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“US Authorities to Launch Investigation Into Pre-2019 Colombo Stock Exchange Transactions”

A Financial Tempest Brewing in the Tropics

(Lanka-e-News -16.April.2025, 10.25 PM)  The curtain is lifting on what could become one of the most consequential financial investigations in Sri Lanka’s modern history. The United States Treasury Department, in collaboration with the FBI’s Financial Crimes Division, is preparing to initiate an inquiry into a series of suspicious stock market transactions that took place on the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) in the years leading up to 2019. According to sources familiar with the matter, the spotlight is now on a group of Sri Lankan business magnates, including Dilith Jayaweera, Dhammika Perera, Nimal Perera, and 19 others alleged to have orchestrated an elaborate pump-and-dump scheme that resulted in multi-billion-dollar losses for foreign investors—including American institutional funds.

This investigation could have far-reaching implications, not only for those directly involved but also for the integrity of Sri Lanka’s capital markets and its diplomatic relationship with the United States.

The Mechanics of Manipulation: Colombo’s Great Share Scam

Investigators allege that select individuals used their influence, insider access, and media platforms to artificially inflate the value of targeted stocks—many of which were thinly traded and lacked intrinsic growth. After drawing in retail and institutional investors—including foreign pension and hedge funds—these insiders are said to have quietly exited their positions at peak price points, pocketing massive profits in the process.

US regulators, who have received multiple complaints from American financial institutions burned by CSE’s volatility during this period, now believe this was not market coincidence, but calculated deceit.

The Names Behind the Numbers

While Dilith Jayaweera and Dhammika Perera have long been household names in Sri Lanka’s business and media landscapes, this investigation may mark the first time they are scrutinized on foreign soil. According to leaked documents and whistleblower testimony, the alleged manipulation extended beyond mere stock transactions and into boardroom collusion, misinformation campaigns, and selective disclosure practices.

Also mentioned are companies connected to media entities and political outfits—raising the uncomfortable question: was this financial operation also a political funding machine?

American Interests at Stake: Why the US is Involved

US Treasury officials are particularly incensed that billions in retirement funds, university endowments, and other public institutional investments were potentially compromised. The U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) provides extraterritorial jurisdiction when American interests or victims are involved, and in this case, there’s more than enough reason to act.

Internal memos suggest that American funds exposed to this manipulation include several top-tier private equity groups and university investment arms. These institutions are now pressuring Washington to act decisively—especially as the Sri Lankan authorities, under past regimes, repeatedly stonewalled any formal investigations.

The Role of the NPP Government: A Crossroads

With the National People’s Power (NPP) administration recently introducing anti-corruption legislation—including the Proceeds of Crime Act—this presents a political litmus test. Will the NPP stand by its mandate to cleanse Sri Lanka’s financial and political systems? Or will it, like its predecessors, yield to pressure from the oligarchs?

The Act, which allows for the seizure of assets acquired through illicit means, could become a crucial tool if domestic investigations are launched parallel to US efforts. However, sources within the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) suggest that major players are already lobbying influential politicians to slow down the process.

Corporate Capture and a Culture of Impunity

Critics argue that the Colombo Stock Exchange has, for too long, functioned as a playground for the elite—where a handful of connected families could mint wealth through insider trading and unregulated financial engineering. If the US investigation proceeds, it may lift the lid on decades of corrupt entanglements between finance, politics, and media in Sri Lanka.

Among the most serious allegations is that key CSE-listed companies, aided by compliant auditors and regulators, submitted falsified or manipulated financial statements to mislead investors. If proven, this would amount to securities fraud of international proportions.

Dhammika, Dilith, and the Ghosts of Market Past

Dhammika Perera, once hailed as Sri Lanka’s business wizard, and Dilith Jayaweera, the media mogul turned nationalist political figure, now find themselves tethered to an unfolding global scandal. Their meteoric rise was often attributed to “vision” and “calculated risk,” but critics now suggest a darker reality: a carefully orchestrated transfer of wealth from unsuspecting investors to private pockets under the veneer of entrepreneurial brilliance.

Nimal Perera, long considered a financial architect behind many high-stakes trades, is also said to have facilitated these transactions through shell accounts and nominee shareholding structures that obfuscated true ownership.

A New Era or a New Cover-Up?

If Sri Lanka fails to act, the consequences may be swift and severe. Not only could bilateral financial cooperation suffer, but Sri Lanka’s future access to US markets, grants, and IMF goodwill may also be jeopardized. The NPP’s reformist brand will also suffer a significant credibility blow if it shields the accused under the guise of “business stability.”

What Comes Next: Investigations, Extraditions, and Confiscations

The US is expected to formally request financial data, shareholding records, and communication logs from Sri Lankan regulators, including the Securities and Exchange Commission of Sri Lanka (SEC) and the Central Bank. If the NPP government cooperates, joint task forces may be established.

According to diplomatic insiders, there is even the possibility of seeking extradition for key figures if they are found to have violated US laws, particularly where American investors are victims.

In addition, both the Department of Justice and SEC may pursue civil asset forfeiture proceedings against foreign-held properties and bank accounts of those involved.

Conclusion: A Reckoning Long Overdue

This looming investigation is not just about financial malfeasance; it’s about the future of accountability in a country where the powerful have long been untouchable. For decades, Sri Lanka’s elites operated above the law, manipulating not just markets, but institutions. Now, the long arm of international justice may finally be reaching toward Colombo—and this time, it’s wearing an American badge.

-By LeN Financial Correspondent

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by     (2025-04-16 16:53:53)

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