Press Room
March 1, 2002
Betrayed?
By David A. Gaffen
Registered Rep.
On one side is a growing group of WorldCom
employee-shareholders, who are looking for more
than $35 million that they claim was lost because
of improper handling of their brokerage accounts.
On the other side is Salomon Smith Barney, a
major underwriter for telecom companies, including
WorldCom, and -- through an Atlanta office --
the retail broker that handled the stock option
business of hundreds of WorldCom employees.
In the middle are two Smith Barney brokers who
built a $2 billion book off the WorldCom options
business and are now being accused of mishandling
some of those accounts. The complaints, filed
with the NASD, range in size from $219,000 to
$14 million, among the complainants is Gary Brandt,
former WorldCom head of investor relations.
The brokers, Philip Spartis and Amy Elias, who
clashed with Smith Barney when it began settling
the suits, are out of a job and fear their prospects
in the business have been destroyed. Now they're
fighting back. They've hired well-known securities
attorney Jeffrey Liddle and are going after their
former employer, as well as high-powered telecom
analyst Jack Grubman.
The two say they have been made scapegoats by
the firm, which they say is seeking to quietly
settle some of the claims, in part to protect
Grubman, who generated lots of banking business
for Smith Barney. Current and former WorldCom
employees have lodged more than 25 different
complaints against brokers at Smith Barney, according
to attorneys for Spartis and Elias. As of Feb.
13, NASD filings showed 11 complaints -- most
of which do not explicitly name WorldCom -- on
the U-4 form of Spartis, seven against Elias,
and eight against a third broker in their corporate
client group, David Hobby. Some have been settled
and some are in arbitration.
Complainants say the brokers encouraged investors
to take on margin risk, allowed them to be over-concentrated
in WorldCom stock and failed to apprise clients
of the growing precariousness of the strategy
as WorldCom's stock weakened.
"Spartis, Elias and Hobby misrepresented,
deceived and/or concealed from claimants material
facts known to them with the intention...of thereby
wrongfully lulling claimants into a false sense
of security that Respondent Smith Barney would
properly manage claimants accounts and solicit
only suitable investment strategies," reads
one complaint, filed by attorney Lawrence Klayman
of Klayman & Toskes in Boca Raton, Fla.,
with the NASD. Salomon Smith Barney, through
a spokeswoman, declined to comment on the litigation.
Spartis and Elias say they wanted to avoid settling
because they did not want to have the information
on their U-4 records--which, to them, was an
admission of guilt. Officially, they were terminated
from Smith Barney due to "job abandonment" in
January, after the pair had been away from the
office for three weeks. Their book of business
has been handed off to other brokers.
In late December, Spartis and Elias hired attorney
Jeffrey Liddle, partner at Liddle & Robinson
in New York, who last summer won a historic $26.7
million judgment against Waddell & Reed for
broker Stephen Sawtelle. Liddle says Smith Barney,
along with analyst Grubman, should bear responsibility,
because Spartis and Elias found their ability
to properly advise the WorldCom clientele was
seriously hindered by the ever-bullish Grubman.
Liddle has filed a cross-claim against Smith
Barney, seeking an undetermined amount in damages
for his clients as compensation for lost income
and harm to their careers. He has also filed
a third-party claim against Grubman, perhaps
establishing a novel claim that a research analyst
who continued to vigorously recommend a stock
that was already tumbling can be liable for damages
suffered by brokers who are being sued by their
clients who heeded the analyst's advice. Until
now, only clients have attempted -- largely unsuccessfully
-- to recover damages from analysts for making
improper recommendations and concealing conflicts
of interest.
