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    #13
    #3. Enjoy. More to come when you have
    digested some of this. Pars

    In early 2008, MF Global broker Evan Dooley
    found his way around the company's trading limit
    controls and managed to lose $141.5 million
    trading the wheat market. The episode was a
    blow to the market's confidence in MF Global just
    as the company was scrambling to refinance a
    $1.4 billion bridge loan that it took out in
    conjunction with its initial public offering.

    To deal with the bridge loan, MF Global needed
    capital, but it also needed to regain the market's
    confidence. At the time that Flowers invested, MF
    Global was leveraged at 39-to-1 -- as compared
    to 24-to-1 at Lehman Brothers prior to its
    bankruptcy -- with nearly $19 billion of its
    financing coming through repurchase
    agreements, a type of short-term borrowing that
    financial companies use. More than $8 billion of
    those repos could be pulled in 24 hours or less.
    For most publicly traded companies, market
    confidence is a nice luxury; for MF Global, it was
    a must for survival.

    Luckily for MF Global, Chris Flowers brought both
    money and market confidence. Flowers, through
    the J.C. Flowers II investment fund, agreed to
    invest a minimum of $150 million -- and up to
    $300 million -- in MF Global via convertible
    preferred shares that paid an annual 6%
    dividend.
    And though he may not have quite the brand
    equity of Warren Buffett or George Soros, to
    many on Wall Street an investment from Flowers
    is a very big deal. In fact, Flowers is so respected
    in the financial world that in 2008 he was called
    on to be a key player in sorting out the industry
    in the very depths of the meltdown, including
    acting as banker during Bank of America's
    (NYSE: BAC  ) ill-fated acquisition of Merrill
    Lynch. Even here at The Motley Fool,
    insurerEnstar Group (Nasdaq: ESGR  ) remains
    a recommendation of the Global Gains
    newsletter, largely due to the presence of J.C.
    Flowers' ownership stake and the deal-making
    prowess of Chris Flowers.

    The confidence boost from the Flowers
    investment appeared to pay off quickly for MF
    Global as the company was able to secure
    further funding a month later, including a $450
    million financing commitment from a bank
    syndicate.

    As good as the Flowers investment was for MF
    Global, though, the timing and nature of the
    investment was also great for Flowers. Rather
    than waging a rancorous proxy campaign to gain
    a board presence -- a tactic of many hedge fund
    managers that often puts them at odds with the
    board -- Flowers was a welcomed outside
    investor and a well-respected name in the world
    of finance. That made it far more likely that
    strategy and hiring recommendations from Chris
    Flowers and the J.C. Flowers-appointed board
    member, David Schamis, would find very
    receptive ears on the MF Global board.


    Changes happened quickly following the J.C.
    Flowers investment. In early June, the former
    CEO of the Chicago Board of Trade, Bernard
    Dan, was brought in as the chief operating officer
    of North America to help whip the company back
    into shape.
    Dan was quickly promoted to global COO and
    then, just four months after joining the company,
    he was named CEO. It was a relief for many
    investors as they'd been clamoring for CEO
    Kevin Davis to leave. In the short time that the
    company had been trading on public markets,
    investors had seen the stock clobbered in large
    part due to sloppy internal controls under Davis'
    watch. One particularly blunt shareholder said, "I
    think Davis should be taken out and shot." 

    The market provided its stamp of approval by
    sending MF Global's stock skyrocketing 45%
    following the announcement.
    The environment wasn't kind to MF Global, but
    Dan appeared to be taking reasonable steps to
    expand the company's business, while
    simultaneously cutting back unprofitable areas
    and continuing to tighten controls. 

    Early efforts had the company shutting down its
    Western Canada operations, applying for primary
    dealer status, and expanding its operations in
    Japan in an effort to gain a stronger foothold in
    Asia. During the summer and fall of 2009, the
    company went on a hiring spree, bringing in a
    small army of new executives including the
    positions of general counsel, head of European
    government bond trading, head of repo sales,
    chief economist, global head of fixed income,
    and COO of North America.

    If you were looking for the quintessential Wall
    Street banker, you couldn't do much better than
    J. Christopher Flowers. A Harvard graduate and
    chess whiz, Flowers, with his eggish head,
    thinning hair, and glasses, fit the finance-wonk
    caricature to a T.

