The three men purchased call options to buy Activision Blizzard shares at $40 on January 14, four days before tech giant Microsoft agreed to buy the company at $95 per share, according to the Journal, which cited unnamed sources (shares of Activision Blizzard were worth $82.31 at close on the day the acquisition was announced).
• The trades by Diller, Geffen and von Furstenberg led to unrealized profits of around $60 million, the Journal reported.
• JPMorgan Chase, through which the men arranged the transactions, reported the trades to law enforcement, according to the Journal.
Anyone wonder about the name of the banker involved in the deal? What do his phone, email, and text messages reveal?
1 posted on
03/14/2022 7:07:19 AM PDT by
ptsal
To: ptsal; bitt
Making money the old fashioned way..../sarc
2 posted on
03/14/2022 7:07:56 AM PDT by
ptsal
(Vote R.E.D. >>>Remove Every Democrat ***)
To: ptsal
Some Sodomites have all the luck,
some Sodomites have all the fame,
some Sodomites get all the breaks…
6 posted on
03/14/2022 7:16:47 AM PDT by
Jan_Sobieski
(Sanctification)
To: ptsal
Trying to enjoy the illegal sweetheart deals Congresscritters regard as their due.
7 posted on
03/14/2022 7:17:29 AM PDT by
BradyLS
(DO NOT FEED THE BEARS!)
To: ptsal
Perhaps Congress are the best people to investigate this.?.? No one knows more about insider trading than our Representatives and Senators!
8 posted on
03/14/2022 7:20:41 AM PDT by
Jan_Sobieski
(Sanctification)
To: ptsal
How dare they getting into that deal before congress.!!
9 posted on
03/14/2022 7:27:05 AM PDT by
unread
(Everything you ever thought was right, fair and just is completely wrong..... I think..(?))
To: ptsal
Did they actually believe they were in the US Congress? Stay in your own lane!
10 posted on
03/14/2022 7:29:54 AM PDT by
Herodes
To: ptsal
11 posted on
03/14/2022 7:31:52 AM PDT by
tennmountainman
( Less Lindell CONS, More AZ Style Audits)
To: ptsal
Oliver Stone's
Wall Street personified such people in the character of Gordon Gekko, whose famous "Green Is Good" speech depicted him as a villain.
Yet throughout the 1980s and 1990s, many conservatives (especially of the libertarian and Objectivist bent) praised Gekko, and embraced "Greed Is Good" as their motto. It appeared on conservative merchandise, on t-shirts and mugs and such.
This past decade has seen a struggle over the meaning of conservatism; between populists who want to preserve nations and their culture, vs. hardcore free marketers who want to transform all nations into multicultural/LGBT free enterprise zones.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson