Tuco not an anomaly

Quote from chris1085:

THIS IS AN OUTRAGE. HOW THE HELL ARE PEOPLE SUPPOSED TO BREAK INTO DAY TRADING WITHOUT 25k. FUCKING ABOLISH THE SEC!!!! ITS A F**KING JOKE ALONG WITH THE FED AND TREASURY DEPARTMENT.

The SEC is simply screwing te little guy. That's all. If you don't have 25K ultimately you won't be able to trade in this capacity. Little guy gets screwed. So if you are confident the only way you can do it would be if you have the credit to take a cash advance on several credit cards to trade with if you don't happen to have 25k cash lying around.
 
As I have posted before, I tend to check things out with a securities lawyer before getting involved. I was advised more than a year ago by an attorney who used to work in Enforcement that companies ( like Tuco--just as an example) were operating as unregistered b/d's and that I should not involve myself in investing in one of these.

I was recently told by the same attorney SEC usually does not take this type of action without a complaint.

I'm not trying to tout my foresight, but good legal counsel is always important. I often go a little "overboard" with the legal bills but they give me a little comfort.

As to Lescor, I am very sorry about your situation; don't make anything worse for yourself by admitting to receiving overrides. Only a registered person is permitted to receive such income, and itshould be paid by a b/d, not an affiliated LLC.

If anyone has missed my previous posts, please google the Birtchtree Letters to get an understanding of just how seriously the SEC takes what we might consider a shortcut.
 
Quote from propseeker:

tito, corey may be making assumptions about the capital acct based on his relations with mike/doug, but he happens to be right, like i've already stated. he's not making irresponsible statements, YOU are. do your homework before accusing others of spinning.

why don't you register at pacer and see for yourself? acct statements were submitted to the court and are on public record. NO NEED FOR SPECULATION. i've looked at them, and they're as stated. i suppose you could claim that those are also fraudulent, but me thinks their lawyer's wouldn't want to risk a perjury count by falsifying. http://dockets.justia.com/docket/court-ilndce/case_no-1:2008cv01685/case_id-218370/

the shortfall claim by the sec/receiver stems from the fact that they would not count receivables into the equation. i, personally, find it interesting the receiver chose not to post the accounting record on his website... would calm a lot of fears. the only concern traders of tuco should have right now is that the receiver may draw on trader money to pay expenses. as someone stated, he already got an extension to october, that's a lot of time. the court order said no lawsuits could be brought against tuco, not so sure nothing could be brought against the receiver.

why tuco chose not to fight it? come on, obviously it would have cost millions and millions of dollars. odds are trader money would have been at much greater risk in that situation.

also, to those claiming this is isolated, it's not... sec told the tuco guys they were going after 2 more, so head's up.

They sec was quite right not to count receivables in their complaint. Unless the receivable was just trades clearing, it would be ridiculous to include them. Back at the start of this thing, it was stated that the one to three million shortfall in the capital account was from a "russian trading group".

I guess it would not bother you to know that getting your money out of tuco was dependent upon tuco collecting millions from some russians, but I think it would bother many traders. It sure would me. If I had placed my money with them, I would want to know if a shortfall of this nature existed, and would be quite uneasy if I found out that the money on my statement was not backed up by money in the accounts, but rather a receivable from some russians. If I was going to loan my money to some russians, it would have to be at a fairly high rate of interest.
 
Quote from bestfriend:

As I have posted before, I tend to check things out with a securities lawyer before getting involved. I was advised more than a year ago by an attorney who used to work in Enforcement that companies ( like Tuco--just as an example) were operating as unregistered b/d's and that I should not involve myself in investing in one of these.

I was recently told by the same attorney SEC usually does not take this type of action without a complaint.

I'm not trying to tout my foresight, but good legal counsel is always important. I often go a little "overboard" with the legal bills but they give me a little comfort.

As to Lescor, I am very sorry about your situation; don't make anything worse for yourself by admitting to receiving overrides. Only a registered person is permitted to receive such income, and itshould be paid by a b/d, not an affiliated LLC.

If anyone has missed my previous posts, please google the Birtchtree Letters to get an understanding of just how seriously the SEC takes what we might consider a shortcut.

ask your lawyer about illegal naked shorting and who bought the 9/11 airline put options? ask him if the SEC takes these things seriously? when he starts stuttering.... just know i am already laughing.
 
Quote from Yours truly,:

They sec was quite right not to count receivables in their complaint. Unless the receivable was just trades clearing, it would be ridiculous to include them. Back at the start of this thing, it was stated that the one to three million shortfall in the capital account was from a "russian trading group".....


weren't these ecn rebates? if so.. they sure as hell should be counted.
 
You mean years ago, like in 2001 when they instituted the PDT rule???
Quote from jazzsax:

How are they supposed to break in? Do what people used to have to do. Work hard, save some money, then invest it.

You're all fortunate now you can open an account with next to nothing. Years ago, only the fortunate had accounts.
:confused: :confused: :confused:
 
Quote from Yours truly,:

three million dollars? don't think so.

Try not thinking then, doesn't suit you. Just look here... all you will need is basic word and number recognition and a couple bucks to register a pacer acct:

http://dockets.justia.com/docket/court-ilndce/case_no-1:2008cv01685/case_id-218370/

Yea, they were ECN rebate receivables and IMO they should've been counted, but to each his own... in the very least it would have dispelled the whole fraud allegation.

I liked your whole russian shpeel though... funny.
 
Quote from Yours truly,:

three million dollars? don't think so.


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I didn't even know that Tuco had $3 mil in ECN receivables due (=practically money in the bank), which makes all the SEC 'shortfall' claims completely bogus. So there was a 7-figure <b>surplus</b> of cash, and this crude injustice stinks even worse than before. If the SEC were a privately owned entity, they'd be brought up on extortion charges.

With the billion$ in SEC fees looted from our pockets, the <i>least</i> the SEC could do would be to steal our SEC fee money quietly, and not use it to actively disrupt good firms and steal more money.
 
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