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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Noble Resources SA & Anor v Gross [2009] EWHC 1435 (Comm) (19 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/1435.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1435 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) NOBLE RESOURCES SA (2) NOBLE RESOURCES LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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PHILIP SETH GROSS |
Defendant |
|
NOBLE EUROPE LIMITED |
Part 20 Defendant |
____________________
(instructed by Reed Smith Richards Butler) for Noble
Richard de Lacy Esq QC (instructed by Kramer & Co) for Mr. Gross
Hearing dates: 19th January 2009-23rd January 2009; 26th January 2009-29th January 2009;
2nd February 2009-6th February 2009; 10th February 2009;
17th February 2009-19th February 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The parties | ♦ |
Noble | ♦ |
Mr. Gross | ♦ |
Allegations against Mr. Gross of wrongdoing | ♦ |
Mr. Gross' position in relation to Noble's main allegations | ♦ |
Further factual issues in dispute between the parties | ♦ |
Noble's monetary and other claims | ♦ |
Mr. Gross' counterclaim | ♦ |
Executive summary of my conclusions | ♦ |
Role of Mr. Penin | ♦ |
Summary of the procedural history | ♦ |
Relevant legal principles | ♦ |
Standard of proof | ♦ |
The issues | ♦ |
Liability issues | ♦ |
Quantum/Causation issues | ♦ |
Mr. Gross' counterclaim | ♦ |
General analysis of the evidence and its credibility | ♦ |
The documentary evidence | ♦ |
The SMS messages | ♦ |
The Notebook | ♦ |
The contemporaneous accounting records | ♦ |
Noble's witnesses | ♦ |
Mr. Spitz | ♦ |
Mr. Favre | ♦ |
Mr. Sharp | ♦ |
Ms. Winchel | ♦ |
Mr. Feld | ♦ |
Mr. Manning | ♦ |
Mr. Penin | ♦ |
Mr. Gross' credibility as a witness | ♦ |
The witnesses who did not attend trial | ♦ |
Ms. Grin | ♦ |
Other Noble witnesses | ♦ |
Mr. Mende Gertner and Mr. Stephen Spector | ♦ |
Liability | ♦ |
Issue (i): The respective roles of Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin | ♦ |
Issue (ii): The extent to which Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin were authorised to enter into any speculative trades | ♦ |
Issue (iii): whether Mr. Gross was required to, and did in fact, review the Craig Reports | ♦ |
Issue (iv): the speculative trading positions | ♦ |
Issue (v): the concealment of the speculative trading positions and the losses arising from them | ♦ |
The December 2004 short position | ♦ |
Concealment of the December 2004 position | ♦ |
The June 2005 long position | ♦ |
Concealment of the June 2005 long position | ♦ |
The July 2005 short position | ♦ |
Concealment of the July 2005 short position | ♦ |
The motives for the false contracts and other manipulations | ♦ |
Mr. Gross' receipt of dishonest and secret commissions | ♦ |
Issue (vi): Noble's alleged awareness of the actual speculative position and the manipulations | ♦ |
Issue (vii): whether Mr. Gross' conduct in the period 13 to 19 January 2006 was consistent or inconsistent with Mr. Gross' alleged knowledge of Mr. Penin's fraudulent misconduct | ♦ |
Issue (viii): what, if any, involvement did Mr. Gross have in Mr. Penin's flight to Brazil | ♦ |
Conclusion on liability | ♦ |
Causation and Quantum issues | ♦ |
Issue ix): if Noble had known of its true exposure to the aluminium market, would it have suspended Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin and/or prevented them from trading further; closed or hedged the speculative positions; and/or paid any bonus to Mr. Gross and/or Mr. Penin and if so, how much? | ♦ |
Issue x): did Mr. Gross' alleged breaches of contract or tortious acts cause Noble loss and, if so, what is the quantum of such loss? | ♦ |
Mr. Gross' counterclaim | ♦ |
Endnote | ♦ |
Appendix 1 | ♦ |
Mrs Justice Gloster:
The parties
Noble
"[the] segment encompasses the sourcing, transport and physical delivery of steel products, iron ore, ferro-alloy, manganese ores and chrome, alumina and aluminium metal. … This is a logistically complex set of businesses involving several steps to aggregate product tonnage, challenging port conditions on both the load and discharge bases."
i) United States of America ("US"): The main office was based in Stamford with a smaller office in New Orleans. The US business was also referred to as "Noble Americas Corporation" or "NAC". The US aluminium trading business (which was largely a physical distribution business) was managed by Lucy Winchel ("Ms. Winchel"), assisted by Paul Koenig.
ii) Europe: Lausanne was the centre of the Group's aluminium trading. However, there was also an office in London, where the defendant, Philip Seth Gross ("Mr. Gross" or "the Defendant"), was based. Marcos Penin ("Mr. Penin") was an aluminium trader employed by NRSA and based in Lausanne. Noble contend that he reported to, and was supervised by Mr. Gross, but this was denied by Mr. Gross. Contracts for physical aluminium, or in respect of futures trades, entered into by Mr. Penin and Mr. Gross were recorded in various ways in Noble's accounting system in the Lausanne office. The traffic department, which ran the back office and organised the logistics for the transport and delivery of physical aluminium, was headed by Anne-Jose Grin ("Ms. Grin") and was also in Lausanne.
iii) Asia: The main office was in Hong Kong with a small office in Beijing. The trading operation in Hong Kong and mainland China was managed by Raj Kapoor ("Mr. Kapoor"). For much of the relevant period there was a trader in China called Liang Bing ("Mr. Bing").
Mr. Gross
"… no more than a cynical attempt to put an end to these proceedings."
and made an unless order requiring Mr. Gross to serve a witness statement setting out his evidence for trial by 16 May 2008.
Allegations against Mr. Gross of wrongdoing
i) a short speculative position of about 11,375 metric tonnes ("mt") (455 lots at 25mt per lot) which, as at the end of December 2004, Noble contends had built up an unrealised loss of $ 1 million ..."the December 2004 short position");
ii) a long speculative position of about 34,075mt (1363 lots) established by about the end of June 2005, which, again, Noble contends had built up a substantial unrealised loss ("the June 2005 long position");
iii) a short speculative position of about 52,425mt (2097 lots) built up in July 2005 and maintained thereafter; Noble contended that, for most of the period between July 2005 and January 2006, that position created a substantial unrealised loss ("the July 2005 short position").
i) Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin agreed that the December 2004 short position as at that year end, and the resulting unrealised loss, would be concealed by the recording in Noble's NTS system of a false physical contract, purportedly between Noble and Normet UK Limited ("Normet") ("the First Normet Contract"). Normet was a Russian aluminium dealer and a business contact of Mr. Penin[2]. Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin knew and intended that the entry of the First Normet Contract in Noble's accounting system would have the effect of generating a false profit of approximately $2,296,876, and thereby offsetting and concealing the unauthorised short position[3].
ii) At the beginning of January 2005, the market price for aluminium fell sharply, making the short position profitable. Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin closed the position and instructed the back office staff to remove the First Normet Contract from Noble's physical book gradually over the next 5 months until May 2005[4].
iii) In relation to the concealment of the unrealised losses arising from the long speculative position held towards the end of June 2005, and the short speculative position built up in July 2005 and maintained thereafter, Noble pleaded as follows:
a) In order, once again, to conceal the speculative positions and their resulting loss, Mr. Penin, with the agreement, and at the direction, of Mr. Gross, obtained from Normet a second contract document for the sale by Normet of 18,000mt at a fixed price of $1470 per mt of aluminium ("the Second Normet Contract"). The Second Normet Contract was recorded in Noble's physical trading book on 5 July 2005 in 9 sub-lots of 2,000mt with a delivery period from July 2005 to March 2006. The Second Normet Contract had a face value of $26,000,000 and generated a false profit of about $1.5 million.
b) Between 11 July and 13 July 2005, Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin built up a substantial unauthorised short position of 52,425mt at an average price of $1788.80. For most of the period between July 2005 and January 2006 that position created a substantial unrealised loss. Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin together caused a series of further false transactions to be entered into Noble's physical trading book for the purpose of concealing the position.
c) On 30 April 2005, Noble entered into two contracts MC041562 and MC041563 with Hydro Aluminium AS ("Hydro") for the swap of 5,000mt of duty paid and duty unpaid aluminium. On 22 August 2005 Noble and Hydro entered into two further contracts, this time for 24,000mt (the "Hydro Swap Contracts"). Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin caused only the purchase side (the contract by which Noble was buying) of the Hydro Swap Contracts to be shown as priced in the physical trading book in 12 entries of 2,000mt from January 2006 to December 2006. This generated a false profit of approximately $175,000 each month.
d) On 18 October 2004, Noble entered into contract MC033644 with Egyptalum, also referred to as Egtal (the "Egtal Contract"), covering shipments between January and June 2005. The contract was genuine, but Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin caused to be entered in the physical trading book in February 2005 further shipments of 12,000mt (in 12 lots between July 2005 and June 2006 at a fixed price of $1850, generating a false profit of approximately $300,000 against each month's shipment), which had not been agreed by Egtal, thereby generating a false long position. The details of the Egtal Contract were updated to show the price (it had been previously unpriced) in the physical trading book on 5 August 2005.
e) On 27 September 2005, Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin agreed that to cover further losses Mr. Penin would obtain from Normet a third contract document for the sale by Normet of 18,000mt of aluminium at a formula price of LME less $240 (contract MC043347) (the "Third Normet Contract"). The Third Normet Contract was recorded in the physical trading book in the system in twelve lots of l,500mt with a delivery period from January 2006 to December 2006.
f) On 17 November 2005, Mr. Penin obtained from Mr. Sergei Pavlov, an employee at Normet, and a contact of Mr. Penin, a revised contract document; the Second Normet Contract was amended to show a price of $1640 per mt and a quantity of 18,000mt. These amended details were entered into the physical trading book on 30 November 2005.
g) In January 2006 Mr. Gross told Mr. Penin to conceal further losses and Mr. Penin adjusted the recorded price and quantities of the Third Normet Contract to ten lots of l,000 mt with a fixed price of $1875 with a delivery period from February to November 2006, ten lots of 500mt with a fixed price of $1895 with a delivery period from February to November 2006 and ten lots of 500mt with a fixed price of $1930 with a delivery period from February to November 2006.
