Business
The Government Proved It Was a Scheme. Barry Honig Was a Victim
For seven years, Barry Honig’s name was dragged through the mud by short sellers who called the companies he backed frauds, scams, and stock schemes.
The media repeated those claims without question. Now the U.S. government has confirmed what Honig always said: it was a coordinated lie.
What Is a ‘Short-and-Distort’ Scheme?
Most people have heard of ‘pump and dump’ — where someone hypes a stock to drive the price up, then sells. A ‘short-and-distort’ is the opposite. Short sellers bet that a stock will fall, then deliberately spread false negative information to make that happen. It’s illegal. And it’s exactly what the SEC and DOJ found was happening.
What Exactly Did the Government Find?
In June 2024, the SEC charged Anson Funds Management — a $2.9 billion hedge fund — with running a secret scheme from 2018 to 2023. Here’s how it worked, in plain terms:
- Anson would quietly ‘short’ a company’s stock — meaning they placed bets that the stock would fall.
- They then paid Andrew Left of Citron Research to publish false, alarming reports about those same companies.
- Left would blast these reports out to hundreds of thousands of followers on Twitter, CNBC, and his website — calling companies ‘fraud,’ ‘scam,’ or ‘dead.’
- Investors panicked, sold their shares, the stock crashed, and Anson collected its profits.
- To hide the payments to Left, Anson funneled the money through a third party called Falcon Research, using fake invoices for ‘research services’ that were never actually performed.
PolarityTE: A Real Company Destroyed by Lies
One of the targets was PolarityTE — a biotech company that had developed SkinTE, a revolutionary product that used a patient’s own skin to heal wounds. Barry Honig and his family entities were the second-largest shareholders, owning nearly 10% of the company.
In June 2018, Citron Research published a report with a headline screaming ‘FRAUD’ in all capitals. The report claimed PolarityTE’s patent was dead — that the USPTO had permanently rejected it and the company had hidden the news.
Both claims were false.
A USPTO ‘final rejection’ is a technical term — it’s a step in the process, not the end of the road. Applicants who continue forward receive a patent roughly 70% of the time. PolarityTE did exactly that, and in February 2021, the USPTO granted the patent. The company was never hiding anything — the patent process simply wasn’t over.
The false narrative about PolarityTE’s patents was demonstrably false — demonstrated by the USPTO allowing its patent, and the class action lawsuit ultimately was dismissed. — Honig v. Anson Funds, First Amended Complaint
But the damage was already done. The stock crashed over 40% on the day of the first attack. Institutional investors fled. PolarityTE lost its financing, declared bankruptcy in 2023, and its shares went to zero. Honig and his family lost millions.
7 Years of Fake News — Now Confirmed
For years, Barry Honig’s name appeared in articles that treated short-seller reports as gospel truth. Those reports called him a ‘stock promoter’ for ‘failed companies’ — language Citron used to smear anyone connected to its targets. The media amplified the attacks without checking whether the underlying claims were true.
As the new lawsuit filed in May 2026 states, the defendants ‘made false and disparaging statements about PolarityTE and Plaintiffs’ business… with knowledge that they were false or with no reasonable grounds for believing them to be true.’
Honig’s RIOT Blockchain investment — another Citron target — was cleared by the SEC in 2020. RIOT Platforms today is worth billions. MARA Holdings, another company Honig helped build, is also a multi-billion dollar enterprise. The ‘frauds’ turned out to be real companies.
Now It’s Left Who Faces Justice
In July 2024, the Department of Justice indicted Andrew Left on 19 criminal counts — including securities fraud and lying to federal investigators. He faces up to 365 years in prison. His trial is currently scheduled for 2026.
The indictment describes the scheme in detail, including a ‘Hedge Fund A’ that secretly paid Left through a third-party intermediary — matching precisely what the SEC found about Anson Funds.
Ryan Choi, Left’s partner who executed trades at Citron Capital, settled with the SEC and paid over $1.8 million. Anson itself paid $2.25 million in penalties. Hindenburg Research — another short seller connected to the broader network — shut down while investigations were ongoing.
The Bottom Line
Barry Honig didn’t need to wait for a trial to be vindicated. The SEC already confirmed the scheme was real. The DOJ already confirmed PolarityTE was a named target. The patent was already granted. The class action lawsuit was already dismissed.
What took seven years wasn’t the truth — it was the government catching up to it.
The Andrew Left trial may finally put a face and a prison sentence on what was done. But the record is already clear: Barry Honig was the victim of a coordinated, government-confirmed fake news campaign — and the perpetrators are now the ones facing accountability.
