It took John Teeples six-and-a-half years as a software salesman at Microsoft to amass the stock options and other assets he felt he needed to take a break from work and spend more time with his wife, Sharon, and their two young sons.
"I wanted to park the bus," Teeples, 45, said in a recent interview from his home in Reston, Virginia. "So I pulled the bus over to the side of the road, I took my stock options and said, `I can reacquaint myself with my 9-year-old, who thought Daddy wasn't there for him.'"
As Teeples was about to exit the fast track of 80-hour weeks in late 1999, he encountered two Morgan Stanley Dean Witter brokers: Arun Sardana, 36, and Michael Moriarty, 46, partners in the firm's office in Chevy Chase, Maryland. Assuring him that they would handle all his financial, tax and estate-planning needs, the brokers persuade Teeples, who had never traded in the market, to entrust them with retirement accounts and stock options worth roughly US$700,000.
PHOTO: NY TIMES
Within 16 months, Teeples said, what had taken him years to build was gone. By last April, all that was left of his portfolio was US$403.95 and a US$40,000 tax bill due next April. Now he's fighting back.
With the stock market in the doldrums and the practices of brokerage firms under the microscope, executives at Wall Street firms are clearly worried that investors have lost faith in the industry. If Teeples' account of how his money was managed is any indication of what passed for investment advice and brokerage services in the market mania of the late 1990s, Wall Street should be worried indeed.
Unfortunately for the industry and investors alike, Teeples' story is just one of many tales beginning to emerge as investors realize that their decimated portfolios may never come back, and that for novices, investing is not as easy as it looks.
But perhaps the most troubling aspect of Teeples' story is that he is not the only current or former Microsoft employee to say he has lost his life savings under the guidance of Sardana and Moriarty. In several arbitration claims filed recently against the brokers and Morgan Stanley -- most investor claims cannot go to court -- a total of 13 customers on the East and West coasts accuse the two men of a widespread pattern of sales-practice violations. These include recommendation of highly speculative stock trades and excessive use of margin borrowing. In about a year, these people lost US$20 million, according to the complaints.
"Morgan Stanley Dean Witter's brokers were out of control," said Jacob Zamansky, a lawyer at Zamansky and Associates in New York, who represents the Microsoft workers.
"Young, inexperienced brokers preyed on hard-working people with little or no investment experience. They lost my clients' retirement and life savings."
Across the country, many workers at technology companies have been hurt by stocks that have fallen below their options' prices. Even worse, some have exercised options at high levels and watched the underlying stock collapse. But the Teeples case is particularly compelling because it brings together all the elements of the speculative frenzy of the late 1990s. Now that the bubble has burst, brokerage-firm practices like the ones Teeples encountered are coming under scrutiny. All of Wall Street is on the defensive.
As was the case at many technology companies, Teeples and his fellow plaintiffs had amassed sizable nest eggs through stock option grants earned at Microsoft. The other plaintiffs wish to remain anonymous because most of them still work at Microsoft. But their naivete in the ways of Wall Street made them easy pickings for aggressive brokers looking to make fortunes of their own. And these brokers, encouraged by the fee structure at Morgan Stanley, subjected their customers to high-risk strategies involving the heavy use of borrowed funds.
Furthermore, by following the recommendations of the firm's research department, the brokers submitted their customers to what their lawyer calls biased analysts peddling overvalued stocks.
Bret Gallaway, a Morgan Stanley spokesman, said, "We are very comfortable leaving the disposition of Teeples' claims to the arbitration process he initiated." Sardana and Moriarty, who are still employed there, did not respond to several calls seeking comment.
According to the complaint, the money lost by the customers of Sardana and Moriarty is considerable. Seven of the 13 Microsoft workers lost a total of US$1.3 million in JDS Uniphase, US$555,000 in Cisco Systems and US$366,000 in America Online. Numbers like these put into perspective exactly who lost the US$5 trillion in stock market value since the NASDAQ crashed last year.
But perhaps even more astonishing is the amount that Morgan Stanley earned on this performance. According to a securities and accounting expert who has examined all of the trades made for the plaintiffs and who plans to testify on their behalf in the arbitration, Morgan Stanley earned at least 5 percent, on average, of the net assets in these customers' accounts. This amount, more than five times what an institution might pay, was made up of margin interest and aggressive money management fees. It is unclear how much of this went to the brokers involved, but the usual level is 35 percent to 50 percent of fees.
Some of the plaintiffs' stock market loss may be a result of conflicts of interest between Morgan Stanley's retail business and its investment banking business -- the very conflicts, so pervasive on Wall Street, that have caught the attention of securities regulators and members of Congress.
Last week, Merrill Lynch settled a case in which a customer had accused Henry Blodget, the firm's Internet analyst, of maintaining a positive rating on a stock without disclosing a conflict. It paid US$400,000, or most of what the customer had sought.