    But it was Flowers' razor-sharp intellect and
    comfort with the complex numbers involved in
    financial-institution deal making that made him a
    standout banker at Goldman Sachs. His rise
    through the ranks of the then-private partnership
    was nothing less than meteoric; he was named a
    partner at 31 -- the youngest ever at the time. 
    Internal politics helped cut Flowers' career short
    at Goldman, but there were plenty of
    opportunities available to a former Goldman
    Sachs superstar. His first major splash out of
    Goldman would prove to be a career-making
    deal as he elbowed his way through the
    inhospitable Japanese bureaucracy to secure a
    role in the rescue of Long-Term Credit Bank
    (now Shinsei). Flowers finagled a sweetheart
    arrangement that relied heavily on Japanese
    government guarantees and allowed the
    company to reintroduce itself to the public
    markets. Private-equity leading light David
    Rubenstein of Carlyle hailed the transaction as
    "the most profitable private-equity deal of all
    time." Flowers reportedly walked away with $1
    billion.

    From there, he bucked the tough times of 2002
    and raised $900 million for the first fund under
    the J.C. Flowers & Co. shingle. With Flowers still
    very much riding on his reputation at Goldman
    and the grand-slam Shinsei deal, the second
    J.C. Flowers fund closed in 2006 after raising an
    impressive $7 billion. In 2006, the 48-year-old
    nabbed a spot on the Forbes 400 list with an
    estimated net worth of $1.2 billion.
    Flowers was off to the races investing the $7
    billion in capital from J.C. Flowers II. The fund
    made major commitments to Dutch bank NIBC
    Holdings, Germany's HSH Nordbank and Hypo
    Real Estate, and the now-public equity of Shinsei
    Bank. Even though Flowers was making many of
    these investments in the face of a fearsome
    global financial meltdown, his confidence in
    himself and his ability to deliver for his investors
    was unwavering. 

    In June of 2008 -- following the JPMorgan Chase
    (NYSE: JPM  ) rescue of Bear Stearns, the Bank
    of America bailout of Countrywide Financial, and
    Britain's nationalization of Northern Rock --
    Flowers told investors in the J.C. Flowers II fund
    that they were looking at "the Super Bowl of
    investment" and that it was "no time to be sitting
    in the bleachers." He maintained that "every
    single investment will make money," proclaiming
    the eventual internal rate of return, or IRR -- a
    measure of annualized returns -- of the fund
    would be 23%.

    But the wheels were already starting to come off.
    While investors waited for Flowers to produce
    some more of his Shinsei magic, many of J.C.
    Flowers II's major investments were floundering.
    HSH Nordbank sustained massive losses and
    eventually had to take a government bailout. The
    trusts that held J.C. Flowers' stake in HSH
    declared bankruptcy in early 2010. The German
    government was likewise forced to rescue Hypo
    Real Estate as it turned into an even bigger
    disaster. Germany's Special Financial Market
    Stabilization Funds (Sonderfonds
    Finanzmarktstabilisierung, or SoFFin) stepped in
    with a hefty bailout that paved the way for a full
    nationalization of Hypo, forcing Flowers to sell
    the fund's stake at a fire-sale price.

    Flowers narrowly missed scoring a big win with
    NIBC when Iceland's Kaupthing Bank pulled out
    of a proposed deal to buy the bank for $4.4
    billion in early 2008. The bank eked out a profit in
    2010, but its pre-tax income was less than a third
    of what it was in 2005. Meanwhile, Shinsei,
    which in many ways made Flowers' career, only
    exacerbated the funds' problems as its share
    price cratered.

    As if that wasn't enough, Flowers' reputation as a
    banker was called into question as well. Bank of
    America absorbed gargantuan losses thanks to
    its acquisition of Merrill Lynch. When the deal
    was struck, B of A's CEO at the time, Ken Lewis,
    praised Flowers' work on the deal, emphasizing
    that Flowers' team did "very, very extensive" due
    diligence.

    In its 2009 letter to shareholders, Enstar Group, a
    J.C. Flowers portfolio company and an investor in
    the J.C. Flowers funds, disclosed that it had
    written off $61.6 million of the $96.9 million that it
    had committed to J.C. Flowers II due to the
    fund's poor performance. According to the most
    recent data from Preqin, a leading source of data
    on alternative-asset managers, the IRR for J.C.
    Flowers II has been -29% versus 6% for other
    funds in its benchmark group.