It was Grubman's cheerleading, Spartis and Elias
assert, that convinced these investors -- including
some prominent WorldCom employees, Liddle points
out -- that it was okay to hold the WorldCom
shares (at times bought with loans from Smith
Barney), rather than sell some or all to diversify
their holdings. Some clients who later filed
claims borrowed against WorldCom stock to buy
other equities. Grubman is being slammed by other
investors for his excessive bullishness; his
U-4 form turns up a number of complaints, several
of which have been denied. Among the allegations
are a failure by Grubman to notify investors
of conflict of interests, issuing misleading
research reports between 1996 and 2000 as well
as making improper "buy" recommendations,
and breach of fiduciary duty, according to NASD
filings. (One suit filed in New York State was
dismissed on a technicality.) Grubman did not
comment for this article.
The heart of the legal strategy is Spartis' and
Elias' claims that the two are being scapegoated
for the firm's internal policies -- regarding
Grubman's investment advice, the way the firm
monitored accounts and how the firm responded
to what the two brokers insist were defensible
claims. When Smith Barney began settling complaints
last spring, Spartis and Elias were hot. "We
spent weeks and weeks pulling together our defense," Elias
says. "But it was all about what they were
going to pay."
Attorney Klayman says it was ultimately the responsibility
of the brokerage to make better decisions for
its clients -- to impress upon them the need
for hedging strategies and greater diversification. "They
just needed to do the right job, which wasn't
done," says Klayman, who says he currently
is representing more than a dozen claims against
Smith Barney. "They wanted to be handled
properly, and weren't given advice or anything."
Spartis and Elias say that 95 percent of their
accounts were sufficiently diversified away from
one stock. The remaining clients, the two brokers
say, wanted to put all their chips on one bet,
so to speak, and were burned for it. The pair
claims that while they apprised customers of
the possibility of using margin, they also discussed
other strategies. They say they did not encourage
highly concentrated positions, and discussed
hedging and stops that would have stemmed some
of the losses. "That discussion was had,
but they didn't hear you say it," says Elias. "They
didn't want to hear you say it." Why? Because
the notion that WorldCom might fall "was
an impossibility," she says.
"You can lead a horse to water, but...you
know the phrase," Spartis says. "We
had conference calls with many of these folks
-- some of whom have claims against us."
Booming Business Busts
Spartis, 49, worked at Smith Barney since 1984,
and specialized in corporate clients for the
past 10 years. Some of the best clients were
WorldCom employees, whose option-based wealth
swelled through the 1990s as the colorful founder,
Bernard Ebbers, conducted a non-stop deal binge
that catapulted the communications upstart to
the top of the long-distance and Internet-service
business. WorldCom's stock rose from $18 in 1991
to $90 in 1999 as the company swelled in size
and investors bet heavily on surging demand for
communications services.
Spartis added Elias to his group in 1995. She
had moved to Atlanta from Bismarck, N.D., where
she'd started in the brokerage business soliciting
ranchers -- often incurring the wrath of their
wives, who felt being a broker was rather unladylike,
she says. Elias, now 36, was extremely enthusiastic,
Spartis says. She got interested in the brokerage
business when, as a salesperson for a newspaper
group in Illinois, she would spend hours with
clients of hers -- brokers -- who would explain
the market. She decided to become a broker and
recalls how excited she was when she, self-taught,
passed her Series 7 -- on the second attempt. "I
remember calling all my friends saying, ‘I'm
going to be a stockbroker!’" she says.
In Atlanta, things went well for Spartis and
Elias as the bull market soared. Spartis says
his book of business was among the largest at
the firm, thanks in part to the swelling volume
of business from WorldCom employees exercising
options. Liddle says Spartis and his team handled
more than 80,000 transactions in their last two
to three years. The business was so good that
about seven other people were brought in to handle
the overflow, Liddle says.
Many WorldCom clients sought to maximize their
gains by actually purchasing the shares, rather
than executing a cashless exercise. In such a
transaction, the brokerage briefly lends the
client the money to exercise the option, then
immediately sells the shares and gives the client
the difference between the market price and the
strike price -- less a small fee. With a non-qualified
stock option plan (the type most WorldCom clients
had, Spartis says), the profit is taxed as ordinary
income, usually 39.6 percent, for the difference
between the strike price and the market value
of the stock.
