French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

The Biggest Financial fraud in history

http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20080124/wl_time/frances72billionhit;_ylt=AlRJQ0w6V858fWvM0X.q1MCs0NUE

It could have been the plot of a thriller: A young lone trader secretly concocts bogus transactions for months, in an attempt to cover his spiraling losses, until he has siphoned off billions of euros from under the noses of one of France’s most venerable institutions.

For Societe Generale - France’s second-biggest bank - the details were all too real, however, as stunned executives attempted to explain on Thursday how a mid-level employee lost 4.9-billion euros ($7.2 billion) in a rogue operation without anyone noticing.

In what could be one of the biggest inside frauds in banking history, French futures trader Jerome Kerviel, 31, effectively created his own trading firm within the bank’s market rooms, according to Societe Generale CEO Daniel Bouton. “He succeeded in building this hidden firm, in building his positions by hiding them by other positions that were totally fictional,” Bouton told reporters at a Paris news conference on Thursday. “That is what is so extraordinary about this case.” Bouton’s offer to resign was rejected by the bank’s administrators this week. Bank official said Thursday they needed to raise $8 billion to cover their losses and that 2007 profits would likely be between 600 million to 800 million euros (about $874 million to $1.16 million), a sharp drop from its 2006 profits of about 5.2 billion euros.

Kerviel’s identity was revealed on the Financial Times and Daily Telegraph websites, but was not confirmed by bank officials, who admitted on Thursday that the rogue trader appeared to have gone to ground and that they had no idea where he was. Executives said two years ago, the trader had a back-office job in the bank working on internal controls to prevent questionable and suspicious trades. He then transferred to a position trading in so-called “plain vanilla” stock futures in European markets. He earned a salary of about 100,000 euros (about $147,000). In his new job, he began trading far beyond his responsibilities, racking up debts as global markets gyrated. To cover his losses, he created complex fictitious trades, until the losses appeared to spiral out of control. Said Kinner Lakhani, a London-based analyst for the Dutch bank ABN Amro, who covers Societe Generale: “It was out of the realms of anyone’s expectation.”

Bank executives said they finally realized their mammoth problem last weekend. Societe Generale chief executive of corporate and investment banking Jean-Pierre Mustier told reporters that he was “convinced [Kerviel] acted alone.” Kerviel confessed to the elaborate fraud during a six-hour grilling by bank officials on Saturday night, according to the Daily Telegraph, which posted a photograph online of a slender, dark-haired man. Despite the weekend revelations, three days lapsed before executives suspended trading of Societe Generale shares. They declined to tell reporters at Thursday’s press conference why the trader had not been immediately fired, nor why they had not involved the French police.

Executives said the trader was able to use his extensive knowledge of the bank’s controls from his previous job at the bank in order to bypass the control system and create his own rogue operation. That revealed a crucial hole in the bank’s security, says Mark Thomas, an analyst with Keefe, Bruyette & Woods in London. “The single most important factor [in security] is that the risk-control function is independent of traders,” Thomas told TIME on Thursday. “You would typically put extra supervision on that person for a couple of years.” Said ABN Amro’s Lakhani: “This was management’s biggest nightmare.”

The huge scale and complexity of Kerviel’s fraud has strong echoes of Nick Leeson, a young rogue British trader in Singapore. Leeson bankrupted the 230-year-old Barings Bank in 1995, after losing $1.38 billion in fictitious trades on Asian futures markets, single-handedly wiping out Barings’ cash reserves. Leeson was jailed for more than three years in Singapore, and the scandal became almost synonymous with the power of a lone employee to unravel a large company. At the time, officials at various banks said they were tightening internal security measures in order to avert a similar disaster.

More than a decade later, those assurances sound thin to some analysts. “This raises huge questions marks about whether you can fix the rogue-trader risk,” says Pierre Flabbee, head of banking-sector research for Landsbanki Kepler in Paris. “This demonstrates that you cannot. The human factor is one you cannot control 100 percent. The more sophisticated procedures become the more sophisticated employers become.”

Judging by Leeson’s experience, Societe Generale’s rogue trader might some day land another career. Leeson is now manager of the Galway United soccer team in Ireland, and was portrayed by Ewan McGregor in the 1999 movie Rogue Trader, the film version of his autobiography. He has written a further book entitled Back from the Brink: Coping with Stress. That sounds like perfect bedtime reading this week for Societe Generale executives.

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

oops. My guess is that he will get fired.

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

reminds me of that movie Rogue Trader, which we all know was based on true events.

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

wow. you know he'll be going on a long vacation, if he hasn't left already that is.

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

suitcases pack ho gaye hain shayed :D

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

havvis burri balaa hai :nono:

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

i believe you mean ‘Havvas’ :chai:

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

I did that once - but the 7 billon dollars made me smart enough not to get caught.

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

says the person known for “tomaato, tomato, same deal” (or something along the lines of this) :rolleyes:

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

per app nay to tang he toor dee thee :hehe:

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

lollll… Z whats with all the adab? kanhasskam meiney jaan to nahi nikaal di unlike some ppl :hoonh:

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

aray yaar…np…jum ker kero haddi pasli ki toor phoor :hugz:…i do all the time… i barely know this roman urdu stuff.

or t ko daantoo..khud to tafl-e-maktab hai or doseroon ka mazak urata hai :hehe:

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

ha’eN? yaar plz, easy on the gaarhi urdu… I dont quite get it but you have my permission to daaNt Teggy on whatever it is he did wrong :konfused:

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

lemme mail u :hehe:

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

All those chuckling about the long vacation by this rogue trader, proly didn't read the whole news story - the dude didn't make a single penny in this fraud (well, other than getting his salary and keeping his job!). Now the whole thing has unraveled, and he will probably be jailed or something.

How can one person in a bank trade 7 billion dollars without anyone finding out, defies common sense.

Re: French banker trades away 7 Billion dollars to his own company

More than likely he was trading futures or commodities on margin. In some cases those traders only have an equity position of 5% or less, meaning that he would be working with a couple of hundred million in equity, but he would be levering billions. If he got caught leaning the wrong way, particularly with some of the fast moves over the past few weeks, he could erode his equity and start getting margin calls pretty quickly. If the margin clerk does not see funds quickly enough, they just liquidate the position, regardless of price, which of course drives the price lower.

Really crappy set of internal controls and intraperiod accounting however.

Somebody has some 'splaining to do.