Of the 23 stocks that the brokers bought for Teeples and his wife, 12 were companies which Morgan Stanley had brought public or provided with other investment banking services. Ten were rated "buys" by Morgan Stanley analysts when they were bought. Three rose slightly, but seven fell, generating US$85,000 in losses. By the time Teeples sold all his shares in those seven, they had lost, on average, half their value.
Teeples and his wife have taken out a second mortgage on their home in order to pay their bills, and he went back to work in November at a wireless-data company in Baltimore that he would not identify. But he is remarkably philosophical about it all. Teeples says he should never have trusted Sardana and Moriarty. But they seemed like nice guys, he said, and investing was something he knew nothing about.
"I was working hard on understanding Microsoft technology and how to solve my customers' problems," he said. "I had never had an investment account. My mother taught school and my father taught college. Money was foreign to me."
The pitch
Party conversation leads to advice. At a pool party given by mutual friends in the summer of 1999, Teeples recalled, he met Sardana, who struck up a conversation with him. He told him he managed money for many of Teeples' colleagues in Washington and Seattle. "He said he had gotten permission to do a series of seminars at the Microsoft office in DC," Teeples said. Sardana also told him later that he often flew to Seattle to work with Microsoft employees based at company headquarters.
In search of advice on how to handle the options he had received at Microsoft, Teeples decided to attend the next seminar sponsored by Morgan Stanley that fall. "It was called `It's All About Your Options,'" he said, "And there were about 15 to 18 people in the room." Sardana and Moriarty brought along a tax expert and an estate planner, calling the team a one-stop shop for financial advice.
At the seminar, the brokers handed out some pages describing their investment management strategies. "As Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Financial Advisors," the document said, "Arun Sardana and Michael Moriarty provide affluent individuals with customized professional money management services. Each portfolio is individually managed to meet the personal goals and risk tolerance of the client."
Those attending the seminar, Teeples said, were given a "spreadsheet calculator" that indicated the riches they could earn within five years if they invested their money with Morgan Stanley. He said the brokers also explained that they would earn a flat fee of 1 percent to 2.5 percent of assets to manage the money. Other prospects said they were told that paying a flat fee would be cheaper than paying commissions on each trade.
Sardana gave a one-page summary of his background to people who attended the seminar. Born and raised in New Delhi, India, Sardana emigrated to the US in 1988 at the age of 23 "to find better opportunities for supporting his family in India," it said. While working full time, he attended Johns Hopkins University, earning an MBA "summa-cum-laude with a major in finance [investment management and portfolio analysis]," according to the summary. In more recent years, it said, Sardana "has developed a unique and customized educational program for employees with large concentrated stock positions such as those with incentive stock options."
"This program," the summary continued, "addresses real-life issues faced by these employees," like how to handle tax implications. Advice would also be given on "how to protect the loved ones against any unforeseen liabilities and events."
But Sardana's transcript from Johns Hopkins, obtained by the plaintiff's lawyer, showed that he did not earn his MBA until this year, and a school official said such degrees are never awarded with the distinction he claimed.
When he met Sardana, Teeples was weeks away from quitting his job at Microsoft. He knew that when he left, he would have only three months to exercise his options. And because of the brokers' connections to other Microsoft employees, he felt no need to investigate them further. So in January last year, he turned to Sardana for help.
The nest egg: Cashing in options for hot stocks.
In his years at Microsoft, Teeples reckoned that his annual cash compensation, beginning at US$75,000 in 1992 and rising to US$100,000 when he left, was 37 percent below what was paid in comparable jobs elsewhere. "The bet I made was that the options were going to make up for the difference," he said.
That bet seemed to be paying off as Teeples rose through the organization. When he left Microsoft, he had options for 12,000 shares, worth just over US$500,000. He said he told Sardana that he wanted to achieve a reasonable growth rate on his money but added that he was interested in a conservative investment strategy. "He said that Microsoft was not going to grow at a fast-enough rate and we needed to diversify into other stocks," Teeples said. "He gave me a last-quarter performance on his picks that clearly showed he was brilliant."
According to the complaint, the list supplied by Sardana showed 10 stocks that had returned an average of 70.62 percent annually for the last 10 years. They were Clear Channel Communications, EMC, Tellabs, Cisco Systems, Dell Computer, Solectron, America Online, Microsoft, Amgen and MCI Worldcom.
All carried strong "buy" recommendations from Morgan Stanley analysts. The list did not disclose whether Morgan Stanley had relationships with the companies on it, as the National Association of Securities Dealers requires of any sales materials. In fact, half were clients of the investment banking department at Morgan Stanley.
Teeples said he was impressed with the stocks' performances. So when Sardana recommended that he exercise all his Microsoft options immediately and put the proceeds in a Morgan Stanley account, he agreed. The broker also advised Teeples to take out a margin loan to pay part of the taxes due on the transaction and to buy the recommended stocks at various strike prices -- as low as US$4 for shares then selling at around US$100.
By Jan. 31, Teeples' account at Morgan Stanley held Microsoft stock worth US$1.17 million. The margin loan stood at US$620,524, leaving him with a net asset value of US$551,000.