But amendments to legislation changed the capital
gains implications. Once that ordinary income
had been paid off, there was a significant benefit
to holding the stock for a year, as the long-term
capital gains tax was lowered to 20 percent.
This was especially appealing if a client believed
that the stock had a good chance of making double-digit
annual gains.
In the euphoria of the late 1990s, it was easy
to overlook the downside of holding so much WorldCom
stock. "Most people had their wealth concentrated,
like many in telecom, and they thought, ‘Hey,
if I can save myself 19.6 percent, why not?’" says
Spartis. So, borrowing money from Smith Barney,
clients exercised their options and wound up
with WorldCom shares that were margined.
But why did they think the stock was going to
go higher? Spartis and Elias say clients would
assume either it was going higher, or they'd
inquire about what Smith Barney was saying about
the stock. And Grubman, who made a name for himself
with his grand pronouncements about telecom companies,
was steadfastly bullish on WorldCom. Grubman
has maintained a "buy" recommendation
on the stock even as it dropped steadily, from
a peak near $100 a share in 1999 to its recent
range around $7 a share. On Feb. 8, he reiterated
his "buy" rating on the company, according
to Salomon Smith Barney research reports.
Margin Euphoria
There was another factor influencing clients
in those days of continually rising markets:
The possibility of a margin call seemed remote.
Indeed, New York Stock Exchange margin debt hit
an all-time high of $278 billion in March 2000
-- nearly double the figure from a year earlier.
That, of course, was when the market began to
wobble. And it was not long before WorldCom's
fortunes began to wane. The company saw a potential
deal with Sprint fall through in the summer of
2000, in part because of the declining value
of telecom shares.
Still, Grubman remained bullish on the New Economy
story, issuing encouraging reports on not only
WorldCom, but also on companies like Global Crossing,
termed a "speculative buy" up until
October 2001 (it declared bankruptcy in January).
On June 27, 2000, with WorldCom stock down more
than 60 percent from its peak to $37.50, Grubman
stated in a research report that WorldCom "remains
the company every major global telecom company
wants to look like in terms of assets," and
maintained an $87 price target.
As WorldCom shares drifted lower, accounts in
Spartis' book were being hit with margin calls
and were falling into negative equity. In the
spring of 2001, a number of complaints were lodged
against Spartis, Elias and Hobby, according to
filings obtained from the NASD. Most of the complaints
on each of the three broker's U-4 forms overlap;
they have identical case numbers, or an identical
figure in alleged damages. Spartis and Elias
say all but one of these were from WorldCom employees.
Among other things, the complaints charged misconduct
and improper use of margin and the unsuitability
of investments. Some of the claims against Spartis
and Elias are in arbitration with the NASD. Three
of the cases have been settled, according to
the U-4 forms, including one $7 million claim
-- for $600,000 in damages.
Hobby, who is not being defended by Liddle, continues
to work at Smith Barney. A call to him was transferred
to Jinan Strickland, operations manager at the
3455 Peachtree Road office, who then referred
calls to corporate communications in New York.
Smith Barney, through a spokeswoman, did not
comment on the status of the arbitration or on
the individual consultants involved.
Lost Their Home
When the complaints started coming in, Spartis
and Elias say they were caught off-guard. But
they concluded that they could prove that they
were not guilty of any improprieties in handling
client accounts.
But Klayman at Klayman & Toskes says his
clients tell a different story. He says Smith
Barney, through the representation of Spartis,
Hobby and Elias, aggressively pushed people to
lever up with a higher margin balance to increase
the firm's assets and gain new accounts, rather
than just try to hold the assets created with
a routine options exercise. "They did very
clever marketing to gather assets," Klayman
says. According to the lawyer, Spartis and Elias
encouraged clients to go long WorldCom stock,
as well as take out margin loans for other purposes.
The number of arbitrations involving margin calls
has exploded, from 39 in 1998 to 375 in 2001,
according to the NASD.