    Those disastrous returns put Flowers' first big
    fund in the fourth quartile of its benchmark group,
    a place where asset manager careers go to die.

    By early 2010, it was clear that more change was
    needed at MF Global. To be sure, in some ways,
    the company was moving in the right direction.
    The new people and tighter compliance that
    Bernie Dan brought in kept the company out of
    the news without any repeats of the Dooley
    fiasco. 

    However, the bottom line showed that the broker
    was still far from healthy. In March 2010 the
    company reported an $89 million net loss -- its
    fifth straight quarterly loss. 

    It appeared that expansion was no longer
    enough for the broker to prosper. Commissions
    had been under pressure for years. The Federal
    Reserve's efforts to pull the economy out of its
    tailspin meant unheard-of lows in interest rates,
    which helped crunch what the company could
    earn on brokerage deposits. And atCME (NYSE:
    CME  ) , where MF Global did much of its trading,
    average daily volume slipped 20% between 2008
    and 2009 while the total notional value traded on
    its exchanges plunged by a third.
    Meanwhile, it was increasingly looking like
    Flowers would have to pull a rabbit out of his hat
    to salvage J.C. Flowers II and his reputation. And
    it was all unraveling as Flowers was attempting
    to raise another$7 billion for J.C. Flowers III.

    Aside from solidifying the suspicion that Chris
    Flowers was a one-hit wonder who got lucky with
    Shinsei, a fizzling-out brokerage firm certainly
    wasn't going to be of any help. On the other
    hand, the turnaround of a revered name in the
    brokerage business might help Flowers reclaim
    his mojo. Or, perhaps even better, he could find
    a way to set a turnaround in motion that would
    transform the broker into something much larger -
    - and much more profitable.

    Flowers reaches out to a friend
    Except to the extent that a floundering economy
    soured New Jersey voters, the fact that Jon
    Corzine lost his first gubernatorial re-election bid
    right at the same time that MF Global was
    desperately in need of a new direction was
    largely coincidence. The fact that Flowers
    reached out to Corzine to provide that new
    direction is, however, no coincidence.

    The two finance titans had a relationship
    stretching back to Goldman Sachs when Flowers
    was the star financial institution's banker and
    Corzine was the firm's chairman. 

    Flowers played Corzine's right-hand man in the
    chairman's crusade to take the company public --
    a push that was eventually successful, but cost
    both men their jobs. After Goldman, they
    remained friends: Corzine tapped Flowers to
    manage some of his fortune while he was in
    politics, and the duo rubbed elbows as fellow
    board members for the New York Philharmonic.

    According to reports at the time, it took just
    seven days from the time that Flowers first
    reached out to Corzine about the job for his pal
    to sign on the dotted line, agreeing to step into
    the CEO and chairman roles at the broker. 

    MF Global gave Corzine $1.5 million in salary, a
    $1.5 million signing bonus, and a $3 million
    target bonus for his first year. Showing just how
    much faith Flowers had in his former boss, he
    also made Corzine an operating partner at J.C.
    Flowers and gave him a 3.5% carried interest in
    J.C. Flowers III -- a significant share of the
    investment profits that the private equity fund
    was entitled to. The latter arrangement had the
    potential to be far more lucrative for Corzine than
    his pay from MF Global.

    And, with that, Bernie Dan became part of MF
    Global's history with little more than a mention
    that he was resigning from MF Global "for
    personal reasons."
    But there was no time for a teary farewell for Dan
    -- this was an exciting time for MF Global. It now
    not only had a Wall Street superstar standing
    behind the company, it had a Wall Street
    superstar -- perhaps of even greater proportions -
    - calling the shots internally. And soon after
    Corzine's joining, MF Global also got a shiny new
    turbocharged strategy to target big profits.

    Though Corzine was unable to win the votes of
    the citizens of New Jersey, the stock market
    voters came out in his favor, boosting MF
    Global's stock 10% the day after the hiring
    announcement. The stock continued to rise soon
    after, tacking on 27% over the next month. It was
    a show of blind faith in a leader who had been
    out of finance for more than a decade and had
    no track record of success in a turnaround effort.
    It was a show of faith that would ultimately prove
    dead wrong.

    Comment


      #14
      you guys ought to deal with a cattle buyer and then you'll find out what shady means.

