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Jefferies accused of ‘malpractice’ by Icahn short sellers

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By James Mitchell
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4 minute read

The major investment bank has become embroiled in a short attack against corporate activist and former Trump adviser Carl Icahn’s investment group.

A report published by Hindenburg Research on Tuesday (2 May) cost Florida-based Icahn Enterprises L.P. (IEP) more than US$3 billion ($4.5 billion) in a single day. 

Nasdaq-listed IEP fell from around $50 at Monday’s close to a low of $38 before ending the day’s trading at just over $40 a share, wiping 20 per cent off the group’s market cap.

The Hindenburg report, titled Icahn Enterprises: The Corporate Raider Throwing Stones From His Own Glass House, accuses Icahn of using money taken in from new investors to pay out dividends to old investors.

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“Such Ponzi-like economic structures are sustainable only to the extent that new money is willing to risk being the last one ‘holding the bag’,” the report said.

The report also accused investment bank Jefferies of malpractice.

“Supporting this structure is Jefferies, the only large investment bank with research coverage on IEP,” the report said.

“It has continuously placed a ‘buy’ rating on IEP units. In one of the worst cases of sell-side research malpractice we’ve seen, Jefferies’ research assumes in all cases, even in its bear case, that IEP’s dividend will be safe ‘into perpetuity’, despite providing no support for that assumption,” it said.

“Since 2019, one bank has run all of IEP’s $1.7 billion in ATM offerings: Jefferies. In essence, Jefferies is luring in retail investors through its research arm under the guise of IEP’s ‘safe’ dividend, while also selling billions in IEP units through its investment banking arm to support the very same dividend.”

Icahn fired back at Hindenburg in a trading update on Tuesday, accusing the “self-serving short seller report” for its intentions to generate profits on Hindenburg’s short position at the expense of IEP’s long-term unitholders.

“We stand by our public disclosures and we believe that IEP’s performance will speak for itself over the long term as it always has,” Icahn said.

“Today, IEP operates from a position of strength with approximately $2 billion of cash and cash-equivalents on its balance sheet as of March 31, 2023 to execute on our strategy,” stated Carl Icahn, chairman of the board of Icahn Enterprises.

“We continue to believe that activism is the best paradigm for investing and my activist investments over the last 25 years have well proved this out. We regularly put our activist principles into effect at our majority-controlled companies as well as the minority positions held in our investment segment, and currently have representatives on 14 public company boards. Additionally, we believe strongly in hedging our positions to mitigate risk, especially in markets that we are living in today.”

Carl Icahn made a name for himself as a major corporate raider during the 1980s when he led a hostile takeover of TWA before stripping the airline’s assets and netting a significant windfall. The move made major headlines at the time and inspired a plotline of the 1987 major motion picture Wall Street.

A major Trump supporter, Icahn was special adviser to the former US President during his first year in the White House.

He famously left Trump’s election victory party in November 2016 to put more than a billion dollars to work in the market.

He reportedly left the celebrations at 2am after watching the futures market collapse and immediately started buying.