http://www.nj.com/business/ledger/index.ssf?/base/business-5/1062911785144960.xmlRevenue projected at $2.25 million a year
Sunday, September 07, 2003
BY DAVID RESS
Star-Ledger Staff
Eddie Stern, whose family made a fortune from the Hartz Mountain flea-collar and pet-food empire, had a bright idea three years ago: Doing trades in mutual-fund shares that other investors didn't have the connections to pull off.
Stern, 38, was running the family business's hedge fund while his big brother, Emanuel, took charge of a real-estate operation with 200 buildings. He and the family fund were about to become one of the few winners in one of the worst stock-market slumps in history.
Now, a months-long investigation by New York officials found the millions in profits the $700 million hedge fund made came at the expense of smaller investors.
And hundreds of e-mails, trading records and other documents released last week show fund-company officials knew the trades never should have happened, but went along anyway.
The reason was money.