      Comment


        #15
        So in essence ALL commodities produced by farmers and ranchers are subject to pricing determined by GAMBLERS who use the financial trading world as their playground where they make the rules and interpret them as they please.

        How precious is that?

        Comment


          #16
          Institutions make rules to grab wealth. Kings
          routinely tithed you into poverty; governments
          declared war on you, formally and killed you.
          And in the good old days Wil, I'd don my horned
          helmet, hop a boat, and slice your cousins to bits
          as I dragged you out the door by your hair.

          But wait, there's hope. Rule of law slows down
          the institutions. The Internet retards governments
          because now the world can read, and be
          honest, you'd volunteer. pars

          Comment


            #17
            #4


            While Jon Corzine's resume may have made him
            look like a tremendous asset for a company like
            MF Global (OTC: MFGLQ), he was
            unquestionably the wrong man for the job. The
            spectacular implosion of the firm was almost
            inevitable from the day that he agreed to take
            over as its CEO.

            In many ways Jon Corzine had reached the
            pinnacles of business and politics. He rose from
            Goldman Sachs' bond desk to lead the division
            and eventually the company. After Goldman, he
            was elected both a U.S. senator and a state
            governor. However, at almost every turn
            Corzine's sky-high ambitions slammed headfirst
            into brick walls.

            At Goldman Sachs, Corzine's bullheadedness,
            particularly with regards to Goldman's initial
            public offering, put him at odds with other key
            players in Goldman's hierarchy, including Henry
            "Hank" Paulson, who would later become the
            U.S. Treasury Secretary. Corzine eventually got
            his way and Goldman hit the public markets, but
            his crusade cost him his job.

            After Goldman, Corzine "won" a spot on the U.S.
            Senate by personally financing the most
            expensive senatorial campaign in history, but his
            policies were so far left that they hit a brick wall
            with the largely Republican-run Senate during his
            term. Corzine spent tens of millions more of his
            own money to win the New Jersey gubernatorial
            election in 2005. He found himself battling the
            back-alley deal culture that often dominates
            Garden State politics, enduring a scandal
            involving the president of New Jersey's largest
            union, presiding over a government shutdown,
            and ending up on the receiving end of the first
            and only attempted recall of a New Jersey
            governor. 

            Ultimately, Corzine lost his first re-election bid in
            a fractious contest with Republican Chris
            Christie.

            When longtime friend J. Christopher Flowers
            called Corzine to discuss the top job at MF
            Global, the decision was a quick and easy one.
            The money was nothing to sneeze at, particularly
            the share of J.C. Flowers & Co.'s profits that
            Flowers offered up by making Corzine an
            operating partner. More importantly for Corzine,
            though, the MF Global job offered a much-
            needed shot at redemption.

            A former Corzine senate staffer told us that the
            senator's staff strongly encouraged him to not run
            for governor in New Jersey. But it was of no use.
            Corzine, he told us, is drawn to "charity cases
            and disasters" and he plowed his way into the
            Garden State's gubernatorial battlefield anyway.

            Since Corzine was being paid millions to run MF
            Global, it's hard to think of it as a charity case --
            but it was certainly a disaster. Though the broker
            had a history that stretched back hundreds of
            years, it had never really found its legs as a
            stand-alone public company after being spun off
            from Man Group. A trading scandal shortly after
            the IPO sent the company reeling, and while a
            confidence-boosting investment from Chris
            Flowers helped temporarily, the global financial
            crisis and an increasingly challenging
            environment for brokers battered the company
            relentlessly.

            Corzine joined at the end of MF Global's fiscal
            fourth quarter -- a quarter in which it lost $89
            million, its fifth straight quarterly loss. And with
            the company levered at 37-to-1, it had the
            definite potential to quickly turn from disaster into
            outright catastrophe.

            In his first quarterly conference call, Corzine
            emphatically declared that the company's "fiscal
            2010 performance … [was] completely
            unacceptable." He continued, "Going forward
            these are not the kinds of results that MF Global
            management will tolerate nor should its
            shareholders." During the same call, Corzine
            subtly hinted at his key thrust for MF Global -- a
            thrust that would eventually be its undoing --
            when he said that he would have the company
            "extend [its] client facilitation efforts to include
            principal risk-taking across most product lines."

            It wasn't until two quarters later, though, that
            Corzine referred to the push as an effort to turn
            MF Global into a "full-service global investment
            bank."

