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Hedge Fund Started in College Dorm Room Accused of Fraud by SEC

The SEC on Monday sued Barnett, SBB and Matthew Aven, the firm’s chief operating officer.

Hedge Fund Started in College Dorm Room Accused of Fraud by SEC
Signage is displayed outside the headquarters building of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in Washington, D.C., U.S. (Photographer: Zach Gibson/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Samuel Barnett, 30, founded SBB Research almost a decade ago in his dorm room, transforming a college side gig into a hedge fund that managed more than $400 million.

How did he pull it off?

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission says through a years-long fraud that consisted of inflating holdings to mislead investors into believing that SBB’s performance was much better than it actually was.

The SEC on Monday sued Barnett, SBB and Matthew Aven, the firm’s chief operating officer. Barnett started Northbrook, Illinois-based SBB in 2010, initially investing his family fortune, the regulator said in an order. But even after raising hundreds of millions of dollars from friends and relatives, the California Institute of Technology graduate had greater ambitions: turning SBB into an SEC registered firm that could solicit money from outside investors.

To get there, Barnett promoted his investing acumen in appearances on CNBC and other media outlets. He also sought to establish a track record to show prospective clients he was an expert trader. But according to the SEC, SBB’s track record was based on fraudulent manipulation by Barnett and Aven of the value of the hedge fund firm’s investments.

“Investors rely on investment advisers to accurately value assets and disclose fund performance,” Daniel Michael, who runs the SEC enforcement division’s complex financial instruments unit, said in a statement. “As alleged in the SEC’s complaint, SBB, Barnett, and Aven intentionally manipulated valuation models to deceive current and prospective investors.”

Barnett, who primarily invested in structured notes, overcharged his clients $1.4 million in fees due to the inflated evaluations, according to the SEC. He eventually tried to make investors whole by paying a “secret” credit into their accounts without revealing that they had been overcharged in the first place, the regulator said.

SBB is “eager” to fight the SEC’s allegations in court, H. Gregory Baker, a lawyer representing Barnett, SBB and Aven, said in a statement.

“SBB operates with the utmost integrity and vehemently disagrees with the SEC’s aggressive and extreme interpretation of SBB’s good faith estimates of their hard-to-value investments,” Baker said. “The SEC is in direct conflict with years of professional opinions of SBB’s third-party accounting professionals. No investors were harmed; quite the contrary, SBB’s funds have performed well.”

A phone call to Barnett at SBB wasn’t immediately returned.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jesse Westbrook in Washington at jwestbrook1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jesse Westbrook at jwestbrook1@bloomberg.net, Gregory Mott

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