One claim, filed by Klayman against Smith Barney
on behalf of Robert J. Grim, a 17-year employee
of WorldCom, and his wife, Dawn Grim, charges
that Grim was counseled by the brokers to exercise
his accumulated 49,918 shares on March 31, 2000.
At the time, the stock was at $42.56, for a total
market value of $2,124,659. An exercise-and-hold
strategy was employed, involving a margin loan
of $785,432, according to the claim filed with
the NASD.
Ultimately, the value of the portfolio declined
$1,669,221. The final tally? Grim was responsible
for $1,293,812 in taxable ordinary income, and
suffered $916,741 in net short-term capital losses,
which aren't deductible against the ordinary
income. This particular claim alleges damages
of $1.75 million, including the sale of the Grim's
house.
Spartis says his clients were advised of their
possibilities. "After educating the clients
to the alternatives available, and given the
fact that the stock had been up over the last
10 years, some of these people were inclined
to borrow to gain the liquidity that they'd never
had before," Spartis says.
"The ability to use stock as collateral
for loans became more appealing. Did we encourage
margin? No. We explained it as an alternative
method of financing an exercise and hold. We'd
also ask if they could bring in extra outside
cash, or sell other securities. We'd tell them,
here are the sources for you to utilize: cash,
other securities or margin, but we wanted them
out of margin."
Klayman says the investors should have been further
educated about hedging strategies, such as zero-cost
collars and other types of put options that would
have offset the risk inherent in holding already-overvalued
stock. Again, Spartis says he tried to protect
clients, but some would not listen. "We'd
talk about hedging, and stops, and Jack would
say, ‘Higher, higher, higher,’ and
they would bring in outside assets to shore up
[their accounts] when the next decline happened," Spartis
says.
When WorldCom shares fell, Spartis and Elias
also say they were unable to effectively monitor
margin accounts that were running into trouble
because of the firm's inadequate internal system.
They say the only way they could have identified
the accounts in danger themselves would have
been to comb through, from A to Z, account by
account, which they say would have been impossible. "The
system they had was inadequate, and it was impossible
to get our hands around," Spartis says.
The firm did not respond to questions regarding
its systems. The branch manager during this period,
Michael J. Grace, who is still listed on Smith
Barney's Web site as the senior branch manager,
did not return a call seeking comment. He has
five complaints on his U-4 record reflecting "alleged
failure to supervise." Those cases are currently
in arbitration, according to NASD filings. The
current branch manager, Brad Bradham, who started
at Smith Barney on Jan. 22, did not return a
call seeking comment.
The first claim against Elias and Spartis was
settled in May 2001 for $190,000 that cited the "failure
to disclose the risks associated with margin
use" and "unsuitable investment strategy
recommendations," according to the U-4 forms
of Spartis and Elias. Another complaint against
Spartis was settled in July 2001 for $85,000
that also cited an "unauthorized margin
balance" and "unsuitable investments." When
the settlements began and the charges appeared
on Spartis and Elias' U-4 forms, the two realized
that their interests and the firm's were diverging.
"We built the firm's defense position, and
they decided to mediate rather than arbitrate," says
Elias. "That really depressed me." Spartis
says they attempted to write on their U-4 forms: "We
vehemently oppose this settlement." But,
he says, [the attorneys] "said we couldn't
do that."
As the settlements commenced, Spartis began to
think it might be best to put the whole thing
behind him and met with then-branch manager Grace
to ask about his retirement benefits. He then
received a call from H. Wayne Hutton, regional
director. "Wayne said, ‘I understand
you think you want to retire; we think that would
be a good idea,’" Spartis says. Spartis
says he was offered about $300,000 in his own
contributions to the firm's capital accumulation
program, his existing 401(k) and nothing more.
Spartis says he then asked what would happen
to his book, figuring he could, under the firm's
franchise protection program, sell it to the
firm, collect a large sum, and walk away. "But
he [Hutton] said the book was useless because
there's too many liabilities," says Spartis.