            In theory, it was brilliant. By itself, the broker
            business was under pressure and unlikely to
            suddenly turn around and become wildly
            profitable. Looking back to the fiscal year that
            ended in March 2007 -- the last full year that MF
            Global reported a profit -- the company's
            operating earnings as a percentage of revenue
            was roughly 8%. But at Corzine's former
            employer, Goldman Sachs, operating profits were
            more than 25% of revenue for roughly the same
            period.

            There was much work to do, but MF Global's
            brokerage business provided a perfect foundation
            to build an investment bank around. 

            The brokerage operations that it knew so well
            could provide a base of business. Plus, it put the
            company in many of the right places and in touch
            with many of the right people to expand the
            company in multiple new, more profitable
            directions.

            If Chris Flowers was every bit the image of a
            Wall Street investment banker, Jon Corzine was
            none of it. Born in a small town in Illinois, his
            father was a farmer and part-time insurance
            salesman and his mother was an elementary
            school teacher. The family lived modestly and his
            parents never had a credit card.
            Corzine went to public school and spent his high
            school years focused on football and basketball.
            He learned well-worn middle class lessons like
            "You've got to work for everything you do," and
            "When you get beat, you've got to get up." He
            went to the state college and married his high-
            school sweetheart.

            Even after rising to the top rungs of finance and
            politics, Corzine never fit the mold. He was
            known for his thick beard and fuzzy sweaters,
            both anomalies in the clean-shaven, pinstripe-
            suit culture of Wall Street. One former staffer
            from Corzine's senate days said it wasn't
            unheard of to see the senator in shoes with holes
            in them.

            In conversations with those that worked with him,
            "friendly" and "approachable" are words that
            came up often. Former MF Global trader Michael
            Fitzgerald, who joined the firm in 2007, said that
            while he'd seen former CEO Bernard Dan "once
            or twice," Corzine was very present and regularly
            engaging employees. Another former MF Global
            employee said that Corzine knew a lot of lower-
            level people by name and was constantly
            "walking around, smiling, and saying hello to
            people."

            But while much of Corzine's upbringing and
            comportment may have made him an unlikely
            financial master of the universe, financial risk-
            taking may have simply run in his blood. The
            driving force behind Corzine's father's aversion to
            financial risk was the fact that Corzine's
            grandfather had levered up his personal balance
            sheet ahead of the Great Depression, at one
            point owning 2,500 acres of farmland and a bank.
            When the downturn hit, the family lost everything.

            All signs point to Jon inheriting his grandfather's
            drive for success through risk-taking. In The
            Partnership, author Charles Ellis describes
            Corzine as "a strongly intuitive risk taker and a
            relentless trader." In William Cohan's Money and
            Power, Cohan notes that at Goldman, Mark
            Winkelman was appointed as co-head of fixed
            income "to tame some of Corzine's more
            reckless trading instincts." Meanwhile, a former
            Goldman Sachs partner that worked with Corzine
            noted, "Everything to him, if it was a position, if it
            was a hundred, he liked it better at two hundred
            and he liked three hundred better than two
            hundred."

            In fact, at Goldman there may have been deep
            concerns even as the partnership at Goldman
            tapped Corzine to run the entire company. In
            Money and Power, Cohan writes, "The fact
            remained that Goldman had selected as its new
            leader the very person who had just presided
            over a complete meltdown in Goldman's fixed-
            income business and who, as a result, never fully
            had the trust and faith of the firm's investment
            bankers."

            As if his thirst for risk wasn't troubling enough,
            Corzine coupled that with a juggernaut's drive to
            get his way when he thought he was right. As
            former Goldman Sachs Vice Chairman Bob Hurst
            put it, "It's not that he always thinks that he's
            right; it's that he knows that he's right. That's
            dangerous." A senate staffer that spoke on
            background echoed that sentiment, saying that
            when it came to challenging Corzine, "You're not
            going to talk him out of it if the numbers are on
            his side."

            Corzine displayed this bullheadedness a great
            many times throughout his career. He was
            pushed out of Goldman Sachs in part because of
            his unrelenting push for a Goldman IPO. But it
            wasn't just that effort. 

            When he decided that Goldman needed to grow
            through a merger, he plowed ahead with
            unilateral meetings with potential merger
            partners, leaving Goldman's executive committee
            out of the process. When participating in the
            coordinated bailout of hedge fund disaster Long-
            Term Capital Management, he put $300 million
            of Goldman's capital on the line even though he'd
            been authorized to commit only $250 million.
            Politically, Corzine's "damn the torpedoes"
            approach was seen early on in the cash-blitz
            approach to his senate campaign. 