h) On 13 January 2006, in preparation for the audit of the aluminium division for 2005, Noble's accounting department issued draft financial statements for December 2005 showing a loss of $10 million (including the false transactions pleaded above, which, at that time, Noble was unaware of). Jean-Claude Favre ("Mr. Favre"), financial director of Noble, expressed concern to Mr. Penin at the apparent size of the loss and asked him to investigate it.
i) Mr. Penin contacted Mr. Gross and told him that they would need to make further adjustments to the false transactions to conceal these losses. Mr. Gross concurred with the approach suggested by Mr. Penin.
j) On 14 January 2006, Mr. Penin reverted to Mr. Favre and told him, falsely and dishonestly, that certain genuine transactions had been omitted from or wrongly recorded in the physical trading book:
i) He said that Noble had concluded contracts with Eural and Alcan, although he knew that those contracts were still under negotiation;
ii) He said that Noble had concluded a contract with "Digena", a fictitious entity;
iii) He said that there was a mistake on the pricing of the Second Normet Contract, which should have been recorded at $l,460/mt rather than $l,640/mt. This improved the figures by approximately $3 million.
k) On 15 January 2006, Mr. Gross contacted Mr. Spitz, and told him that Noble had a $16 million "performance exposure" as a result of various contracts with Normet. He did not say that there was any difficulty with the enforceability of the contracts. Mr. Spitz contacted Mr. Penin and instructed him to send an email to Mr. Paul de Fries, Noble's Global Risk Manager, ("Mr. de Fries") setting out the position. Mr. Penin emailed Mr. de Fries as follows (correcting typographical errors):
"While analysing the dec figures we realised the exposure with Normet of about 16m on two long term contracts from feb to dec 06 on fixed price .... We have been working with Normet for 6 years with spot ctrs and never had a performance issue: we are talking to him daily and receiving assurances that performance will take place although they might require additional time."
Mr. Gross' position in relation to Noble's main allegations
"… it is denied that Mr. Gross took speculative positions in the aluminium futures market, with Mr. Penin or otherwise, without the authority or knowledge of Noble from February 2004, or at all" (emphasis added)[5].
"… denied that [he] knew the specific extent of the net position or any unrealised loss which had resulted."
And that, even if he had known about it:
"… he would not have regarded it as a great cause for concern, or for there to be a need to conceal the said loss.[6]"
"… that whilst he did have knowledge of certain trades being conducted by Mr. Penin at the time he was not aware of the precise details of those trades or the extent of the net speculative position taken by Mr. Penin"[7]
Further factual issues in dispute between the parties
Noble's monetary and other claims
i) repayment by way of restitution of the sum of $750,000 awarded to Mr. Gross by way of bonus, in respect of the year ended 31 December 2004, which Noble contended would not have been awarded, or paid, if Noble had known the true position (in particular the taking of an unauthorised short position as at the end of December 2004, and its concealment by the First Normet Contract at the 2004 year end);
ii) a declaration that the amount paid to Mr. Gross in respect of his bonus is held on constructive trust;
iii) damages for breach of Mr. Gross' employment contract with NRSA[8], deceit and conspiracy to defraud, in the sum of $37,071,400, being Noble's alleged losses on the speculative positions, and a further sum of $1 million, being the bonus payments made to Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin.
Mr. Gross' counterclaim
Executive summary of my conclusions
i) that Mr. Gross knew about, participated in, and encouraged the build up and maintenance, by Mr. Penin, of large speculative positions in aluminium futures, including the December 2004 long position, the June 2005 long position and the July 2005 short position;
ii) that, to Mr. Gross' knowledge, those positions were significantly in excess of authorised speculative limits;
iii) that Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin agreed to enter false transactions in Noble's physical trading book, NTS, in order fraudulently to conceal the speculative positions, and the losses which resulted from them, from Noble's management in Lausanne and Hong Kong;
iv) that, accordingly, Mr. Gross is liable in damages for breach of his duties under his employment contract, for deceit and for conspiracy to defraud and to repay his bonus of $750,000 in respect of the year ended 31 December 2004, which would not have been paid had Noble known the true position;
v) that I assess the quantum of Noble's damages claim at $38,071,400; and
vi) that, in the circumstances, NRSA and Noble (UK) were entitled to dismiss Mr. Gross and, accordingly, his counterclaim stands dismissed.
Role of Mr. Penin
i) the signed Minutes of Declaration prepared by Mr. Penin on 19 January 2006, shortly after his return from Brazil, with the exception of paragraph 7. This document records Mr. Penin's initial account as to the fraud perpetrated by Mr. Penin, together, as he alleges, with Mr. Gross;
ii) specific paragraphs from the draft statement dated 9 March 2006 (but referred to as "the June Statement") which was originally drafted in connection with these proceedings. Although the June Statement was not signed, it was hand-annotated by Mr. Penin himself; in his examination before the Swiss court Mr. Penin confirmed that the handwriting on the draft represented amendments that he thought were required to the statement before he would be willing to sign it;
iii) Specific paragraphs from Mr. Penin's most recent statement in the Swiss proceedings, which was submitted in August 2007 ("the August Statement");
iv) The answers given by Mr. Penin in his examination before the Swiss Court on 15 and 16 December 2008.
Summary of the procedural history
i) Mr. Gross instructed solicitors (Peters & Peters) on or about 24 January 2006.
ii) Noble originally obtained an ex parte freezing order against Mr. Gross on 31 January 2006. This was continued by various orders thereafter, and discharged by Walker J on 27 November 2007 in the context of Noble's application to adjourn the trial (then set to commence in February 2008) to allow a Letter of Request to be issued for the examination of Mr. Penin in Switzerland.
iii) An application by Mr. Gross for specific disclosure was dismissed by HHJ Mackie QC on 7 March 2006, although Noble was ordered to provide certain documents.
iv) The proceedings were stayed for a period of three months in early 2007.
v) Disclosure was made on a rolling basis and completed on 12 October 2007. Disclosure was a major exercise, involving the review of over 130,000 documents.
vi) Witness statements were originally to be exchanged on 31 August 2007. This was extended by agreement between the parties to 14 November 2007 and then to 7 December 2007.
vii) As I have already indicated, at a hearing on 27 November 2007, Walker J granted Noble's application pursuant to CPR 34.13 to obtain evidence from Mr. Penin under a Letter of Request to the appropriate judicial authority in Switzerland. On that occasion, Walker J vacated the trial date which had been fixed for February 2008.
viii) Mr. Gross' skeleton for the hearing on 27 November 2007 suggested that it was Noble who had delayed the exchange of witness statements to 7 December 2007. Mr. Gross' solicitors, Peters & Peters, said that they were ready for trial in February 2008 (indeed, they resisted the adjournment of the trial date and complained that Noble was "dragging their feet"). The clear inference was that Mr. Gross' witness statement was substantially complete.
ix) Mr. Gross then failed to exchange witness statements as agreed and subsequently argued that witness statements should be delayed until 25 July 2008, after the issuance of the Letter of Request.
x) At a hearing on 12 March 2008, Walker J agreed with Noble that witness statements should be exchanged before finalisation of the Letter of Request. He declined to put back the date for exchange of witness statements, and told Mr. Gross to "get on with it", and set a date for exchange of witness statements of 4 April 2008.
xi) On 25 March 2008 (ten days before the new date for exchange of witness statements), Noble was informed that Peters & Peters were no longer on the record.
xii) Mr. Gross did not exchange witness statements on 4 April 2008, as ordered.
xiii) As I have already stated, on 7 April 2008, Mr. Gross petitioned for his own bankruptcy, and on 1 May 2008, Walker J gave leave for Noble to continue the proceedings.
xiv) Mr. Gross served a seven-page witness statement on 16 May 2008. Noble served witness statements from certain personnel involved at Noble at the time.
xv) Any witness statements in reply were due by 5 June 2008, extended by the court on 16 June 2008 to 25 July 2008. Noble served a brief statement from Mr. Spitz. Mr. Gross chose not to serve a witness statement in reply.
xvi) Mr. Gross served various supplemental witness statements and an unsigned document in the two months leading up to trial.
xvii) The trial began on 19 January 2009 and concluded on 19 February 2009, both parties having provided lengthy written closing submissions.
Relevant legal principles
Standard of proof
"In criminal cases the charge must be proved beyond reasonable doubt, but there may be degrees of proof within that standard. As Best C.J., and many other great judges, have said, 'in proportion as the crime is enormous, so ought the proof to be clear.' So also in civil cases, the case may be proved by a preponderance of probability, but there may be degrees of probability within that standard. The degree depends on the subject-matter. A civil court, when considering a charge of fraud, will naturally require for itself a higher degree of probability than that which it would require when asking if negligence is established. It does not adopt so high a degree as a criminal court, even when it is considering a charge of a criminal nature; but still it does require a degree of probability which is commensurate with the occasion."
Denning LJ himself made similar observations in Hornal at page 258.
"Where the matters in issue are facts the standard of proof required in non-criminal proceedings is the preponderance of probability, usually referred to as the balance of probability. This is the established general principle.
