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Warburg forced to lift prices on Kepit sale

Thursday 31 October 1996 19:02 EST
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SBC Warburg has been forced to raise prices realised on the sale of a pounds 300m portfolio of shares after a complaint from Merrill Lynch on behalf of its client, the Kleinwort Benson European Privatisation Trust.

The shares were sold as part of the liquidation of Kepit, an investment trust specialising in European stocks. Warburg chose the market turmoil that surrounded Wednesday's surprise increase in interest rates to execute the trade. Later in the day prices rose back to more advantageous levels.

Merrill Lynch, which is advising Kepit, accused Warburg of executing the trade at poor prices. The row was later defused after Warburg offered to use closing prices for the stocks.

One source said: "It's no big deal. This sort of thing happens the whole time." But another said it was indicative of the way market-makers manipulated prices to their own advantage.

"This was a programme trade," a source close to the transaction said. "The timing had been pre-set and it was unfortunate that it occurred when prices were weak as a result of the interest rate decision."

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