            While he was governor of New Jersey, Corzine
            presided over the state's first-ever government
            shutdown, which he ordered as a gambit to get
            the state's legislature to agree to his proposed
            budget, and, in particular, an increase in the
            state's sales tax.

            Corzine's hardheaded nature had serious
            personal consequences as well. He and his wife
            split in 2002 and she later lamented that his
            quest for political power had caused him to leave
            his family behind. And in the wake of a
            devastating auto accident that left the governor in
            critical condition, his chief of staff tacitly
            acknowledged that Corzine often didn't wear his
            seatbelt and added, "Those of you who know
            Governor Corzine know that he's not always
            amenable to suggestion."

            In hindsight, it's hard to overstate how wrong Jon
            Corzine was for the CEO role at MF Global. MF
            Global was a company in turmoil. There was a
            void in stable leadership, a void in clear direction,
            and, thanks to the merger with Refco and the
            significant turnover in the years that followed, an
            undoubted void in stable culture of any sort, let
            alone risk management. A former MF Global
            employee described the company as operating
            out of "silos" that were essentially "different
            groups with different cultures." Former MF Global
            trader Mike Fitzgerald similarly described it as
            "individual fiefdoms," though he noted that it's not
            necessarily an unusual thing for an older
            commodities trading firm.

            What MF Global needed was a conservative,
            plotting CEO, perhaps an executive seasoned in
            turnarounds or restructurings. With the bottom
            line under water, leverage at extreme levels, and
            the market already looking askance at the firm,
            there was little room for error.

            What MF Global got was a growth-obsessed risk
            taker who was generally unwilling to build any
            sort of consensus before barreling ahead with
            whatever course of action he thought was best.
            At Goldman Sachs, the approach earned him the
            ire of Hank Paulson and other powerful partners
            at the firm. At MF Global, it was tantamount to
            allowing a known arsonist run wild in a munitions
            shed.

            The way that Corzine approached the strategic
            transition was immediately revealing. While
            turning a brokerage into a "full-service global
            investment bank" could mean many things --
            adding advisory services, asset management,
            prime brokerage, etc. -- Corzine made the initial
            push in principal transactions. That is the slice of
            a "full-service investment bank" that could
            potentially produce profits the quickest -- but was
            also by far the riskiest.

            A story from a former MF Global insider is telling:
            A younger trader made an error in entering a
            trade and caught it a short time later. Traders
            focused on executing trades are generally taught
            early on to cut an error short immediately
            whether the error is in their favor or not. In this
            case the error was in MF Global's favor and
            Corzine found out about it. He told the young
            trader to "let it ride."

            Meanwhile, Corzine set to work recreating the
            employee base to support his approach. Many of
            the existing traders were uncomfortable with the
            idea of taking on principal positions and so
            Corzine started bringing in a new batch of traders
            -- through selective hires as well as a freshly
            instituted training program -- that would be more
            willing to take on risk. He also hired a young,
            hotshot hedge-fund punter to build out the
            company's principal strategies desk.

            The upper levels of the executive suite saw
            wholesale change as well. In the fall of 2010,
            Bradley Abelow -- who worked under Corzine at
            Goldman and was later his chief of staff while he
            was the governor of New Jersey -- was brought
            in as the company's chief operating officer. Chief
            Risk Officer Michael Roseman, who reportedly
            questioned Corzine's approach at times, was
            replaced by Michael Stockman in January of
            2011. Stockman was previously the North
            American chief risk officer for UBS (NYSE: UBS  
            ) , the Swiss investment bank that absorbed
            some of the worst losses during the financial
            crisis. 

            Two months later, the well-seasoned chief
            financial officer of the company, Randy
            MacDonald, was moved elsewhere in the
            company and the young, less experienced Chief
            Accounting Officer Henri Steenkamp was
            promoted.

            In the fiscal fourth-quarter earnings conference
            call, Corzine hailed the changes as "upgrading in
            those areas where we recognize the opportunity
            to align staff to strategy." That's a nifty way to
            put it, but what Corzine was really doing was
            building a management team that would let him
            do whatever he wanted -- particularly when it
            came to risky trading decisions.

