Filed under: Industry, Law, Scandals

Imagine your broker parked your funds in an account that he said would be as safe as a money market fund but offer slightly higher yields. If you went for that line, you might now be among those who hold the $330 billion worth of Auction Rate Securities (ARS) whose weekly price-setting auctions stopped working in February. Now, Bloomberg News reports that those who are trying to get at their funds through arbitration will be lucky to receive 22 cents on the dollar.

I first began posting on the ARS market back in February. Since then 5,482 comments have appeared from people trying to unfreeze their funds from what their brokers told them were safe investments. Massachusetts and New York have sued one of the ARS hawkers — UBS AG (NYSE: UBS) — thanks to e-mails that indicated that when the ARS auctions failed, UBS decided to dump this toxic waste on individual investors rather than take the losses on its own books. New York’s attorney general found that UBS executives sold $21 million worth of their ARS holdings before launching this campaign to dump them on the public.

Many are now trying to get their money back through a process called arbitration. If your claim is above $50,000 you will face a panel of three judges, two “public” and one of whom represents the ARS industry. Bloomberg reports that the process for choosing the panelists virtually assures that consumers will be judged by a representative of the industry that defrauded them. So it’s no wonder that arbitration rulings have given investors enormous haircuts.

Continue reading Will Auction Rate Securities holders get 22 cents in arbitration?

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