Rogue trader to cost SocGen $7bn

This guy makes Nick Leeson look like an amateur. I just cant believe that the guy acted on his own. Whether he acted on his own or with the knowledge of the bank officials it is an appalling state of affairs for such a big institutions. Where were the internal controls?

Rogue trader to cost SocGen $7bn

French bank Societe Generale says it has uncovered “massive” fraud by a Paris-based trader which resulted in a loss of 4.9bn euros ($7.1bn; £3.7bn).
The bank said the fraud was based on simple transactions, but concealed by “sophisticated and varied techniques”.
It also announced fresh losses of 2.05bn euros related to the sub-prime mortgage crisis in the US.
The losses are four times greater than those made by Nick Leeson, the rogue trader who brought down Barings Bank.
Leeson was sentenced to six-and-a-half years in jail.

‘A daily occurrence’

Speaking to the BBC, Leeson said he was not shocked that the latest fraud had taken place - only its scale.
“Rogue trading is probably a daily occurrence within the financial markets,” he said.
“What shocked me was the size. I never for one moment believed it would get to this degree of magnitude, this degree of loss.”
Societe Generale’s shares, which were suspended in the morning, lost 3.6% when they resumed trading.

‘Alone’

According to Financial Times newspaper’s Alphaville website, the trader’s name is Jerome Kerviel, a 31-year-old trader who worked in the bank’s Delta One products team in Paris.
Societe Generale declined to comment on the report.

But the bank did confirm that the trader was a Frenchman in his 30s who joined the bank in 2000 and earned a salary and bonus of less than 100,000 euros.
He was responsible for betting on the markets’ future performance, bank executives said.
“I’m convinced he acted alone,” said Jean-Pierre Mustier, chief executive of the corporate and investment banking division, who interviewed the trader after the fraud was uncovered.
Societe Generale said the trader had taken what it called “massive fraudulent directional positions in 2007 and 2008 beyond his limited authority”.
Executives said the trader may not have sought personal gain from the fraudulent deals.
The fraud is an extraordinary echo of the rogue trader, Nick Leeson, who caused the collapse of Barings Bank in 1995, says BBC business correspondent Nils Blythe.
But the losses uncovered by Barings bosses totalled just £860m - about a quarter of the amount lost by Societe Generale.
‘Secret trade’

The bank, one of France’s largest, will need to seek 5.5bn euros in new capital to offset the losses.
But it said it would still make a profit of 600m to 800m euros for 2007, despite the blow to its balance sheet.
The bank said the trader responsible for the fraud had “in-depth knowledge of the control procedures resulting from this former employment in the middle-office”.
“The transactions which involved the fraud were simple - taking a position on shares rising - but hidden using extremely sophisticated and varied techniques,” chief executive Daniel Bouton said in a letter to the bank’s customers.
The bank said that the trader had confessed to the fraud and was being dismissed. His managers were to leave the bank as well.
“I am sorry but I have a hard time buying the fact that a trader was able to set up a ‘secret trade’ of 4.9 billion without anybody finding out,” said Ion-Marc Valhi at Amas Bank.
Frederic Hamm, fund manager at Agilis Gestion, believes that the fraud “impacts the reputation of the bank”.
Mr Bouton offered his resignation but it was rejected by the board, the bank said.
Richard Fuld, the chairman of Lehman Brothers, told BBC News in Davos that “nothing stuns me, nothing really surprises me these days.”
‘Unprecedented event’
The bank’s losses have seriously dented its profits for 2007.
The company will announce its full year results on February 21, and it said that it expects its 2007 net income to be in the range of 600m-800m euros.
Shares in Societe Generale have fallen by nearly 50% in the past six months.
Societe Generale is also going to raise 5.5bn euros through a capital increase “to strengthen its capital base”.
Meanwhile, another French bank, BNP Paribas, said that “it has not revealed any loss of item that would justify any particular warning to the market”.
Gilles Glicenstein, BNP Paribas Investment Partners chief executive, suggested that “there is still some information missing to understand what happened” at Societe Generale.
“Because the scale of the fraud is so large, there must be a complex explanation… For Societe Generale, it’s an unprecedented event,” he added.
Mr Glicenstein also said it was not good news for banks in general, as “it can create doubt”.
“In other periods, this type of news was hidden, but today, there is a tendency to reveal everything and maybe it’s by revealing everything that confidence can return,” he said.
French Prime Minister Francois Fillon said that Societe Generale “has taken serious measures to cope with the situation”.
“I note too that the Bank of France has indicated that there is no reason to have any worries about the health of this bank and I am happy with that,” he added.