            With a close relationship that reached back to
            their days at Goldman, it'd be no stretch to call
            Abelow a Corzine crony. The woes of Stockman's
            previous employer suggest that he may have a
            pretty liberal interpretation of controlling risk. And
            besides, Stockman's position was set up so that
            he reported to Abelow. And as for Steenkamp,
            while he may have been a competent candidate
            for CFO, what's a 34-year-old going to say to the
            former chairman -- and, at one time, CFO -- of
            Goldman Sachs?

            With Corzine molding the decision makers at MF
            Global in his own image, it appeared increasingly
            unlikely that there would be anybody at the
            company that would challenge Corzine's views.
            This may not have been anything new for
            Corzine. In Money and Power, William Cohan
            writes that Corzine's second in command, Hank
            Paulson, "believed Corzine surrounded himself
            with his cronies, who told him what he wanted to
            hear."

            That left only the board to pull the reins on
            Corzine. Corzine happened to be a board  
            member himself and J.C. Flowers controlled a
            second board seat through David Schamis. As
            for the rest of the directors, Corzine showed his
            willingness to play hardball with them, at one
            point threatening to resign if the board didn't go
            along with his strategy. 

            In testimony in front of the House Committee on
            Agriculture, Corzine described the incident as
            "offering" to resign if the board had lost
            confidence in him, but surely a savvy player like
            Corzine understood the crippling market reaction
            that would have followed if he had suddenly left
            the company.

            Even as Corzine was installing an executive team
            that was unlikely to challenge him, in many ways
            there appeared to be less reason for anybody to
            want to challenge him. In his first quarter as
            CEO, the company reported a small profit. The
            company would go on to produce profits on an
            operating basis for four of the first five quarters
            that he was at the helm. 

            On the balance sheet, total leverage was reduced
            from 37-to-1 when Corzine started to 30-to-1 by
            the end of June 2011. In early 2011, the
            company was also named a Federal Reserve
            primary dealer, a huge coup for the company that
            would potentially open up new business lines as
            well as major new customer relationships.

            But if things were starting to look better from the
            outside, there were turbulent waters churning
            beneath the surface. Behind the scenes, the
            "relentless trader" in Jon Corzine came out. The
            principal trading specialist he'd hired had left, and
            it appeared that Corzine gave himself the
            unspoken anointing of "CEO trader" as he built a
            massive trading position that would eventually
            lead to the complete undoing of MF Global.

            Comment


              #18
              #5


              #5

              When he got up on the morning of Oct. 25, Jon
              Corzine knew he had a tough day ahead of him. 

              Beginning at 7:30 a.m. Eastern time he would be
              presiding over a conference call to discuss MF
              Global's results for the second fiscal quarter
              ending Sept. 30. The numbers weren't good, and
              on the previous day credit ratings agency
              Moody's had downgraded the broker to one
              notch above junk status and warned that the
              rating was under review for a possible additional
              downgrade. 

              Part of Moody's rationale pertained to a huge
              trade involving the government bonds of five
              troubled European nations -- a trade Corzine
              himself had "strongly advocated" and that he was
              now managing personally.

              Eight days prior, The Wall Street Journal
              reported that one of the firm's regulators, the
              Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, insisted
              in August on an increase in the amount of capital
              at MF Global's U.S. broker-dealer subsidiary
              specifically in relation to that very trade. As
              Corzine later recounted in Congress, "Some of
              MF Global's counterparties decided to reduce
              their exposure to the company, requiring some
              adjustment in our financing." 

              Corzine didn't know it yet, but the article had
              sealed the firm's fate; the attention it received set
              in motion a series of events that would end two
              weeks later in a bankruptcy filing.

              FINRA was also demanding that MF Global
              include a specific disclosure concerning the
              European sovereign debt trade, known as "repo-
              to-maturity," in the earnings press release that
              would go out just before the start of the call. The
              disclosure figured prominently in the release and
              included a table breaking down the $6.3 billion
              exposure between five countries: Italy, Spain,
              Belgium, Portugal, and Ireland.

              With the table indicating Italy as the largest
              country exposure -- half the total amount -- the
              timing of the release was awful. The European
              sovereign debt crisis had been the primary focus
              of markets worldwide through much of the
              summer. In the early hours of Oct. 25, while New
              York was asleep, six hours ahead in Rome talks
              between Silvio Berlusconi and his coalition
              government partners failed to produce an
              agreement. The Italian government was veering
              toward collapse.

