The New Zealand Herald

FMA quiet on cost of Milford case

- Hamish Fletcher

New Zealand’s financial regulator is refusing to reveal exactly what it spent investigat­ing Milford Asset Management and one of its traders for alleged market manipulati­on, claiming the costs in the case are “sensitive” and their disclosure possibly prejudicia­l.

Milford last month paid $1.5 million in a settlement following a Financial Markets Authority probe, $1.1 million of which will go to the Crown, with the balance covering the costs of the regulator’s investigat­ion.

One of Milford’s portfolio managers is still facing enforcemen­t action.

Milford portfolio manager Mark Warminger ceased to be involved with the firm’s investment team, without explanatio­n, last month.

The company last month would

It is the FMA’s opinion that the costs incurred and being incurred are sensitive and the disclosure of them could prejudice the ongoing conduct of the case.

not comment on whether Warminger was the individual still under investigat­ion by the FMA.

An Official Informatio­n Act request into what the FMA has spent on the case bore little fruit and was declined by the regulator yesterday afternoon.

“While the FMA’s concerns regarding Milford’s conduct have been addressed, the enforcemen­t processes with respect to the individual continue. Therefore, while the matter remains open it is the FMA’s opinion that the costs incurred and being incurred are sensitive and the disclosure of them could prejudice the ongoing conduct of the case,” the FMA’s senior solicitor Ginny Coubrough said when declining it.

In another market manipulati­on case last year, the FMA spent $400,000 more investigat­ing Diligent Board Member Services’ founder Brian Henry than it got back from him in penalties.

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