US charges 2 Singapore men, 6 others in global insider trading scheme

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Ge Zhi was apprehended on July 3 and brought to the State Courts the next day, where he was ordered to be held under the Extradition Act.

Ge Zhi, 34, was provisionally arrested in 2024 in Singapore and is subject to extradition proceedings.

PHOTO: JOSH GE/FACEBOOK

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- US prosecutors on Nov 18 unveiled charges against eight men, including two Singaporeans, accused of belonging to a global network that made tens of millions of dollars trading on inside information about the finances and merger plans of numerous companies for years.

Federal prosecutors in Boston said the insider trading scheme ran from 2016 to 2024 and was led by Samy Khouadja, a former Merrill Lynch banker in France; Eamma Safi, who co-owned a French restaurant with Khouadja; and Singapore citizen Ge Zhi.

Safi is in US custody and pleaded not guilty earlier in 2025. Ge, 34,

was provisionally arrested in 2024 in Singapore and is subject to extradition proceedings.

 Another Singaporean, Dev Ananth Durai, 39, is one of six other defendants considered fugitives, according to the US Justice Department.

The others are: Khouadja, who worked at Bank of America’s Merrill Lynch until 2014 and is facing securities fraud and money laundering conspiracy charges; Christophe Dong of France; Julien Liu of France and Hong Kong; Patrick Chou of France and Hong Kong; and Cheuk Yue Lee of Hong Kong.

Their lawyers did not respond to requests for comment or could not be reached.

Prosecutors allege that Khouadja, Safi and Ge recruited investment bankers and other corporate insiders to supply them with confidential information about a variety of publicly traded companies, including US-based ones that they and their co-defendants then traded on.

They also recruited other traders in the US, Europe, the Middle East and Asia, to trade on the information they received in exchange for a share of their insider trading profits, prosecutors said.

The indictment said the insider information included that Britain-based drugmaker AstraZeneca in 2020 planned to acquire Alexion Pharmaceuticals for US$39 billion (S$50.8 billion); that Louis Vuitton owner LVMH would seek to acquire jeweller Tiffany in 2019; and medical device maker Stryker’s plans to acquire rival Wright Medical that year.

Prosecutors said the defendants leaked information they obtained to journalists to make a trading profit once news about their illicit tips became public, and used “burner” cellphones and encrypted messaging applications to conceal their activity.

They spoke in code as well, referring to money as “greens”, insider trading as “running”, a yet-to-be-announced deal as a “race”, and another company’s prospective merger partners as “girls” and “models”, the indictment said. REUTERS

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