By Douglas Gillison
(Reuters) -Billionaire investor Carl Icahn and his firm Icahn Enterprises LP (IEP) have settled charges that for years he failed to disclose pledging the majority of the firm’s securities for billions in personal margin loans, together agreeing to pay $2 million in penalties, U.S. regulators said Monday.
The action came more than a year after short-seller Hindenburg Research accused Icahn of running a “Ponzi-like” scheme to pay dividends by overvaluing its holdings and also raised questions about Icahn’s margin borrowing.
Icahn said Monday those allegations had sparked the SEC probe, which identified failures to disclose margin loans but did not substantiate the more serious allegations.
He said the outcome allowed him to put to rest the short-seller’s “scurrilous and unsupported” accusations. However, Hindenburg said it stood by its charges and maintained its short position on the company’s securities.
Despite the news, the company’s stock price closed up a little more than 1%.
Starting in 2018, Icahn pledged between 51% to 82% of the IEP’s outstanding securities as collateral to secure billions of dollars in personal margin loans from multiple lenders but did not disclose this until February 2022, the SEC said.
The famed activist investor also allegedly failed to amend securities filings describing personal loans dating back as far as 2005, the agency said in a statement.
Had Icahn made the required market disclosures, they “would have revealed that Icahn pledged over half of IEP’s outstanding shares at any given time,” Osman Nawaz, head of the Complex Financial Instruments Unit in the SEC’s Enforcement Division, said in the statement. This deprived investors of information they needed, he added.
Icahn and IEP neither admitted nor denied the SEC’s allegations. However, Icahn said Hindenburg’s report had used misinformation to boost its own financial position.
“After Hindenburg issued a false report to make money on its short position at the expense of ordinary investors, the government investigation that followed has resulted in this settlement which makes no claim IEP or I inflated” asset values or engaged in “a ‘Ponzi-like’ structure,” Icahn said in a statement.
IEP also revealed in a securities filing on Monday that it had had “no substantive communication” with federal prosecutors in Manhattan since officials there made an initial inquiry in May 2023.
The SEC said it had no comment beyond the settlement announcement. The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan also declined to comment.
IEP last year cut its dividend amid a steep decline in its share price driven by the short seller’s claims.
In a statement on the social media platform X, Hindenburg said Monday’s developments had not disproved their accusations and that IEP continued to report losses while trading at an elevated premium.
“We remain short units of $IEP,” it said.
(Reporting by Ismail Shakil in Ottawa and Douglas Gillison and Pete Schroeder in Washington and Carolina Mandl in New York; editing by Susan Heavey, Nick Zieminski and Jonathan Oatis)