• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Natural gas trader sues hedge fund Amaranth

NEW YORK
Thu Jul 12, 2007 6:32pm EDT

Stocks

   

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A trader sued Amaranth Advisors LLC on Thursday, alleging he lost money because the hedge fund that collapsed last year after $6 billion in losses manipulated natural gas prices.

Regulatory News  |  Funds News

Roberto Gracey, who traded natural gas futures contracts, alleged that Amaranth amassed large positions, causing the price of natural gas futures contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange and InterContinental Exchange to be artificial, according to the complaint in the U.S. District Court in Manhattan.

"When defendants' unlawful scheme of highly leveraged trading collapsed in September 2006, the price of natural gas and natural gas futures contracts traded on NYMEX experienced an almost unprecedented drop," the complaint alleged.

"Defendants' manipulative trading caused traders of natural gas futures contracts, including plaintiff, to suffer substantial losses," it said.

The lawsuit, which also names Amaranth's principal Nicholas Maounis and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM.N), one of the fund's prime brokers, is seeking class action status. It seeks to represent people who bought or held NYMEX natural gas futures contracts between February 23, 2006, and September 20, 2006.

A JPMorgan representative declined to comment. Lawyers representing Amaranth and Maounis in another case were not immediately available for comment.

Gracey's lawyer was not immediately available for comment.

Amaranth, a hedge fund manager with about $9.3 billion in assets last year, imploded last September after billions of dollars in bets in the natural gas market went sour.



More from Reuters

Photo

Obama blames "systemic failures" for plane attack

KANEOHE, Hawaii (Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Tuesday blamed "human and systemic failures" for allowing a botched Christmas Day attack aboard a Detroit-bound airliner and a U.S. official said the incident was linked to al Qaeda. | Video

A man passes by a logo of the Tokyo Stock Exchange at the bourse in Tokyo December 29, 2009. REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao

Tokyo trade gets turbocharged

The "Arrowhead" gives Asia's largest -- and long derided -- bourse a viable electronic trading platform, it hopes.  Full Article 

REUTERS/James Saft

Welcome to the "Teenies"

Shrinking financial sector? Paltry investment returns? Welcome to the the next decade. Don't worry, there's some good news, too.  Commentary