The Wall Street Journal is reporting that three menâFox co-founder Barry Diller, Reggie Miller-hating socialite Alexander von Furstenberg, and music magnate David Geffenâare currently under two separate federal investigations. This is over suspicions insider trading was involved in their purchase of millions of dollars of Activision shares just before the companyâs purchase by Microsoft.
The allegations are centred on the trioâs purchase of $108 million in Activision Blizzard shares only days before the Microsoft sale was announced in January. Following the deal, those same shares are now worth approximately $168 million, making the three men a quick profit of $60 million.
The timing of the deal, the sums involved, and one of the menâs personal connection to Activision Blizzard (more on that in a minute) certainly raise suspicions. As a result, the Justice Department is âinvestigating whether any of the options trades violated insider-trading laws,â while the Securities and Exchange Commission âis separately conducting a civil insider-trading investigation.â
Of the three men, Barry Diller is the central figure here, as he served alongside Activision CEO Bobby Kotick on the board of Coca-Cola. Or at least he did until Kotick recently âstepped downâ from that role in the wake of historic allegations of abuse and harassment at Activision Blizzard. The two werenât just occasional colleagues, either. Diller has called Kotick a âa long time friend.â
Diller is then in turn also very close friends with Geffen, and married to von Furstenbergâs mother. So you can see why the SEC and Justice Department have both decided to investigate the deals. And arenât exactly having to work overtime to put the pieces together on the trioâs connections.
Speaking with the WSJ about the report, Diller said on record that âIt was simply a lucky bet. We acted on no information of any kind from anyone. It is one of those coincidences,â while von Furstenberg told the paper he had been âbuying Activision stock prior to that and the thought was that Activision at some point would either go private, or would be acquired at some point.â