The balance of probability standard means that a court is satisfied an event occurred if the court considers that, on the evidence, the occurrence of the event was more likely than not. When assessing the probabilities the court will have in mind as a factor, to whatever extent is appropriate in the particular case, that the more serious the allegation the less likely it is that the event occurred and, hence, the stronger should be the evidence before the court concludes that the allegation is established on the balance of probability. Fraud is usually less likely than negligence. Deliberate physical injury is usually less likely than accidental physical injury ... Built into the preponderance of probability standard is a generous degree of flexibility in respect of the seriousness of the allegation."[13] (Emphasis added)
"Lord Nicholls was not laying down any rule of law. There is only one rule of law, namely that the occurrence of the fact in issue must be proved to have been more probable than not. Common sense, not law, requires that in deciding this question, regard should be had, to whatever extent appropriate, to inherent probabilities. If a child alleges sexual abuse by a parent, it is common sense to start with the assumption that most parents do not abuse their children. But this assumption may be swiftly dispelled by other compelling evidence of the relationship between parent and child or parent and other children. It would be absurd to suggest that the tribunal must in all cases assume that serious conduct is unlikely to have occurred. In many cases, the other evidence will show that it was all too likely. If, for example, it is clear that a child was assaulted by one or other of two people, it would make no sense to start one's reasoning by saying that assaulting children is a serious matter and therefore neither of them is likely to have done so. The fact is that one of them did and the question for the tribunal is simply whether it is more probable that one rather than the other was the perpetrator."[15]
The issues
A: Liability issues
i) the respective roles of Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin;[16]
ii) the extent to which Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin were authorised to enter into any speculative trades[17]; it was to some degree common ground between the parties that this was an issue of secondary importance since Mr. de Lacy submitted that if Mr. Gross was party to deceit by misrepresentation in the books of Noble, it was irrelevant that Mr. Penin (or Mr. Penin and Mr. Gross) were exposing Noble to an unauthorised risk, because he accepted that it was sufficient that the risk existed, was dishonestly covered up, and resulted in loss (because of movement in the aluminium price against the position); likewise Mr. Boulton submitted that, given that Mr. Gross denied any knowledge of the speculative position that caused Noble's loss, the primary relevance of the issue was whether Mr. Gross would have had a motive to hide any speculative position of which he was aware;
iii) whether Mr. Gross was required to, and did in fact, review internal management accounting reports prepared by Craig Sharp, the assistant financial controller of NRSA ("the Craig Reports")[18];
iv) whether Mr. Gross and/or Mr. Penin took speculative positions in excess of trading limits in December 2004 (i.e. the December 2004 short position), June 2005 (i.e. the June 2005 long position) and July 2005 (i.e. the July 2005 short position); whether those positions gave rise to a substantial unrealised loss; and, if the positions were taken by Mr. Penin, to what extent Mr. Gross knew or approved the net position, and the maintenance of the short position from July 2005 to January 2006[19];
v) to what extent, if at all, did Mr. Gross know about, or was involved in, the various manipulations to the physical book, including the Normet, Egtal, and Hydro contracts[20]; in particular, were the false contracts entered into for the purpose of concealing the speculative positions, and/or the losses arising from the speculative positions, or were they recorded for some other entirely separate, and/or private, purpose of Mr. Penin's related to the commissions which he had received from Normet, both before and after he joined Noble[21];
vi) was Noble aware before January 2006 of the true net trading position of the aluminium division and/or the true nature of the various false or manipulated contracts[22];
vii) were the communications and conversations between Mr. Gross, Mr. Penin, Jean-Claude Favre, the finance director of NRSA ("Mr. Favre"), and Mr. Spitz over the period 13 to 19 January 2006 consistent or inconsistent with Mr. Gross' alleged knowledge of Mr. Penin's fraudulent misconduct[23];
viii) what, if any, involvement did Mr. Gross have in Mr. Penin's flight to Brazil[24];
B: Quantum/Causation issues
ix) if Noble had known of its true exposure to the aluminium market, would it have suspended Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin and/or prevented them from trading further; closed or hedged the speculative positions; and/or paid any bonus to Mr. Gross and/or Mr. Penin and if so how much[25];
x) whether Mr. Gross' alleged breaches of contract or tortious acts caused Noble loss and, if so, what is the quantum of such loss[26];
C: Mr. Gross' counterclaim
xi) if Mr. Gross' contract of employment was wrongly terminated, what is the quantum of Mr. Gross' counterclaim[27].
General analysis of the evidence and its credibility
(i) The documentary evidence
i) Mr. Penin's evidence (which I accept) was to the effect that Mr. Gross would delete messages off his (Mr. Penin's) mobile phone.
ii) Mr. Gross' first reaction on learning that Mr. Bing (a Noble trader based in China), was to tell Mr. Penin to speak to Mr. Bing to ensure that the latter did "not have anything [left] on his e-mail".
iii) No SMS messages whatsoever were recovered from Mr. Gross' BlackBerry, which was returned to Noble within a week or so of Mr. Gross' suspension.
iv) Mr. Gross did not disclose the SMS messages from his Treo mobile phone, which had been automatically backed up onto his work laptop computer. Mr. Gross claimed that he knew that he was backing up the messages, so that there would have been no reason for him deliberately not to have disclosed these messages. I find this an improbable explanation, given their content and the fact that he did not disclose them in this litigation; alternatively he may have believed that they had been deleted on 23 January 2006.
v) Mr. Gross did not disclose anything from his home computer, which he variously claimed to have been (i) unused after November 2004, (ii) damaged by water and (iii) stolen. These different explanations were conflicting and unsatisfactory: either they were inconsistent with what the Court had been told earlier and with his own previous solicitors' correspondence; or they purported to be supported by inadequate evidence; or they were unsupported by any evidence at all.
vi) The oral evidence which Mr. Gross gave about these matters was wholly unconvincing.
The SMS messages
i) 2,610 messages sent and received by Mr. Penin between 15 June and 3 August 2005, plus six messages sent and received by Mr. Penin between 15 and 21 December 2005;
ii) 2,609 messages sent and received by Mr. Penin between 17 November 2005 and 10 January 2006;
iii) some 6,600 sent and received messages recovered from a backup of Mr. Gross' personal Treo mobile telephone, of which 1,844 were admitted into evidence, covering a period between 6 November 2003 to 16 October 2005; and
iv) various fragments recovered from the BlackBerries of Mr. Penin and the BlackBerry of Mr. Gross.
i) it was not possible to recollect individual messages after a period of more than three years;
ii) it was difficult or impossible to interpret SMS messages without a wider context than allowed by the constraints of brief texts; (for example, Mr. Gross said that these were not conversations and frequently referred to intervening telephone calls);
iii) the SMS messages covered only part of the relevant period; and
iv) many of the SMS exchanges were simple "trader banter" or reflected the excitable or juvenile behaviour of traders.
The Notebook
"I also kept a physical notebook. I had learned to do this from my days at Gerald [previous employers]. I took it everywhere with me and updated it daily. When I was travelling it provided me with an idea of the position. I would enter in it the physical contracts (and their pricings) and, later, the spec position Phil and I were running".
He also gave evidence in relation to the entries in the Notebook during the course of his evidence before the Swiss court.
"The fact is that had Noble even bothered to check the "notebook" in the most cursory fashion they would have seen clearly that the notebook is in fact inaccurate, missing trades, fabricating trades, missing dates and most importantly completely disappears after the July 2006 [sic] alleged speculations."
i) first, the evidence in relation to the interlocutory applications shows that Noble had obtained copies of key extracts from the Notebook as early as 23 January 2006, which meant that it was highly unlikely that the entries would have been fabricated or doctored for the purposes of this litigation;
ii) secondly, since the evidence showed that it was standard practice for a trader to keep such a notebook, it was not surprising that Mr. Penin chose this way to keep track of his position; indeed Mr. Gross' own evidence was that he relied upon Mr. Penin to maintain a record of their combined position;
iii) thirdly, Mr. Penin confirmed in his evidence that references in the Notebook to "position" or "net position" were to the speculative position at specific dates; in order to record the speculative or risk position, Mr. Penin would have only needed to record speculative futures trades and any physical trades or pricings that were being offset against that speculative position; there was thus no need for Mr. Penin to record in the Notebook every single physical trade, or pricing or hedge transaction, that he was conducting in the course of his normal business for Noble;
iv) fourthly, the SMS messages show that from time to time Mr. Penin reported the position as recorded in his Notebook to Mr. Gross; there is thus a separate corroboration for the Notebook's authenticity;
v) fifthly, contrary to Mr. de Lacy's submissions, it is not surprising that the Notebook had fewer entries after July 2005 (in fact there are ten further handwritten pages, with entries made in each month from August 2005 to January 2006); in circumstances where, as the evidence showed, with the exception of a brief period in mid-September 2005, the price of aluminium had risen to the point where any attempt to buy back a short position of over 50,000mt would have resulted in a significant realised loss, there was little that Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin could do other than hold on to the July 2005 short position and hope that the market fell;
vi) sixthly, the financial information in the Notebook is corroborated to a certain extent by contemporaneous records and market data;
vii) finally, the Notebook's physical appearance does not suggest that it has been forged or reconstructed in any way; not only did the evidence show that the position recorded in the Notebook could be reconciled to records of actual trades carried out but also the Notebook contained contemporaneous graphs, hotel notepaper, detailed analyses of each month's likely closing profit or loss, corrections, to do lists etc, all prepared in different colour pens, consistent with a notebook that was used by Mr. Penin contemporaneously.
The contemporaneous accounting records
(ii) The witnesses
Noble's witnesses
Mr. Spitz
Mr. Favre
Mr. Sharp
Ms. Winchel
i) Ms. Winchel herself said in her witness statement that the loss
"… came as some considerable surprise at the time, and was a matter of great concern both to me and to the management of Noble"; and
ii) the cross-examination of Mr. Gross revealed that Mr. Gross was kept abreast of everything done by Mr. Penin during the key period when the speculative position was taken (July 2005), and that he had not travelled to the US between 8 June and 18 July 2005. It also revealed that Mr. Gross was far from preoccupied by the difficulties facing the US operation, even when physically in the US.
