face the possibilit­y of being permanentl­y banned from Canada’s capital markets, or fined up to $1 million for each failure to comply with Ontario securities law.

A separate hearing on sanctions and costs has not been set.

Chan’s lawyer, Emily Cole, said her client was disappoint­ed and would be going over the decision. Stephen Wortley, a lawyer for Ip, Hung, Ho and Yeung, said he was also reviewing the decision and declined further comment.

Sino-Forest, which was establishe­d in 1994, was once the most valuable forestry company listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange. Although it was based in Ontario, the company conducted most of its business in China until it collapsed in 2012.

The decision by the OSC follows the settlement of several lawsuits by investors in connection with the case.

In 2015, several Canadian banks and other financial institutio­ns that helped the company raise millions on the financial markets agreed to a $32.5-million settlement in a class-action lawsuit filed by investors who lost money.

David Horsley, former chief financial officer of Sino-Forest, also agreed to pay $6.3 million to the OSC and to settle class-action lawsuits in 2014, while Sino-Forest’s former auditor, Ernst & Young, agreed to a $117-million class-action settlement with investors in 2013.

The case against Sino-Forest and its former executives was one of the most complicate­d cases in the Ontario Securities Commission’s history.

“Today’s decision on the merits is an important milestone in a complex, multi-jurisdicti­onal case that spanned close to 200 hearing days and involved over 2,000 exhibits,” the commission said in a statement.

The hearing heard testimony from several witnesses from China over video conferenci­ng and with the assistance of translator­s. There were more than 170 hearing days, 22 witnesses and over 22,000 pages of transcript­s.

Defence lawyers for the executives had argued that what the OSC called fraud were simply mistakes made by a fast-growing company.

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