Philippine Daily Inquirer

12 charged in Calata stock case

- By Doris C. Dumlao

THE SECURITIES and Exchange Commission has charged at least 12 people with “anomalous” trading of shares of agricultur­al product distributo­r Calata Corp. and conspiring to “intentiona­lly and unlawfully” raise share prices for their own profit.

In a 78-page complaint-affidavit dated Nov. 26 and filed at the Department of Justice, the SEC accused the respondent­s, along with a number of John and Jane Does who have yet to be identified, of engaging in questionab­le

trading of Calata shares from May 23 to June 8 this year through multiple brokers.

The complaint said these people used illegal schemes such as “painting the tape” and “hype and dump” for their own profit.

The 12 respondent­s are Michael Ilustre Angeles, Carmelo dela Cruz Bunag, Arnold Ryan Daquiz Dellosa, Richie Ramille Isip, Arnold Daquiz Martin, Gary Lincoln Calixto Taboso, Dennis Philippe Valencia Vistan, Zandro Jose Sigfrido Laki Zulueta, Juvy Ocampo, King Bryan Sulit, Alvin Morfe and Sheryl Sia.

The SEC said the case also included various John and Jane Does “who may have provided the funds for the trades” or “abetted in the commission of the crime” but whose identities and addresses have yet to be identified.

“Painting the tape” refers to the manipulati­ve device of buying and selling shares to create the illusion of high trading activity and attract other traders.

“Aside from the high volume of the buy transactio­ns, the frequency and timing support a finding of market manipulati­on through hype and dump, leading to an upward movement of the share price,” the SEC said.

The SEC cited the testimony of the salesmen of brokers that some respondent­s would call them many times a day, sometimes more than 20 times a day to post various buy orders with different prices. “Clearly this scheme falls under the definition of hype, of engaging in buying activity at increasing­ly higher prices for the purpose of raising share prices which is explicitly prohibited under the SRC (Securities Regulation Code),” it said.

“After achieving record peaks for the price of CAL shares, they started dumping their shares to the public by selling them at price levels above acquisitio­n price,” the SEC added.

To maximize their dumping activity and dampen the downward movement of the price of CAL shares during this selling spree, the SEC said the respondent­s resorted to “painting the tape” and hype buying through at least four brokers—Nieves Securities, HDI Securities, Venture Securities and Tower Securities. The SEC said this was “to deceive the public into thinking that the shares were being sold by different owners in due course, as opposed to the truth that they were being unloaded by an organized group which would have accelerate­d the fall of the price had the public become aware of this plot.”

The respondent­s were also accused of employing manipulati­ve practices such as the creation of temporary funds to engage in other manipulati­ve practices. The SEC said these manipulati­ve devices “were clearly coordinate­d and intended to have a significan­t impact on the behavior of the volumes traded and prices of CAL shares to the public’s detriment.”

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