Hutton did not return a call seeking comment.
In the fall of 2001, Spartis shifted tactics,
figuring he could wait out the complaints. He
and Elias hired an Atlanta attorney named Bill
Leonard, who, Spartis says, told Smith Barney
officials that Spartis wanted to come back to
work. Spartis says Smith Barney prepared a document
with four reasons why he shouldn't return to
work, charging him with unsuitability of investments
for clients, concentration of position, excessive
use of margin and unauthorized use of correspondence.
Spartis says he defended these claims, and as
a result, was asked to come back to work.
Shown The Door
The reconciliation didn't last long, the two
brokers say. Spartis made one other request to
Hutton -- that he not continue to report to Grace,
because of what Spartis says was a poor relationship.
Hutton agreed to this, when Spartis returned
in October. He went to a meeting with Hutton,
ostensibly to discuss compliance issues. "Wayne
said, ‘You're no longer the corporate client
group director,’" Spartis says. After
several stressful weeks, Spartis and Elias were
again asked to leave in December, and he says
the two were threatened with termination if they
did not quit voluntarily. In December, "I
got another call saying, ‘Wayne wants a
meeting,’ so I gave him three timeslots,
and when he picked Friday at 2 p.m., I knew this
was not good," Spartis says.
There was no official termination then, however,
and Liddle says he believes the company did not
want to risk a lawsuit for out-and-out firing
the employees. Attorney Liddle says the two were
essentially made to feel as if they'd been terminated.
Finally, on Feb. 4, they received a letter signed
by Hutton saying the two were no longer Smith
Barney employees because they hadn't been at
work for the preceding three weeks, "an
abandonment of their duties," according
to a letter FedExed to Spartis, Elias and Liddle
on Jan. 31, obtained by Registered Rep.
Spartis and Elias maintain that they were forced
out largely because they wouldn't agree to the
settlements and because they feel Smith Barney
is responsible for the unsuitable investments.
They say their claims were ultimately defensible
and their talk of diversification and cashing
in some gains were ignored because clients assumed
the stock would continue to rise, and the brokers
often found their clients quoting Grubman's research
back to them. "If people said, ‘What's
Jack think?’ And we said, ‘Well,
he's got a hold on this,’ don't you think
you'd be less excited about [purchasing on margin]?" Elias
says.
While dragging Grubman into the suit will undoubtedly
generate some more publicity for Liddle and his
clients, it is not clear how it will play in
arbitration. So far, investors have had little
luck with this tack. Henry Blodget settled one
case in July 2001 for $400,000 and soon after
left Merrill. A case against Morgan Stanley Internet
analyst Mary Meeker was thrown out of court.
So getting an analyst to pay damages to a broker
may be unlikely. Although brokers are often strongly
urged to follow the firm's recommendations, Klayman
says that it's still the responsibility of the
broker to judge the suitability of the investment
for the particular client. "The minute
they exercised, those brokers at Salomon Smith
Barney had an obligation, because the assets
were in their custody," Klayman says. "How
did they help them? It's like a plastic surgeon
doing surgery with a meat cleaver."
Liddle's battle against Smith Barney could drag
on for years and the outcome is far from clear.
What is clear, say Elias and Spartis, is the
damage already inflicted on them by Smith Barney's
settlements. The various complaints on their
U-4 forms charge that the pair "improperly
handled accounts," "engaged in breach
of fiduciary duty, fraud and negligent misrepresentation,
unsuitability and violation of state and federal
statutes," and misrepresentation and failure
to disclose risk associated with margin. "We
wanted to defend ourselves, and we thought that's
what was going to be happening," says Elias.
Signing the complaints and agreeing to settlements,
she says, "is like saying we were guilty." For
the moment, Spartis is waiting out what he calls
a "nightmare," though he knows his
chances of getting back into the industry are
dead. Elias is making up for some lost time with
her children. "For two years, my kids haven't
had a good mom," she says.