Business
Form 144 APPLOVIN CORPORATION For: 11 June

Form 144 APPLOVIN CORPORATION For: 11 June
Business
Kospi jumps over 8% on Iran peace deal hopes; world’s best-performing market up 94% YTD
The benchmark KOSPI jumped 660 points, or 8.5%, to 8,424. The surge helped the index finish the week up 3.2%, reversing some of the damage from the previous week when it had fallen 3.7% amid a sharp global selloff in AI and technology stocks.
Despite the turbulence, the KOSPI remains the world’s top-performing stock index this year. The benchmark has surged 94% so far in 2026, largely powered by a rally in semiconductor stocks tied to the artificial intelligence boom.
Technology heavyweights led Friday’s advance. Samsung Electronics climbed 12.21%, while rival SK Hynix gained 8.85%. Battery maker LG Energy Solution rose 6.11%. Automakers also joined the rally, with Hyundai Motor advancing 6.03% and affiliate Kia Corp adding 4.81%. Steel producer POSCO Holdings gained 6.84%, while Samsung BioLogics edged up 1.01%.
The rebound came after Trump said on Thursday that the United States and Iran could sign a peace agreement as soon as this weekend, a move that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz to shipping. Iran, however, said it had not yet made a final decision on any agreement.
Trump also said discussions with Iran had been elevated to the highest levels of the Iranian leadership and received approval. According to him, key elements of the proposed agreement had been approved “in both concept and great detail” by parties including the United States, Israel, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Turkey, Pakistan, Bahrain, Kuwait, Jordan and Egypt, among others.
Friday’s rally capped a week marked by extreme volatility. The KOSPI triggered “sidecar” trading curbs in four sessions, including Friday. Earlier in the week, circuit breakers were activated for the third time this year and the ninth time on record.Only days earlier, the world’s best-performing equity market had been caught in the global technology rout. AI and semiconductor stocks, the standout winners of 2025 and 2026, came under intense pressure as investors questioned whether the rally had run ahead of underlying fundamentals. The impact was particularly severe in South Korea, one of the markets most exposed to the AI supply chain, with index tumbling as much as 8% in a single session this week.
The pullback came despite a powerful long-term growth story. Demand for AI infrastructure has surged over the past year as technology companies worldwide race to develop advanced AI models and expand computing capacity. That has fuelled robust demand for high-bandwidth memory chips and channeled investor interest into South Korean chipmakers, which occupy a critical position in the global AI supply chain.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
Business
Form PRE 14A ZW DATA ACTION TECHNOLOGIES INC. For: 11 June

Form PRE 14A ZW DATA ACTION TECHNOLOGIES INC. For: 11 June
Business
Bangkok Restaurant’s Renminbi-Only Policy Sparks Legal Scrutiny in Thailand
A viral social media video has ignited a renewed scrutiny of foreign-run businesses and their payment practices in Thailand. The clip, originating from a Chinese TikTok user, alleged that a Chinese noodle shop in Bangkok’s Huai Khwang district refused Thai baht and demanded payment solely in Chinese renminbi.
Abstract
- A viral TikTok video claiming a Chinese noodle shop in Bangkok’s Huai Khwang district refused Thai baht and demanded renminbi payment has prompted scrutiny of foreign-run businesses in Thailand. The user also alleged the bill was inflated when paid in the foreign currency.
- Thai authorities are investigating potential violations of the Exchange Control Act, Payment Systems Act, tax laws, and the Foreign Business Act. Officials and industry representatives are calling for verification of the claims and broader inspections of foreign-operated businesses in tourist areas.
The user further claimed that the bill was increased when forced to pay in the foreign currency, leading to confusion and anger. This incident has raised significant questions about whether foreign-operated businesses are circumventing Thailand’s official financial system, potentially violating Thai laws concerning currency exchange, payment systems, and taxation.
Key Points
Potential Legal Ramifications for Non-Compliance
If the allegations are proven true, the restaurant’s alleged practices could trigger multiple legal violations under Thai law. These include the Exchange Control Act for unauthorized foreign currency transactions, the Payment Systems Act for using unlicensed payment channels, and tax laws for income evasion and failure to issue receipts. Furthermore, the Foreign Business Act could be implicated if Thai nominees are used to facilitate foreign ownership and operation, carrying potential jail time. Anti-money laundering concerns also arise if transactions are designed to bypass Thailand’s banking and tax systems, directly repatriating funds to China.
Urgent Verification and Enforcement Measures
The president of the Association of Thai Travel Agents has called for urgent verification of the incident’s authenticity by government agencies. While emphasizing the need for facts before drawing conclusions, he stressed that decisive legal action must be taken if the allegations are substantiated to protect Thailand’s trading standards and monetary sovereignty. He advocated for businesses to integrate fully into the Thai banking system, such as through PromptPay or local bank accounts, warning against reliance on foreign payment applications. Authorities are also urged to conduct broader inspections in affected districts, covering business operations, hygiene, and product compliance.
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