Re: Rogue trader to cost SocGen $7bn

**Rogue Flight: Societe Generale’s Kerviel Tags Leeson
**
Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) – A rogue trader on the run. A storied bank in turmoil. Shareholders left to ask what happened.
More than a decade after former Barings Plc trader Nick Leeson provoked a worldwide manhunt with $1.4 billion in losses, the script has become familiar at modern financial institutions where traders can make fortunes on complex instruments their bosses may not understand.
Jerome Kerviel, 31, who was blamed by Societe Generale SA yesterday for causing a 4.9 billion-euro ($7.2 billion) trading loss, the largest in banking history, is at least the seventh individual singled out for unauthorized trading since 1994. Some hid, or obstructed investigators. Most were jailed.
It's yet another argument why you want to have all derivatives trading in standardized instruments that are exchange-traded,'' said Martin Mayer, a guest scholar at the Brookings Institution in Washington who has written more than a dozen books on finance. Anything else is asking for a lot of trouble, and it will keep coming back.‘’
When Leeson, then 28, went missing from Barings’s Singapore office in February 1995, the story of how a single trader brought down a 233-year-old British merchant bank caused a sensation. The memoir Leeson wrote while serving 3 1/2 years in jail, Rogue Trader,'' was made into a film starring Ewan McGregor. Since then, financial institutions including Sumitomo Corp., Daiwa Bank and Allied Irish Banks Plc have been burned by unauthorized trading, causing billions of dollars in losses. Trading blowups are so frequent that Leeson, who now lives in Ireland, fields calls through an agent to dissect the latest financial scandals. Paid to Talk He will conduct two paid-for interviews on the subject of Societe Generale, a spokesman for Leeson told Agence France Presse yesterday. Leeson also spoke with the British Broadcasting Corp. I think rogue trading is probably a daily occurrence amongst the financial markets,‘’ the BBC quoted Leeson as saying. You're still looking at a situation where the systems and controls aren't good enough.'' Paris-based Societe Generale, France's second-largest bank by market value, said Kerviel set up secret positions that went beyond permitted limits on futures linked to European stock indexes. In a letter on the bank's Web site, Societe Generale Chairman Daniel Bouton said the trades were hidden through extremely sophisticated and varied techniques.‘’
Low Profile
Little is known yet about Kerviel. Management des Operations de Marche, a business school in Lyon, lists him as a 2000 graduate. A photo in the bank’s staff directory shows him as dark-haired and clean-cut, with a somber expression.
Very quiet and a loner,'' Yves Messarovitch, a spokesman for Societe Generale at Image 7, said of Kerviel. He had made his dream of becoming a trader come true.‘’
Bank of France Governor Christian Noyer told reporters at a briefing in Paris that the trader suspected of causing the losses had fled. Elisabeth Meyer, a lawyer for Kerviel, said he didn’t report for work after being dismissed by the bank but is available to investigators, AFP reported.
The bank said Kerviel didn’t enrich himself from the trades, which began in early 2007. He began working at Societe Generale in 2000 and made a salary and bonus of less than 100,000 euros a year, it said.
By its nature, trading tends to attract competitive people who take risks and push limits, Mayer said.
I didn't set out to rob a bank,'' former Daiwa trader Toshihide Iguchi told Time magazine in a 1997 interview at a prison in Pennsylvania, where he was serving a four-year sentence for fraud and falsifying documents. Closings in U.S. Tokyo-based Daiwa in 1995 was forced to shut its U.S. branches after disclosing a $1.1 billion loss from 11 years of unauthorized trading by Iguchi, its chief New York government bond trader. Iguchi, born in Kobe, Japan, had studied psychology at Southwest Missouri State University in Springfield, Missouri, and earlier worked in Daiwa's back office. To me, it was only a violation of internal rules,‘’ Iguchi told Time. I think all traders have a tendency to fall into the same trap. You always have a way of recovering the loss.'' A year later, Sumitomo disclosed a $2.6 billion loss on unauthorized copper trades. The Japanese firm blamed its chief copper trader, Yasuo Hamanaka, who was known as Mr. Copper’’ in the markets because of his aggressive trading. Hamanaka was sentenced to eight years in prison in 1998. He was released in 2005.
In an interview that year with Bloomberg News at his two- story house in Kawasaki, near Tokyo, Hamanaka said he was amazed'' at today's high prices for copper and wanted to go back to work. Prison Term John Rusnak, a Baltimore-based trader for Allied Irish Banks, is serving 7 1/2 years in prison for his role in amassing and hiding $691 million of losses over more than five years. Allied Irish Banks discovered the losses in 2002, and sold the Allfirst Financial unit where Rusnak worked to M&T Bank Corp. of Buffalo, New York. Leeson moved to Galway to live with his Irish wife five years ago, after completing a degree in psychology in London. He is now chief executive officer of Galway United football club, which competes in Ireland's Premier Division. Leeson supplements his income with dinner speeches and conference appearances. He wrote a commentary for the Irish Independent newspaper yesterday warning that the financial meltdown triggered by the U.S. subprime crisis will spread. The really worrying fact is that we probably have not seen the end of the carnage,‘’ Leeson wrote.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=aqoc.1Q8MpGI&refer=home .

Re: Rogue trader to cost SocGen $7bn

Ehsan, can you pls merge with this

http://www.paklinks.com/gs/showthread.php?t=275879

I already provided my pearls of wisdom over there, on this matter. :slight_smile: