U.S. Probes Diller’s Bets on Activision Before Microsoft Deal

(Bloomberg) — U.S. authorities are investigating trading in Activision Blizzard Inc. options by Barry Diller and other investors just before Microsoft Corp. announced an acquisition of the video game studio.

IAC/InterActiveCorp Chairman Diller said through a spokesperson that the Justice Department had contacted him regarding the trades. However, he denied any wrongdoing, adding he had no knowledge of the impending deal and merely spotted a bargain in the market. 

The entertainment mogul was responding to a report in the Wall Street Journal that the U.S. Department of Justice and Securities and Exchange Commission are investigating whether trades made by Diller, entertainment executive David Geffen and Diller’s stepson Alexander von Furstenberg violated insider-trading laws.

Microsoft announced on Jan. 18 it had agreed to purchase the game developer for $68.7 billion. Diller, Geffen and von Furstenberg bought options to purchase Activision shares at $40 each on Jan. 14 in transactions privately arranged by JPMorgan Chase & Co., the newspaper said, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter. 

The three men have made an unrealized profit of about $60 million on the options trade, because Activision shares were trading at about $63 at the time, according to the report. They ended Tuesday above $80 apiece.

“None of us had any knowledge from any person or any source or anything about a potential acquisition of Activision by Microsoft,” Diller said in a messaged statement. “We acted simply on the belief that Activision was undervalued and therefore had the potential for going private or being acquired. And, if we had any such information we would never have traded on it – it strains credulity to believe we would have done so 3 days before Microsoft and Activision made their announcement.”

A representative for Geffen couldn’t immediately be reached.

Spokespeople for the SEC and Justice Department didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment sent outside of normal business hours. JPMorgan declined to comment. 

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