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U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

SEC Halts Fraud by Manager of Startup Quantitative Hedge Fund

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2011-174

Washington, D.C., August 31, 2011 – The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced an asset freeze against a Chicago-area money manager and his hedge fund advisory firm that the SEC charged with lying to prospective investors in their startup quantitative hedge fund. A federal court today entered a preliminary injunction order in the case, which was unsealed earlier this week.

The SEC alleges that Belal K. Faruki of Aurora, Ill., and his advisory firm Neural Markets LLC solicited highly sophisticated individuals to invest in the "Evolution Quantitative 1X Fund," a hedge fund they managed that supposedly used a proprietary algorithm to carry out an arbitrage strategy involving trading in liquid exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Faruki and Neural Markets falsely represented the existence of investor capital and that trading was generating profits when, in fact, losses were being incurred. They defrauded at least one investor out of $1 million before confessing the losses, and were soliciting other wealthy investors before the SEC obtained a court order to halt the scheme.


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"Faruki and Neural Markets lied throughout this elaborate scheme in order to attract capital from sophisticated investors," said Bruce Karpati, Co-Chief of the Asset Management Unit in the SEC's Division of Enforcement. "Even sophisticated institutional investors should be wary of unscrupulous hedge fund managers who cloak their misrepresentations in lofty pitches about a complex investment strategy."

According to the SEC's complaint filed in federal court in Chicago, Faruki and Neural Markets told investors that their hedge fund began trading in 2009. From January 2010 until at least October 2010, Faruki and Neural Markets distorted the hedge fund's performance track record, misrepresented that wealthy investors had invested $5 million in the fund, and misstated that it had engaged a top-tier auditor to assist in preparing the fund's quarterly and annual financial statements. Faruki also falsely told investors that he had invested his own money in the hedge fund so that his interests were aligned with the other supposed investors.

According to the SEC's complaint, Faruki boasted that he was making his investors rich at a time when he actually had no investors. He falsely stated that the names of other wealthy investors had to remain confidential because they did not want their identities revealed. The lone investor in the hedge fund has unsuccessfully attempted to redeem his investment and recover the remaining balance of his funds from Faruki and Neural Markets, who in turn threatened that they would use the investor's funds to defend themselves if help was sought from regulators.

The SEC filed its complaint under seal on Aug. 10, 2011, and that same day the court granted the SEC's request for emergency relief including a temporary restraining order and asset freeze. The court lifted the seal order on August 29, and the preliminary injunction order entered today with the defendants' consent continues the terms of the temporary restraining order until the final resolution of the case.

The SEC's Asset Management Unit and Chicago Regional Office jointly conducted this expedited investigation. Investigative staff included John J. Sikora, Jr. and Amy S. Cotter of the Asset Management Unit, and Luz M. Aguilar and Daniel J. Hayes of the Chicago Regional Office. Mr. Hayes will lead the SEC's litigation.

The SEC's investigation is continuing.

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For more information about this enforcement action, contact:

Merri Jo Gillette
Director, SEC's Chicago Regional Office
312-353-9338

Bruce Karpati (212-336-0104) and Robert Kaplan (202-551-4969)
Co-Chiefs of the SEC Enforcement Division's Asset Management Unit

John J. Sikora, Jr.
Assistant Director, Asset Management Unit, Chicago Regional Office
312-353-7418

 

http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2011/2011-174.htm


Modified: 08/31/2011