Mr. Feld
Mr. Manning
Mr. Penin
i) Mr. Penin's account is consistent with the contemporaneous evidence, in particular the extensive SMS exchanges between Mr. Penin and Mr. Gross over the relevant period, in relation to which the latter was extensively cross-examined. The SMS messages reveal their own story of two friends and colleagues who confided in each other in the minutest of detail, at times on an almost second by second basis, in relation to both business and their most intimate personal affairs. In the context of such a close relationship between Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin, I find it to be almost inconceivable that Mr. Penin would have been off on some speculative trading frolic of his own. Although the two men were about the same age, Mr. Gross was clearly Mr. Penin's superior at Noble, and gave the impression, so far as one can tell from my having seen both men being examined, of being by far the more forceful and dominant personality.
ii) As I have already mentioned, Mr. Penin's original confession when the fraud was first discovered, namely his Minutes of Declaration dated 19 January 2006, can be corroborated by reference to the contemporaneous documents and other evidence adduced at trial. I do not attach any weight to the fact that Mr. Penin, in evidence to the Swiss magistrate on 26 July 2007 stated that Mr. Spitz "… forced me to sign …" the statement of 19 January 2006. It may well have been that Mr. Penin was under pressure to sign such a statement at the time but in the light of his subsequent statements and his confirmatory evidence given before the Swiss court in November 2008, I see no reason to doubt its veracity in all important respects.
iii) Mr. Penin did not seek to shift all the blame onto Mr. Gross. His version of what happened was not that he was instructed to do everything by Mr. Gross. Mr. Penin fairly took responsibility for his own actions, but stated that Mr. Gross was involved at every stage of taking the speculative position and concealing it and its associated losses in the accounting system. This had the ring of truth about it. In contrast, Mr. Gross' case relied upon his total lack of knowledge of what was happening in the division of which he was at least titular head and in circumstances where the SMS messages and telephone records show that he and Mr. Penin were discussing Noble's aluminium trading positions together on a virtually daily basis.
iv) Mr. Gross advanced no plausible explanation as to why Mr. Penin should seek to implicate him, other than to suggest: (a) that Mr. Penin's position at Noble, upon discovery of the fraud, would have been better if he could implicate his superior; and (b) that Mr. Penin had wild, and irrational, fears of the Russian Mafia, in connection with the Normet transactions - a theory which Mr. Gross raised for the first time in cross-examination. Neither purported rationale made sense. There was no reason to suppose that Mr. Penin's position at Noble would have been improved if he could have implicated Mr. Gross. Nor was there any contemporaneous evidence to support the Russian Mafia story, nor any reason to indicate why such fears would be ameliorated by the implication of Mr. Gross.
v) Mr. Gross has from time to time alleged that there was some kind of deal between Mr. Penin and Noble, culminating in a new suggestion on the final day of his cross-examination that Mr. Penin had agreed to assist Noble's management in an insurance claim. This was, perhaps not surprisingly, never put to Noble's witnesses in cross-examination. Moreover, any suggestion of a deal between Mr. Penin and Noble, whether in relation to the civil or criminal proceedings against him, or otherwise, was denied by both Mr. Penin and the Noble witnesses. Indeed, this was a specific question put by the President, at my request, to Mr. Penin in his examination before the Swiss court. Mr. Spitz and Mr. Favre also denied any such suggestion in their witness statements. Neither was cross-examined in relation to this point. Moreover, it was clear that Noble had no power to prevent the Swiss criminal authorities from proceeding with the prosecution of Mr. Penin, to which he remains subject.
vi) The fact that Mr. Penin may have been in receipt of secret and dishonest commissions, not only prior to being employed by Noble, but also during the course of such employment, which may have been greater in amount than the secret commissions in which Mr. Gross participated, does not in the circumstances provide a sufficient motive for Mr. Penin wrongly to implicate Mr. Gross. Nor in my judgment does such fact lead me to disbelieve Mr. Penin's account of Mr. Gross' knowledge and involvement.
vii) In preferring the account given by Mr. Penin, I also take into account the unsatisfactory nature of Mr. Gross as a witness, since both men cannot be telling the truth.
(iii) Mr. Gross' credibility as a witness
i) Mr. Gross appeared to be unwilling to engage at any level with the vast majority of the detailed case against him. His demeanour under cross-examination was not impressive.
ii) He clearly told lies on occasions.
iii) He frequently attempted to suggest that he had had conversations with Mr. Spitz or Mr. Penin to provide context for emails and SMS messages that were on their face damaging to his defence. These were not put to Mr. Penin (in the questions formulated in the Letter of Request) or to Mr. Spitz in cross-examination.
iv) In his oral evidence he frequently purported to give accounts of matters which had not featured previously in his witness statements. A notable example of this was his evidence that he apparently communicated the existence of his regular large speculative positions to management; a statement which I reject. Another example was his admission for the first time in oral examination that Mr. Penin had indeed told him in June 2005 that there was a 1,525 lot (38,125 mt) long position. That was inconsistent with his Defence which did not admit that Mr. Penin had built up a long aluminium position at the end of June 2005. Immediately thereafter in his cross-examination, he stated for the first time that he had told Mr. Penin to correct that part of the long position which was apparently attributable to Mr. Penin's error, and that he had informed Mr. Spitz of this; he said that Mr. Spitz had spoken with both Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin about the matter. However Mr. Spitz was not cross-examined on this matter or as to why he had completely omitted to mention it in his witness statement.
v) He gave wholly implausible explanations of SMS messages which were damning to his case.
vi) There were numerous inconsistencies in his evidence. For example he accepted that he regularly took speculative positions, despite the fact that he had denied ever doing so in his Defence. Likewise his unconvincing interpretation of the early SMS messages in mid-June 2005 (which on their face were corroborative evidence of a long speculative position) was inconsistent with his subsequent admission that he knew that Mr. Penin had taken a long position of 1,525 lots in June 2005; so was his refusal to accept that there was a speculative position of 50,000mt at the end of 2005, notwithstanding that he accepted the logic of the analysis of the impact of the manipulations on the Craig Reports.
vii) He purported not to recall important conversations, communications or events in circumstances where it was, in my judgment, highly unlikely that he would not have remembered such matters, particularly given his apparent almost perfect recollection of other events. In particular, he purported not to remember extremely large speculative positions which he had taken. Another small but significant example of this was his evidence in relation to Mr. Weston. He said that he could not remember who "Jimmy W" was in his address book, despite the fact that the Treo messages recovered from his laptop contain 269 messages between him and Mr. Weston, and that he conveniently was able to volunteer who "Jimmy W" was the moment that Noble's counsel indicated that he was returning to the subject. Thus, he appeared to recall that Mr. Weston was a friend only when confronted with that fact (he had previously indicated only that he was part of the Noble IT team), although when it suited him he could without hesitation recall the name of the road in which Mr. Weston lived. He could not remember why he had called Mr. Weston on 23 January 2006, the day of his suspension.
viii) I am satisfied that, contrary to Mr. Gross' evidence, not only did he know that Mr. Penin was in receipt of certain dishonest and unauthorised commissions and payments from third parties[29], but also that Mr. Gross himself shared in the receipt of certain of those cash payments, which were unknown to Noble and in breach of both men's fiduciary obligations to Noble. That dishonest conduct on the part of Mr. Gross clearly goes to his credibility. It also undermines his defence that Mr. Penin's evidence is not to be believed, or should not be preferred to Mr. Gross' evidence, and that Mr. Penin may have had another motive for the manipulations to the NTS system. I deal with the evidence relating to Mr. Gross' receipt of dishonest commissions later in this judgment.
The witnesses who did not attend trial
Ms. Grin
Other Noble witnesses
Mr. Mende Gertner and Mr. Stephen Spector
Liability
Issue (i): The respective roles of Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin
"(i) Mr Penin was based primarily in the Lausanne office of the Noble Group, whereas the Defendant would rarely attend the Lausanne office;
(ii) Mr Penin was the Defendant's equal in terms of trading experience and was significantly autonomous of the Defendant;
(iii) Mr Penin did not seek the Defendant's approval or consent for any aspect of his employment, including his trading and expenses - although Mr Penin did discuss some of his trading strategies and/or trades some of the time with the Defendant;
(iv) Mr Penin was supervised by, and directly reported to, Mr Spitz and Mr Favre;
(v) Mr Penin made the actual European aluminium trades for the Noble Group, and the Defendant's primary role was to generate and develop business for the aluminium division."
Mr. Gross was cross-examined at trial about this issue. In argument Mr. de Lacy submitted that the evidence showed that Mr. Penin was employed as an autonomous trader, a man who was supervised for risk and accounting purposes by Mr. Favre and reported for commercial purposes in parallel with Mr. Gross to Mr. Spitz. He submitted that the fact that Mr. Penin was travelling with Mr. Gross frequently on business was a matter of business practicality, and did not support Noble's case that Mr. Penin was reporting to, and being supervised by, Mr. Gross. He further submitted that Mr. Gross' visits to Lausanne represented a trivial period of the working year.
i) In about December 2003 Mr. Gross was formally appointed "Metal Manager" with responsibility for Lausanne and the US; in March 2004, he was appointed Head of the Global Aluminium Division, although it is common ground that he never properly assumed this new role, probably in part because of his poor relationship with Mr. Kapoor. He was not formally demoted but in practice he maintained responsibility for Lausanne and had some responsibility for the US, the precise extent of which is not material.
ii) The contemporaneous organisation charts demonstrate that Mr. Gross indeed had management responsibility for the Lausanne operation. Mr. Spitz, whose evidence I accept, was that Mr. Gross' role was both to generate business and to trade, although, after the recruitment of Mr. Penin, some of the trading was performed by Mr. Penin. He also confirmed that Mr. Penin reported to Mr. Gross.
iii) Mr. Favre gave evidence to the effect that the other traders (including Mr. Penin) reported to Mr. Gross and ultimately Mr. Spitz, and that he, Mr. Favre, had no responsibility for commercial activities. As Mr. Boulton submitted, in the Noble organisation it would not have made sense for a trader to report to Mr. Favre, who headed up the finance and administrative functions.
iv) In his written "Minutes" of 19 January 2006, Mr. Gross stated that he was "Marcos' boss". There is no way in which he would have given such a description if it had not been true.
v) Mr. Gross was responsible for carrying out the performance appraisal and objective setting for Mr. Penin, and also for Ms. Grin and Marc Braendle in Traffic.
vi) Mr. Gross recommended Mr. Penin's salary and bonus, which was much less than Mr. Gross' own, which no doubt reflected their relative seniority, contrary to Mr. Gross' assertion that they were equals. Although, as Mr. Gross stated, he may have been asked to make salary and bonus recommendations and to perform Mr. Penin's performance appraisal by Mr. Spitz, that no doubt would have simply reflected the fact that Mr. Spitz had ultimate responsibility for the aluminium division; contrary to Mr. Gross' argument, it did not indicate that Mr. Penin's immediate superior was Mr. Spitz rather than Mr. Gross.
vii) Although, towards the end of 2005, the SMS messages show that Mr. Spitz increasingly sought to obtain information directly from Mr. Penin, it was highly likely that that was because Mr. Spitz was frustrated by his inability to extract even a simple daily recap or position reports from Mr. Gross. However, the evidence shows that, as a matter of course, Mr. Penin would habitually report all emails and SMS messages from Mr. Spitz to Mr. Gross, and that they would together decide how to respond.
viii) Ms. Grin's evidence, and the analysis of the diaries and travel arrangements of Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin, show that on the whole Mr. Gross was in Lausanne on average three days a month although the regularity dropped off from the beginning of September 2005. Even more significantly, the evidence shows that in 2005 Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin spent at least 111 days working together in the same place, whether in Switzerland or elsewhere. What that demonstrated was that Mr. Gross' case (that it was impossible for him to supervise, or be responsible for, Mr. Penin, because the former was in London and the latter was in Switzerland), does not bear scrutiny.
ix) The SMS messages show Mr. Gross approving Mr. Penin's trading strategies.