The next month, according to the complaint, Sardana sold 9,000 Microsoft shares for US$820,000. Despite instruction from Teeples to preserve his capital so he could rest easily about his family's future, the broker bought 23 highflying technology stocks -- including Amgen, America Online, Cisco Systems, EMC, Dell Computer, JDS Uniphase, and Tellabs. All were bought using the margin loan.
Two months later, Moriarty persuaded Teeples to move his Individual Retirement Account, then in Fidelity mutual funds, and a 401(k) at Microsoft, to Morgan Stanley.
"Moriarty said, `You should bring it over here, you'll have more control over it,'" Teeples recalled.
So he cashed in his funds and 401(k) and deposited an additional US$147,000 with Morgan Stanley.
"They said retirement is a long way off for you, you can afford to be more aggressive," Teeples said. So Sardana bought shares in Ariba, JDS Uniphase, Intel, PMC-Sierra, Exodus Communications, Texas Instruments and Microsoft for Teeples' retirement account.
The plunge
Learning the dangers of margin trading. March 2000 dawned. Technology stocks had risen to stupefying levels and were about to collapse. Teeples' account, laden with speculative technology shares bought with borrowed funds, was ground zero for the earthquake that shattered investors' dreams.
How did the Morgan Stanley brokers react when prices started slipping? Reassuringly, at first. "They started putting out statements with these great graphs," Teeples said. "They'd say, `Our analysts say it's going to be all right.' Or, `The technicals look great.'"
Then, with the exception of abrupt calls for more cash to shore up the margin loan, the communications from Morgan Stanley ceased.
Later last year, as the stocks kept falling, Teeples called the brokers several times in alarm. He said they told him "to hang in there."
Teeples learned the hard way how treacherous margin borrowing can be. When borrowing to buy stocks, the shares serve as collateral. When the shares fall in price, the investor must put up additional funds to shore up the loan. A margin call is typically set off when a stock has declined by about 40 percent from the purchase price.
Teeples said he was stunned by the speed at which his money vanished. That shares in free fall create calls for more money had never been mentioned by either Morgan Stanley broker, he said. "They did not explain to me the downside of margin," Teeples said. "I had no idea."
It was not until late fall, he said, that he got some advice from Moriarty. "He said it looked like it wasn't going to come back and he said we should go to cash," the investor recalled -- in other words, sell all the stock to cut the losses.
By December, Teeples' account value was down to US$33,000 and he had US$72 cash in his retirement account. The regular account kept dwindling: only US$403.95 was left in it on April 30.
At the same time, Teeples had to pay US$98,000 in taxes on the options he had exercised. Unable to pay it all, he appealed to the IRS to construct a payment plan for part of it. He figures that next April he will owe at least US$40,000 more for early retirement account withdrawals he made to pay bills.
Teeples said he was surprised to learn later through Zamansky that he was not the only Microsoft employee who had entrusted his life savings to Sardana and Moriarty. "I thought I was the only one who was this stupid," he said. "I found it quite amazing that other smart people at Microsoft bought into the same ride."
Another surprise came when Teeples turned over his account statements to an accountant. He learned that he had paid US$10,000 in fees on his account and US$26,000 in margin interest. It is customary at Wall Street firms to pay brokers a portion of the margin interest earned in their accounts. A Morgan Stanley spokesman said that some brokers share in the margin interest generated by their clients, but that the rules depend on the account. Brokers who receive such remuneration have an incentive to put their customers into risky margin-trading strategies.
The Morgan Stanley brokers had another incentive to put customers on margin. The money management fees the firm charged to customers in its Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Choice Account -- 1 to 2.5 percent annually -- were based on total assets, including margin loans. Other firms calculate money management fees based on net asset values, the market value in an account after margin loan balances have been subtracted.
"The Morgan Stanley Dean Witter fee arrangement encouraged and rewarded brokers for putting clients on heavy margin," Zamansky said. "And the firm encouraged their brokers to generate huge fees by pushing stocks of companies with whom the firm had investment banking relationships."
Morgan Stanley made US$36,000 on Teeples in fees and margin interest, or 4.25 percent of his assets on an annualized basis.
"I could have taken this money myself, put it in an e-trade account and done better," he said.
Because each panel of arbitrators is different, it is difficult to predict how these investors will fare. But Lewis D. Lowenfels, a lawyer at Tolins & Lowenfels in New York and an authority on securities arbitration, said arbitrators rarely awarded customers all they sought to recover in losses or damages.
"The outcome of these cases will largely be determined by two factors," he said. "First, the ability of the Morgan Stanley customers to have their cases heard together by one or two arbitration panels. And second, by the suitability of each individual customer for the firm's recommended course of action."
For Teeples, life goes on. "I'm going to have to work three times as hard to recover from this series of lapses in judgment," he said. "I have my beautiful wife and two beautiful children. I've had a very, very lucky life. But it doesn't mean that this wasn't wrong."
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