Wilbur Ross Shorted Stock In Russian Government-Tied Shipping Company

on March 22, 2018 in Washington, DC.
WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 22: U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross testifies before the House Ways and Means Committee in the Longworth House Office Building on Capitol Hill March 22, 2018 in Washington, DC. Ross was te... WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 22: U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross testifies before the House Ways and Means Committee in the Longworth House Office Building on Capitol Hill March 22, 2018 in Washington, DC. Ross was testifying about the Trump Administration' tarriffs imposed on foreign steel and aluminum that are set to go into affect on Friday. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) MORE LESS
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross made a trade betting that the stock in a shipping company with Russian-government ties would fall, a transaction coming just days after he learned of a possible negative news story about his investment in the company.

Ross reported on a government form released Monday, as required by federal ethics rules, that he shorted stock in Navigator Holdings in October. The New York Times reported Tuesday that the transaction came three business days after a Times reporter submitted questions to Ross about Navigator. The transaction, listed as worth between $100,000 and $250,000, was first reported Monday by Forbes.

Ross rebuffed any suggestions that he shorted the Navigator stock based on confidential information to make a profit. He said the transaction was part of his effort to divest from Navigator and that he did not stand to gain if the stock fell, or lose if it rose, at the time.

Sen. Ron Wyden, the ranking Democratic on the Senate Finance Committee, criticized Ross for the stock trade during a hearing Wednesday examining tariffs on imported aluminum and steel.

“When it comes to trade, Americans have a right to know it’s their best interests Trump administration officials are looking out for at the negotiating table,” Wyden said. “The stories that we have seen in the last few days call that into question.”

Ross did not respond to Wyden’s statement.

In short selling, a person borrows shares of a stock and sells them. The aim is to then replace the borrowed shares with others bought later at a lower price, reaping a profit from the difference.

Navigator counts a Russian gas producer with ties to the Kremlin among its major customers.

President Donald Trump tapped Ross, a billionaire investor in distressed companies, to be his administration’s point man on trade and manufacturing as Commerce chief. His spokesmen said in November that Ross planned to completely divest from Navigator, although he wasn’t required to do so under his ethics agreement as an incoming Cabinet member, because he wanted to avoid any possible perception of a conflict of interest.

Ross says now that he has completely divested his Navigator holdings.

In a statement Tuesday, Ross said it would be “completely false” to imply that the transactions involved insider trading using nonpublic information. The Times reporter “contacted me to write about my personal financial holdings and not about Navigator Holdings or its prospects,” he said.

“I did not receive any nonpublic information due to my government position, nor did I receive any nonpublic information from a government employee. Securities laws presume that information known to or provided by a news organization is by definition public information,” Ross’ statement said.

Ross said he had been in the process of selling off his holdings in the company when he learned in late October that there were additional shares belonging to him in an account opened by the company. Because the shares were “in electronic form” and he didn’t have physical access to them to deliver them to the broker on time, he said he “technically sold them short.”

When he received the physical shares on Nov. 16, Ross said he delivered them to the broker to close the transaction. “Therefore, it made no economic difference to me whether the shares went up or down between the sale date and the date I delivered them,” he said.

The owners of Sibur, the Russian gas producer that is a major customer of Navigator, have included two Russian oligarchs close to President Vladimir Putin and a businessman believed to be Putin’s son-in-law. Navigator ships products from Sibur. Navigator is one of a few companies in the world that can transport liquefied petroleum gas in cold and icy conditions. Russia is known for its brutal winters as well as its giant, state-controlled oil and gas producers.

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  1. Meanwhile, flying under the radar is this high-end grifter extraordinaire…

    What can you say about a Commerce Secretary who was Vice-Chair of a foreign bank that specialized in laundering Russian Mob money…

    Did I mention the undisclosed holdings in Russian firms…

    Trump and him are peas in a pod, Ross also lied to Forbes about his wealth…

  2. Swamp, Meet Swamp Dweller

  3. It’s almost charming, this good old fashioned self-enrichment-style insider-trading corruption, compared to all of the other bullshit this administration is pulling.

  4. Because the shares were “in electronic form” and he didn’t have physical access to them to deliver them to the broker on time, he said he “technically sold them short.” When he received the physical shares on Nov. 16, Ross said he delivered them to the broker to close the transaction.

    Is it just me, or does nothing about that make sense? If the shares were in electronic form, why would he have to get physical stock certificates to deliver to his broker? Do brokers even deal with stock certificates anymore?

  5. Come on Wilbur take your fingers out of your ears, open your eyes, and say what you are really doing…

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