Issue (ii): The extent to which Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin were authorised to enter into any speculative trades
Issue (iii): whether Mr. Gross was required to, and did in fact, review the Craig Reports
28 July, 17.59 onwards:
MP: "Cba selling 6k"
PG: "Will do it"
MP: "Discount? We need something to mark up"
MP: "Just bought 2k at 1840.....balance he is coming back in 30 mins"
PG: "What month"
MP: "Sept ship"
PG: "And the rest"
PG: "2k oct, 2k nov"
PG: "We should hedge"
MP: "Tmrw am 1st thing"
PG: "Or after Craig does his report ... What happened to the 2k that had no price"....
PG: "Make sure Craig doesn't get too eager and send it before you see it"
MP: "He knows that."
Issue (iv): the speculative trading positions
Issue (v): the concealment of the speculative trading positions and the losses arising from them
i) the December 2004 short position: he was aware through communications with Mr. Penin that Mr. Penin had taken a short position at the end of 2004, but he did not know the specific extent of the net position or any unrealised loss which had resulted; that even if he had known of the unrealised loss or its precise extent, he would not have regarded it as a great cause for concern or for there to be a need to conceal the said loss, since speculative trading was not unauthorised;
ii) the June 2005 long position: he did not admit that Mr. Penin had built up a long position towards the end of June 2005 and whilst he did have knowledge of certain trades being conducted by Mr. Penin at the time, he was not aware of the precise details of these trades or the extent of the net speculative position being taken by Mr. Penin;
iii) the July 2005 short position; he did not admit that Mr. Penin was building up a short position and whilst he did have knowledge of certain trades being conducted by Mr. Penin at the time, he was not aware of the precise details of these trades, or the extent of the net speculative position being taken by Mr. Penin;
iv) the concealment of the speculative positions: he did not know about, and would not have countenanced, any attempt by Mr. Penin to conceal the positions and the losses, and he had no involvement in or knowledge of the manipulations to the physical book.
The December 2004 short position
i) the entries in Mr. Penin's notebook;
ii) the various statements which Mr. Penin had given, whether in connection with these proceedings or otherwise; the first account was given in his Minutes of Declaration and signed on 19 January 2006, shortly after the fraud was discovered and on the same day that Mr. Penin returned from Brazil; his account of Mr. Gross' knowledge of, and involvement in, the various manipulations was subsequently confirmed in Mr. Penin's June and August statements and in his evidence before the Swiss court;
iii) Mr. Gross' admission in his defence that he knew that Mr. Penin had taken a short position as at the year end;
iv) the evidence given by Mr. Gross;
v) the evidence relating to the false contracts and manipulations to genuine contracts, which were entered in the physical book, which concealed the net speculative position and the correlative losses arising from it as at the December 2004 year-end.
"I do not believe that Phil's actions were driven only by his desire to have a higher bonus. I think they were driven by his desire to make money for the division, which for the reasons I have given he was keen to do. This in turn fed his ego, strengthened his position and no doubt also would contribute to his being awarded a larger bonus."
I accept that evidence.
Concealment of the December 2004 position
The June 2005 long position
i) the SMS exchanges between Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin;
ii) the testimony of Mr. Penin;
iii) Mr. Penin's Notebook.
Concealment of the June 2005 long position
"how come aj never announced the 18 K Normet contract?"
Perhaps not surprisingly, in cross-examination he admitted for the first time that he must therefore have been aware of the Second Normet Contract at the time. This undermined his attempt to profess ignorance as to who Normet was, when the fraud came to light in January 2006. In my judgment it is inconceivable, given his knowledge, as I have found, of the speculative trading strategy in June 2005 that he was not also fully involved in the method deployed to conceal the losses arising from it. In coming to this conclusion I also rely on the subsequent evidence relating to the July 2005 short position.
The July 2005 short position
"Since June-July 2005, the matter of the short position was a constant topic of conversation between Philip and myself and we were worried that after the problems that occurred in the US aluminium department such news of our own problems would have caused the company to shut us down completely. The level of communication between Philip and myself was extensive and constant. We talked about 30 times a day or exchanged SMS."
i) 29 June, 18.53 onwards:
"PG: "I have a new plan"
MP: "Fire"
PG: "It is a good plan ... But you might not see it right away"
MP: "Lol ... how much?"
PG: "Not too much ... Probably 1500 bucks"
MP: "Details ... we are going short on this rally ... dump the Singapore warrants ... mkt drops to 1600 and we buy it all back"
PG: "But you have to give it thought"
In cross-examination Mr. Gross claimed that this entire exchange was a reference to the dumping of physical Singapore warrants. I reject that explanation and accept Mr. Boulton's submission that the context of the exchange (for example, the usage of the phrase "it all") made it clear that the Singapore warrants mentioned were only part of a broader selling strategy.
ii) 30 June, 17.37 onwards:
"MP: "I am selling everything tomorrow"
...
MP: "We need to sell tmrw big ... big time"
PG: "I am fed up"
MP: "Really????join the fucking club dude ... this mkt is heading to 1600".
In cross-examination Mr. Gross said that he did not remember this exchange. He initially suggested that this exchange could have related to a long physical position. When he was asked whether it would have been realistic for Mr. Penin to have sold all of the physical inventory on one day, he suggested that the exchange could refer to the Singapore warrants or another physical position. The previous exchange concerning the Singapore warrants took place around 24 hours before this one. I do not accept Mr. Gross' explanation.
A little later on 30 June, at 18.20, the following exchange took place:
MP: "Seriously ... I had enough. ... tmrw am I am selling 1000lots".
In cross-examination Mr. Gross said that this was an example of Mr. Penin and him "kidding around". I do not accept that explanation.
iii) 1 July, 09.29 onwards:
"MP: "Sold 650lots at ave 18"
PG: "Are you serious"...
PG: "Did you or did you not"
MP: "I did".
In cross-examination Mr. Gross had no explanation for this exchange, which on the face of it clearly showed that Mr. Penin had sold 650 lots (16,250 mt), and that Mr. Gross knew this. His only response was that he could not tell if Mr. Penin was going short or selling long (either of which would have involved a speculative position). He said that he might have been aware of the net physical position at the time, and admitted that 1,000 lots or 25,800mt (which was the amount actually sold on 1 July 2005) was "a significant amount of business, yes". Again this is an example of Mr. Penin keeping Mr. Gross fully in the picture in relation to the implementation of their strategy.
iv) 4 July, 3.44am onwards:
PG: "Bear or bull ?"
MP: "Bull......"
PG: "Oh... you just solld 40k on Friday?"
MP: "Kidding..... you have another wave os selling today...... then we buy it all back".
Once again, Mr. Gross attempted to explain these messages in cross-examination by saying that Mr. Penin was joking. Irrespective of whether Mr. Penin's answer of "bull" was a joke (as he himself stated in his next SMS), it was only capable of being a joke in the context of a large amount of selling done by him in the recent past (as referred to in Mr. Gross' SMS response). What it clearly shows is that Mr. Gross was being kept precisely in the picture in relation to the implementation of the selling strategy.
v) 6 July, 17.54 onwards:
MP: "Landed. ... market sucks, we suck, we must sell"
...
MP: "Sold 100at 36 refco. We should build a short ard 1740-50"
MP: "Boarding now.... sell, sell, sell".
In cross-examination Mr. Gross attempted to suggest that what he and Mr. Penin were discussing were their "views on the market with regard to how we handle our hedging position, at which way do we think it is going to go in terms of their hedging leeway that we had". In the context of their previous exchanges, such a purported explanation simply cannot be right. The only way that, in context, the words "we should build a short [around] 1740-50" can be interpreted is as building a speculative position, rather than hedging an existing position. As Mr. Boulton submitted, hedging, by its very nature, involves reducing short or long positions, not building them.
vi) 11 July, 14.22 onwards:
PG: "I hate ali"
MP: "I hate everything"
PG: "I am so sick of being wrong"
MP: "We were so fucking right. ...."
PG: "1820"
MP: "I am so pissed off"
MP: "It doesn't make sense"
PG: "I have no words but we now have to stick to going short" (my emphasis)
MP: "No kidding....we need a massive position. Maybe 2k lots"
PG: "Keep building"
MP: "Yeap".
In cross-examination Mr. Gross tried to explain that this was merely trading banter of the type constantly in play between him and Mr. Penin, that he did not take seriously at the time, and that the reference to building was merely a reference to hedging an actual physical contract. He said that the reference to the numerical data of 2,000 lots was assumed by him to be a joke. Once again, I find Mr. Gross' explanation wholly unbelievable. In context, the reference to "going short" could not have referred to a hedging trade, as the very term "short" implies a movement away from the net flat position which hedging would produce. Nor, contrary to what Mr. Gross subsequently claimed, could the phrase "going short" in context have referred to the movement of the market itself. What Mr. Penin and Mr. Gross were clearly discussing was not the market, but what action they would take. Nor was there any possible basis for Mr. Gross' assertion that Mr. Penin's statement that "we need a massive position maybe 2,000 lots" was assumed by him to be a joke. In context Mr. Gross could not possibly have believed that the massive amount of selling done was in order to hedge actual physical trades, when the total sales on 11 July alone amounted to 730 lots (18,250 mt).
vii) 11 July, 14.32 onwards:
PG: "How much so far st what avg"
MP: "853 at 50".
Mr. Gross attempted to explain this entry away by asserting that this was a typographical error on the part of Mr. Penin, who had meant to type "8.5k at 50". Mr. Gross stated that he would have understood Mr. Penin's message in this way. I simply do not believe him. This was a contrived answer on Mr. Gross' part that cannot be supported by any logical reference to a mobile phone keyboard. Moreover subsequent messages clearly showed that Mr. Gross has understood precisely what Mr. Penin was saying. This analysis of the SMS message is further supported by what appears in the Notebook; the figure of "853 @ 1750" appears in the Notebook under the heading "July 11, 05" as representing the cumulative short position that had been built since the change of strategy on 1 July 2005. I have no doubt that Mr. Gross correctly understood Mr. Penin's message, and that it accorded with what he knew at the time.
viii) 12 July, 17.16:
PG: "What is our position?"
MP: "Have to calc but guess ard -1200 at 85"
PG: "Getting there" .
In cross-examination, Mr. Gross again asserted that there was a typographical error, that the reference was actually to 12,000mt, which is how he would have understood it, and that this exchange related to a selling programme for the purposes of hedging against their physical position. I reject this explanation as being totally incredible. The total speculative short position as at this date was indeed 1,200 lots, and Mr. Penin was doing no more than reporting the correct position. I do not believe that Mr. Gross did not understand what Mr. Penin was communicating.
ix) 12 July, 18.15 onwards:
MP: "What abt the eur??????this is stupid...... it can jeopardise our move...fuck I am nervous"
PG: "Stay focused"
MP: "We are"
PG: "Thursday Friday Monday Tuesday 5k per day ..."
MP: "More"
PG: "It is all we will need...I have the dance steps in my head".
Mr. Gross' purported explanation of this exchange was lengthy, but in summary he claimed that the statement "Thursday Friday Monday Tuesday 5k per day" referred to the pricing of an existing, unpriced physical contract for 20,000mt over four days. Again I reject Mr. Gross' explanation. The contract allegedly under discussion, if Mr. Gross' explanation were right, would have been for a very substantial physical contract, with deliveries taking place many months into the future. But Mr. Gross was unable to point to a single contract of this size for deliveries in one month, or to any contract of this size that was under discussion in July 2005, or to any specific contract that had ever been priced on the basis of four days' prices either side of a weekend.
KD: "how is your ali short??..."
PG: "Ali short is great…nearly back to break even!!"
When cross examined about this exchange, Mr. Gross' explanation appeared to be that he and Mr. Dunleavy were engaged in some kind of fantasy or virtual trading, and that they were not discussing actual trades. I did not find such explanation credible.
Concealment of the July 2005 short position
i) There are numerous references in the SMS messages between Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin to the fact that Mr. Penin (in this context referred to as "Magic Marcos") was managing or manipulating the amount of the profit and loss account and the position shown by the Craig Reports. Those SMS exchanges make it clear that this was something that had been going on since at least July 2005.
ii) Thus on 30 June 2005, starting at 17.37, the following exchange took place:
MP: "I cannot show 1.5 this month"
...
PG: "How much can you show?"
MP: "Don't know but probably 500k max".
Mr. Gross in cross-examination conceded that this exchange referred to the June profit and loss figures. In context I conclude that the language of this exchange suggests that Mr. Penin was seeking to manipulate the profit and loss figures and that Mr. Gross was aware of that fact.
iii) 12 July 2005, 14.03:
MP: "Spoke to antoine .... no is shit. ... we have 320k finanve, 260k loss fx plus abt usd 170k loss due to july pricing/deliveries going on june nts. So far we are showing usd 350k profit. ... but will adjust that upto 500k".
Mr. Gross conceded that this message related to the June 2005 closing figures but denied that there was any suspicious activity suggested by Mr. Penin's message. I read the proposal to "adjust" the profit figure as corroborative evidence of Mr. Penin's statement that he was manipulating the accounts and net position, with the knowledge of Mr. Gross.
iv) The same day (12 July), 18.52 onwards:
MP: "Here we go ... what is ass [Mr. Spitz] going to do?"
PG: "shut ut down"
MP: "Auch.."
PG: "Yeah.... make sure our closing is good"
MP: "How good????if we show 750k is good"
PG: "That would work"
MP: "Magic marcos takes the ball ..."
In his cross-examination Mr. Gross admitted that this message related to the June 2005 closing figures, but suggested that the reference to "750k" was a reference to an actual legitimate profit that had been earned. It seems to me to be highly unlikely that, just six hours after the profit and loss figure was stated to be $350,000 in an SMS message from Mr. Penin, that Mr. Gross would have read the message as one in which Mr. Penin was telling him that the profit had genuinely more than doubled to $750,000. The clear inference from the message is that Mr. Penin is telling Mr. Gross that he is dishonestly going to manipulate the figures.
v) The first draft Craig report, sent out after the short position was taken in July 2005, was sent out on 29 July 2005. It showed a net short position of 23,033mt. The final report showed a relatively flat position of 405mt long. The SMS messages relating to this report clearly showed that Mr. Penin and Mr. Gross had concerns as to what it would show, although the incident described by Mr. Penin, where Mr. Gross was said to have been in a panic, I conclude probably occurred in a later month. Thus on 28 July 2005, shortly after Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin had taken out the 50,000mt short position, Mr. Gross texted Mr. Penin to ask "Is the Craig report going to be ok" . Mr. Gross' explanation in cross-examination for this message, and for Mr. Penin's reply "will make it ok", was that he and Mr. Penin were concerned to get the Craig Report out to management in Hong Kong. I find this explanation to be unlikely, since the contemporaneous documentation showed that Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin habitually disregarded requests from Hong Kong management for accounting information, even when pressed by Mr. Spitz.
vi) Later the same day, Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin had the following exchange of SMS messages:
28 July, 17.59 onwards:
MP: "Cba selling 6k"
PG: "Will do it"
MP: "Discount? We need something to mark up"
MP: "Just bought 2k at 1840.....balance he is coming back in 30 mins"
PG: "What month"
MP: "Sept ship"
PG: "And the rest"
PG: "2k oct, 2k nov"
PG: "We should hedge"
MP: "Tmrw am 1st thing"
PG: "Or after Craig does his report ... What happened to the 2k that had no price"
...
PG: "Make sure Craig doesn't get too eager and send it before you see it"
MP: "He knows that".
In cross-examination Mr. Gross tried to explain this exchange as showing his attempt to ensure that the Craig Report would show an accurate position. I do not accept that explanation. I read the SMS messages as showing Mr. Gross clearly suggesting that Mr. Penin should delay hedging an existing physical purchase until after a Craig Report is sent, which would have the effect of lengthening the net position shown in the Craig Report.
vii) In cross-examination Mr. Gross confirmed that he attended a lunch in Oslo in August 2005 at which the extension to the Hydro contract was discussed. He clearly knew about it. He also sent out an email announcing the Hydro swap and the Egtal extension contracts.
viii) On 6 September 2005, Mr. Sharp sent a draft position report to Mr. Penin and Mr. Gross which showed the net position as short by 28,157mt. The inference I draw (which is supported by the figures) is that this was the occasion referred to by Mr. Penin, when he said that Mr. Gross was in a panic about what the draft Craig Report showed. Mr. Gross took an active role in preventing the draft Craig Report circulated to him and Mr. Penin on 6 September from being sent out, sending an email to Mr. Sharp on that date saying "do not send out until we can review, hopefully tomorrow am". The next day, 7 September 2005, a final position report was sent out by Mr. Sharp that showed the net position as short by only 5,572mt. The vast majority of this reduction was attributable to the pricing on 7 September 2005 of the purchase side of the Hydro swap contracts which made the net position appeared 24,000 mt longer. Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin were together on 6 and 7 September 2005, in the United Kingdom and then in the United Arab Emirates. Mr. Gross' telephone records show that, after sending the e-mail to Mr. Sharp, he made four calls to Ms Grin in the Traffic department in Lausanne, on 7 September, at 10.10am and 10.26am (to her mobile telephone), and 10.56am and 11.52am (to her office number). He was also copied on Mr. Penin's email to Mr. Sharp on the morning of 7 September 2005 saying, "Pls call me the minute y walk in". Mr. Gross' explanation in cross-examination for these telephone calls to Ms. Grin were that they related to a freight issue. That explanation was wholly unconvincing and I reject it. Again, the evidence relating to this incident provides strong corroborative support for Mr. Penin's account of Mr. Gross' involvement.
ix) Mr. Gross was copied in on an email dated 24 October 2005 from Mr. Sharp to Mr. Spitz, which said that the large short futures position was balanced by the long physical book and referred to spreads through to the end of 2006 "due to pricing of Hydro and Egtal". In his position as head of the aluminium department, and given his constant communication with Mr. Penin, Mr. Gross must have known that these contracts should not have been priced.
x) Two SMS messages in November 2005 clearly reflect the tension of Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin, as described by the latter, in relation to the maintenance of the July 2005 speculative short position against a stable, and subsequently rising, market, and the consequential and realised losses to which the position was giving rise. They also strongly support Mr. Penin's account of Mr. Gross' complicity in the manipulations being effected by Mr. Penin in relation to the physical book. Thus:
a) 29 November, 22.26 onwards:
MP: "We r on the same page I hope"
PG: "I lost my place"
MP: "We lost it 4months ao dude"
PG: "Fuck it"
MP: "No kidding".
b) 30 November, 19.26 onwards:
PG: "You organise a clean exit and I will get us a fresh start"
MP: "I am good but magic cannot make"
PG: "Safe flight"
MP: "Thks buddy"
PG: "We can all magic"
MP: "We have done it during 4months now....".
In cross-examination, it was suggested to Mr. Gross that the reference to "magic" was a shorthand reference to the manipulations to Noble' s records. Mr. Gross denied this, but in my judgment, in context, the inference was overwhelming.
The motives for the false contracts and other manipulations
i) the Normet contracts were designed to provide risk-free "options" to Normet;
ii) that, if the market moved, such that the contract price was favourable to Normet, it would deliver under the contracts and demand payment;
iii) if, however, the market moved such that the contract price was unfavourable to Normet, Normet would not deliver under the contracts; and
iv) accordingly, Mr. Penin was being paid commission to provide this flexibility to Normet.
i) First, I accept that Mr. Penin may well have been, during the course of his employment by Noble, in receipt of dishonest commissions from third parties which had nothing to do with Mr. Gross. However, it is wrong to suggest that Noble has desisted from investigating such matters. They are the subject of the current criminal investigation in Switzerland. Such allegations do not provide a motive for the manipulations which are the subject of these proceedings
ii) Second, the suggestion by Mr. Gross that the Normet contracts provided some kind of exercisable option to Normet, and were not entered into for the purpose of concealing the various speculative positions, but rather to enable Mr. Penin to earn commission from Normet, is not persuasive. As Mr. Gross himself accepted, the Normet frame contracts were "shaky"; they were no more than agreements to agree. Just as Noble was unable to enforce the frame contracts when the price of aluminium rose to above the indicative price, so Normet would have been unable to enforce the frame contracts, if the price had fallen.
iii) Third, Mr. Gross' suggestion that Mr. Penin would have simply allowed Normet to enforce the frame contract, so as to generate a secret commission for himself, is wholly unrealistic. Any such assistance from Mr. Penin would have been visible in the event that the exercise of the so-called rights under the frame contract gave rise to significant losses. If Mr. Penin had wanted to assist Normet in making profitable deals, he could presumably have achieved the same end by dishonestly, and to the detriment of his employer, Noble, setting individual purchases above market price.
iv) Fourth, the evidence from Mr. Penin and as shown in the documents is that the frame contracts were obtained at the (urgent) request of Mr. Penin and not Normet. That is wholly inconsistent with the notion that the motivation for seeking them was Normet's.
v) Fifth, the summary of the actual effect of the various manipulations (as set out in Appendix 1 to this judgment) clearly suggests that the significant motivation for the false contracts was the impact which they had on the books of Noble, particularly in terms of covering the unrealised losses on the speculative positions at 31 December 2004, 30 June 2005 and 31 December 2005.
vi) Sixth, Mr. Penin's Notebook clearly records that he was using the Normet and Egtal contracts to increase the profits shown at month end.
vii) Seventh, Mr. Gross' hypothesis does not begin to explain any of the manipulations other than those involving Normet. There is no evidence that any of the manipulations other than those relating to Normet were entered into the system with the knowledge or assistance of the relevant counterparties.
viii) Eighth, although Mr. Gross suggests that Mr. Penin's motivation for the manipulations was connected in some way to the commissions or other payments he was receiving from Normet and Egtal, the probability is that Mr. Gross was in any event aware of these arrangements, and that he participated in certain payments. It is far more likely, as Mr. Penin suggests, that, at the very least, Mr. Penin was able to obtain frame contracts from Normet precisely because of his close, albeit irregular, relationship with it.
Mr. Gross' receipt of dishonest secret commissions
i) various SMS exchanges between Mr. Penin and a Mr. Hussein Marei ("Mr. Marei"), a representative of Noble's Egyptian agent, who acted as the liaison between NRSA and Egtal; it was common ground at trial, that Mr. Penin was receiving dishonest secret commissions from Mr. Marei;
ii) SMS messages between Mr. Penin and the Mr. Gross;
iii) the travel schedules for the Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin, derived from their telephone records;
iv) details of payments into the bank account of Mr. Penin; and
v) calculations in Mr. Penin's Notebook, on the headed notepaper of a Beijing hotel, apparently showing monies due to "Phil".
The first four of these sources of evidence were set out in schedule format as Appendix 2 to Noble's closing submissions. Perhaps not surprisingly, nowhere in Mr. Penin's statements did he address the issue of secret commissions or bribes received by him or by Mr. Gross. He was not asked about the issue during the course of his testimony before the Swiss court.
"Q. Do you know what Mr. Penin is referring to by 'thingies' there?
A. No, so it's a word he used a lot. It was a common word for him to use, like for anything, 'thingies'.
Q. It could mean anything?
A. Yes.
Q. Is it a word you used a lot?
A. It's like a word, like if you can't think of the word you want to say you say, 'Thingies' like how many tonnes, 'How many thingies?' You say 'thingies'. I think it was a trendy word."
Issue (vi): Noble's alleged awareness of the actual speculative position and the manipulations
Issue (vii): whether Mr. Gross' conduct in the period 13 to 19 January 2006 was consistent or inconsistent with Mr. Gross' alleged knowledge of Mr. Penin's fraudulent misconduct
Issue (viii): what, if any, involvement did Mr. Gross have in Mr. Penin's flight to Brazil
"60. Around 9:30 p.m., Philip stopped communicating with me. I tried to reach him by any mean.
61. On Monday, at 10 p.m., I received a call from abroad by a non-identified man. He said he was calling on behalf of a close friend of yours, fat guy who lives in NYC, and smokes cigar, speaks Spanish.
62. I immediately knew that he was referring to Mendy, the brother-in-law of Philip.
63. I asked if the name of the guy was starting with "M". He confirmed.
64. He told me that a meeting took place in London in the afternoon and that the whole thing went very bad.
65. He told me the police was on its way to arrest us (both Philip and myself). He advised me to leave the house immediately and go the Bresil and that I should contact him once I get there.
66. He also asked me to get rid of the computer and the mobile phone among other things like not use credit cards, disappear.
67. I asked about Philip. He told me not to worry and that similar arrangement was been done for him.
68. I freaked up became of this phone call and the fact that Philip was not respond my calls any more. I called Avi and ask him a ticket to Sao Paolo.
69. I called him after 10 minutes and asked him if he had done something for Philip. He told me that he did not heard from Philip.
70. Between the two phone calls, Avi received a call from Mendy to make sure that he was booking the ticket.
71. I went to France, from Lyon to Paris, and then from Paris to Sao Paolo.
72. They told me to contact them from Sao Paolo without using mobile phone, using only calling cards or public phones.
73. When I arrived in Sao Paolo, I called this person and I asked for Mendy. I finally got Mendy. He told me that they were arresting me if I was coming back to Europe, that I should start a new life in Bresil, that he would help me out, that I should forget coming back, that they will take everything away from my wife and that I should not worry for Philip.
74. I called Avi and he told me that Philip was going to Lausanne with Elliot on Wednesday, January 18, 2006. So I suddenly realized that it was a mistake to fly away and that it was all a set up to make me carry the hat.
I asked him to find me a ticket back but there was no more place available that day. So I had to wait until Wednesday. When I was in the airport, I fainted and was cared by doctors.
75. I went to a friend's house and came back only on Wednesday, January 18, 2006.
76. On Tuesday night, January 17, 2006, I had an extensive phone call with Mendy who gave me a very dark future if I was coming back and told me that Philip will deny everything and that he will protect himself. He gave me assurances that he will take care of me and my family in Brazil.
77. I had various contacts with Mendy. He always advised me not to come back.
On Wednesday morning, after deciding to come back, I spoke with friend who confirmed my position. That's what I did and why I am here."
i) The evidence of Mr. Feld, the travel agent;
ii) Part of the evidence of Mr. Spector, a friend of Mr. Gertner;
iii) The telephone records.
i) Mr. Gross' brother-in-law, Mr. Gertner, called him on the evening of 16 January 2006, in the course of which conversation he sought to confirm that Mr. Feld had booked Mr. Penin on a flight to Sao Paolo;
ii) He had rung Mr. Gross the same evening to say that he was booking a ticket to Sao Paolo for Mr. Penin and to see if Mr. Gross also needed a ticket. Mr. Feld said that Mr. Gross said something along the lines of "I shouldn't be having this conversation with you" ;
iii) He had confirmed to Mr. Gertner by SMS at 8:04am on 17 January 2006 that Mr. Penin had checked in to the flight to Brazil;
iv) He had spoken to Mr. Gross for over 12 minutes at 8.52am on 17 January 2006 and "probably would have given him a little bit of abuse for being horrible to me the night before";
v) Mr. Penin had called him from Sao Paolo later on 17 January 2006, in the course of which conversation Mr. Feld (i) had booked Mr. Penin on a return flight leaving 18 January 2006 and (ii) had informed Mr. Penin that Mr. Gross was booked on a flight to Lausanne the next day;
vi) He always discussed travel arrangements for Mr. Penin with Mr. Gross; and
vii) He and Mr. Gross were very good friends at the time.
i) Mr. Spector said that Mr. Gertner asked him to call Mr. Penin to tell him to stop calling Mr. Gross. Mr. Gertner was apparently too busy to call Mr. Penin himself (although Mr. Gross' evidence was that he asked Mr. Gertner to intervene at a time when he feared for his life);
ii) Mr. Spector said that Mr. Penin, whom he did not know, proceeded to ask his advice about what to do "about his house, his computer, his family and where he should go";
iii) Mr. Spector said that Mr. Penin "said he was sorry for his actions within the company and any consequences for Philip";
iv) Mr. Spector said that he gave Mr. Gertner's mobile number to Mr. Penin (despite the fact that Mr. Gertner had been too busy to make the initial call).
I agree that Mr. Spector's evidence as set out at sub-paragraphs i) to iv) above is not credible. He was not called as a witness and I attach no weight to his statement, in so far as it disagrees with Mr. Penin's evidence.
"I was in a state at the time. I was in a complete and utter state. There is no way to describe it. I was – my world was crashing all around me …."
i) Mr. Penin's account of this episode is fully supported by the relevant records of telephone calls, as well as by Mr. Feld's evidence, and indeed, in relation to the timing of calls, by that of Mr. Spector and Mr. Gertner. No calls were made from Mr. Penin's Swisscom number after 22.26 on 16 January 2006, which supports his story. Likewise, Mr. Penin's evidence was that he stayed with a friend of his, Ana Paula Chiviotti, and her telephone records show that a number of calls were made, including three calls to Mr. Gertner and calls to Mr. Penin's brother and wife.
ii) Mr. Gross' evidence on this topic was not reliable: for example his account of Mr. Penin "babbling" and "ranting and raving" about the Russian mafia and being found in a ditch had not been put forward before his oral evidence.
iii) If Mr. Gross had indeed feared for his life after his alleged conversations with Mr. Penin about the Russian mafia, then he would surely have immediately warned Mr. Spitz not to go to Russia to meet Normet. It was not suggested to Mr. Spitz that he was given any such warning, and he went to Russia to meet Normet.
iv) Mr. Gross' conversation with Mr. Gertner in which he allegedly asked Mr. Gertner to intervene with Mr. Penin was at 15:32pm that day. He said that Mr. Penin was "ringing and ringing" him at that time, and that he wanted to stop Mr. Penin harassing him. But the telephone records in fact show that Mr. Gross had himself called Mr. Penin twelve times that day, and Mr. Gross had previously testified that he was himself keen to speak to Mr. Penin that day.
v) Mr. Gross' meeting with Mr. Rabinowicz (at which he was allegedly advised not to speak to Mr. Penin) apparently took place at a wedding on the evening of Monday, 16 January 2006. Mr. Gross was still at that wedding when Mr. Feld called him around 10pm that evening. However, he had stopped taking Mr. Penin's calls around 7pm that evening.
vi) Despite the advice not to communicate with Mr. Penin, the telephone records show that Mr. Gross called Mr. Penin's phone eight times on Tuesday and Wednesday, 17 and 18 January 2006. Mr. Gross' only explanation for this was that he was trying to call Mr. Penin with Mr. Spitz.
vii) Mr. Gross had no explanation for why Mr. Gertner would delegate the request to call Mr. Penin to Mr. Spector, following an alleged conversation in which Mr. Gross had told his brother in law that he feared for his life. The suggestion that Mr. Gertner was too busy to deal with it himself is inconsistent with the number of calls Mr. Gertner had with Mr. Gross and Mr. Feld that day.
viii) Mr. Gross' statement that he did not know that Mr. Penin had gone to Brazil was not credible in the light of the clear evidence of Mr. Feld, and the fact of Mr. Gross' lengthy conversations with Mr. Gertner and Mr. Feld, both of whom knew that Mr. Penin had gone to Brazil (admitted by Mr. Gross in cross-examination). Mr. Gross' evidence was that he was not interested in talking to Mr. Feld about what was going on at Noble, which itself was an extraordinary claim in the circumstances. As far as his conversations with Mr. Gertner were concerned, Mr. Gross admitted that it was what was going on with Mr. Penin that prompted his calls to Mr. Gertner in the first place. I agree with Mr. Boulton's submission that it defies common sense that the subject of Mr. Penin's sudden flight to Brazil should not have come up in any of the calls made by Mr. Gross to Mr. Gertner on 18 January and in the early hours of 19 January 2006, as shown in the telephone records.
ix) I draw an adverse inference from the fact that Mr. Gertner has not come to Court to give evidence as to the subject and content of his telephone calls with Mr. Penin. No reason whatsoever was given for his absence and no suggestion was made, for example, that his evidence should be given by video link. A similar point can be made in relation to Mr. Spector.
Conclusion on liability
Causation and Quantum issues
Issue ix): if Noble had known of its true exposure to the aluminium market, would it have suspended Mr. Gross and Mr. Penin and/or prevented them from trading further; closed or hedged the speculative positions; and/or paid any bonus to Mr. Gross and/or Mr. Penin and if so, how much?
Issue x): did Mr. Gross' alleged breaches of contract or tortious acts cause Noble loss and, if so, what is the quantum of such loss?
C: Mr. Gross' counterclaim
Endnote
Appendix 1 |
Summary of the effect of the manipulations of the physical trading book based upon Appendix 2 to Mr. Sharp's first witness statement and Appendix 1 to Mr. Favre's first witness statement. |
The following is a summary of the manipulations which, on the evidence, I find, were made to the physical trading book, together with my conclusions as to their effect.
i) The First Normet Contract was entered into NTS on 4 January 2005, but backdated to the previous year. It generated a false profit of $2.3 million at 31 December 2004, which was used to cover the unrealised loss on the short position at year end. This would also have helped to hide the short position at the end of 2004, but since the position was not being reported at the end of 2004 (the Craig Reports were still under development) it seems unlikely that this was a motivating factor.
ii) The Second Normet Contract was first entered into on 5 July 2005 but backdated to 30 June 2005. It produced a profit of $1.7 million at the end of June 2005, rising to a profit of $12.5 million by the end of 2005. At 30 June 2005, the false profits would have hidden the $1 million loss that Mr Penin estimated would have arisen on the concealed long speculative position at that date. Mr. Gross contended that it would not have hidden the long position at that date. That is right, but in July 2005 Mr Sharp was on holiday and no Craig Report was in fact issued until 29 July 2005, so the contract would have served its purpose. Thereafter, the profits on the Second Normet Contract helped offset the losses on the short position and the pricing of forward deliveries helped to hide the short position.
iii) The Third Normet Contract was initially entered unpriced, and as such would have had no effect on the reported risk position. However, it was marked to market in such a way as to produce a false profit at the end of September of $1.8 million. An amended version of this contract was entered as priced in January 2006, producing a significant profit ($3.8 million by the end of 2005) and reducing the reported short position by 20,000mt.
iv) The pricing of one side of the Hydro swap contract gave rise to a profit of $11.3 million by the end of 2005; it is not clear precisely when Mr. Penin entered the purchase side in the physical trading book; it also increased the priced physical position by 24,000mt, which helped to conceal the short speculative position. Ms. Grin realised that the purchase side of the swap had been priced incorrectly on around 6 January 2006 and corrected this error in NTS; this immediately increased the loss for December and threw out the draft Craig Report sent out that day and the one-sided pricing was reinstated.
v) The First and Second Egtal Contracts were initially entered unpriced; however the First Egtal Contract did have an impact on the P&L. The First Egtal Contract for 12,000mt was allocated a price on 5 August 2005, which would have offset the short position. The quantity that was priced was reduced to 4,925mt on or before 7 October 2005, but it continued to impact the P&L, generating a profit of $6.8 million by the end of 2005.
vi) The booking of the Eural, Digena and Alcan contracts were used simply to reduce the losses that had been reported in December 2005.
Note 1 The two contracts were apparently for tax efficiency purposes, and were intended to reflect the duties which Mr. Gross discharged in the UK and elsewhere. Neither party has sought to argue that any issue arises under Swiss law, or that it is different in any material respect from English law. [Back] Note 2 See paragraphs 14 and 15 of the Amended Particulars of Claim. [Back] Note 3 See paragraph 16 of the Amended Particulars of Claim. [Back] Note 4 See paragraph 17 ibid. [Back] Note 5 See paragraph 11 of the Defence. [Back] Note 6 See paragraph 13 of the Defence. [Back] Note 7 See paragraph 20 of the Defence. [Back] Note 8 No claim for breach of Mr. Gross’ employment contract with Noble UK is made by Noble. [Back] Note 10 [1957] 1 QB 247. [Back] Note 14 [2009] 1 AC 11; [2008] 3 WLR 1. [Back] Note 16 This issue comprised issues numbered 1 to 3 in the list of issues approved by the court following the hearing on 21 November 2008 (“the List of Issues”). [Back] Note 17 This issue comprised issues numbered 4 to 5 in the List of Issues. [Back] Note 18 This was issue 6 in the List of Issues. [Back] Note 19 This comprised issues 7 to 9 in the List of Issues. [Back] Note 20 This comprised issues 10 to 11 and 13 in the List of Issues. [Back] Note 21 This was issue 14 in the List of Issues. [Back] Note 22 This was issue 12 in the List of Issues. [Back] Note 23 This was issue 15 in the List of Issues. [Back] Note 24 This comprised issues 16 to 19 in the List of Issues. [Back] Note 25 This was issue 22 in the List of Issues. [Back] Note 26 This was issue 23 in the List of Issues. [Back] Note 27 This comprised issues 24 and 25 in the List of Issues. [Back] Note 28 The system was subsequently extended to show the overall position in the aluminium division in Stamford as well. [Back] Note 29 It may well be that Mr. Gross was not aware of the entirety of the dishonest commissions received by Mr. Penin but he was certainly aware of many of them. [Back] Note 30 A flat price limit relates to the net speculative position in futures. [Back] Note 31 Appendix 2 to Mr. Sharp’s first revised witness statement. [Back] Note 32 Paragraph 14 of the Minutes of Declaration. [Back] Note 33 The account in his Minutes of Declaration was in general terms to similar effect, although, since he may well not have had the SMS records or his Notebook to hand when making the statement, the details were not in all respects accurate. For example, in paragraph 15 he said “when the market hit low in June or July 2005 (around 1700), we, Philip Gross and myself, decided to go short, approximately 60,000mt.” I see no real disparity in this figure since the actual figure of 52,425mt (as shown in Mr. Penin’s Notebook) was near enough to a figure of 60,000. [Back] Note 34 I have not attempted to correct or expand any spellings or abbreviations. [Back] Note 35 The closing price on 29 July was $1,858/mt. Based on an average purchase price of $1,788, as recorded in the Notebook, the unrealised loss by month end was 2097 (lots) x 25mt x ($1,858-1,788) = $3.7 million. [Back] Note 36 Apart from the drop to $1,780 in September, when Mr. Penin had wanted to close the position out. [Back] Note 37 The evidence showed that the majority of the payments that Mr. Penin received by way of secret commissions from Normet UK were routed via banks in Nicosia. [Back] Note 38 See paragraphs 31 to 33 of the Amended Particulars of Claim. [Back] Note 39 Clerk & Lindsell, paragraph 18-40, citing amongst other authorities the House of Lords decision in Smith New Court Securities v Scrimgeour Vickers (Asset Management) Ltd [1997] AC 254 [Back] Note 40 Clerk & Lindsell, paragraph 25-137; McGregor on Damages, paragraphs 40-007 – 40-011. [Back] Note 41 Sybron v Rochem Ltd, pages 9, 11-13 and 16-17. [Back]