              Although MF Global's public filings contained
              detailed information on the positions and their
              risk, no one had really paid it much attention until
              The Wall Street Journal published their article.
              With increasing urgency, investors were asking
              themselves what exactly a repo-to-maturity was,
              and how much could MF Global lose on them?

              Brought in to turn MF Global around, Corzine was
              now under immense pressure, and he knew he
              could expect some probing questions on the call.
              If he could just ride out the trade until its last
              maturity in December 2012! At maturity, the
              bonds MF Global bought and simultaneously
              used as collateral would be redeemed at par and
              any unrealized losses due to fluctuating bond
              prices would revert to zero. Corzine was not
              unaccustomed to pushing high-stakes situations
              to the limit; he had pulled through two similar
              ones at Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS  ) .

              In 1986, Corzine had been called back to duty on
              a trading desk to take on the responsibility for
              managing a massive bet in the U.S. Treasury
              bond market which threatened to saddle
              Goldman Sachs with $150 million in losses (this
              was back when $150 million was real money and
              Goldman was a much smaller firm). After five
              agonizing and intense months -- during which
              Corzine reported to the management committee
              every other day -- the trade began to move his
              way and he ended up turning a $10 million profit.

              In 1994, Goldman had a horrendous year. The
              firm's proprietary traders -- for which Corzine was
              responsible as co-head of fixed income -- had
              made a huge bet on interest rates and they were
              mowed down when the Fed unexpectedly raised
              rates in a series of hikes. Corzine and the other
              co-head, Mark Winkelman, had sanctioned the
              trade, which racked up hundreds of millions of
              dollars in losses over a period stretching several
              months. Many of Goldman's partners became
              genuinely concerned about the longevity of their
              capital account, to a point where 40 partners left
              at the end of 1994 -- much more than normal
              attrition.

              Despite this, even Stephen Friedman, the senior
              partner of the firm, couldn't get Corzine to reduce
              the size of the positions. Corzine was confident
              and refused to countenance any doubt. "The
              worse it appears, the better the reality," he said.
              "The probability is strong that if we hang on, and
              even increase our position, this can be a real
              winner."

              In one respect, however, Corzine's present
              situation was very different from those he had
              experienced at Goldman Sachs. Back in 1994,
              Corzine was only required to justify his positions
              to a senior partner (Goldman was still a private
              partnership then). Facing the scrutiny of the
              public markets -- including analysts, institutional
              shareholders, and regulators -- was a different
              ballgame altogether, with a very different set of
              rules. He certainly wasn't used to people telling
              him what to divulge and when.

              While media accounts often suggest MF Global's
              trade is "complex" or "sophisticated," the basic
              idea behind a repo-to-maturity transaction is very
              simple. It's comparable to buying a rental
              property in order to pocket the excess of the
              rental income over the cost of the mortgage. With
              a repo-to-maturity, MF Global borrowed money
              in order to buy European bonds and put the
              bonds up as collateral on the loan (just as a
              house is collateral on its mortgage). The point of
              the trade was to collect the difference between
              the yield on the bonds and the borrowing rate.

              Repo-to-maturity refers to the fact that the term
              of the loan coincides with the maturity of the
              bond, at which time MF Global receives the face
              value of the bond, which it uses to repay its loan.
              In a textbook version of this trade, with no risk of
              default on the bond and a secure loan, the profits
              you earn are riskless. Of course, the textbook
              version assumes you'll still be alive to complete
              the transaction at maturity. In the real world, for a
              financial firm to stay alive means paying careful
              attention to all manner of things that may have
              nothing whatsoever to do with the trade itself.

              The trade itself was far from risk-free. Corzine
              was heavily focused on the possibility that one or
              several peripheral European countries would
              default on their bonds and he was satisfied that
              this was well mitigated by the European Financial
              Stability Fund, or EFSF. Never mind that the
              EFSF had offered no specific guarantees backing
              Italian or Belgian debt, or that many investors
              were questioning the size of the EFSF,
              particularly in regard to Italy, which has the
              world's third-largest government bond market.

              During the earnings call, Corzine told analysts
              that "the structure of the [European sovereign
              debt repo-to-maturity] essentially eliminates
              market risk," reasoning that any unrealized loss
              on the bonds would vanish at maturity once the
              bonds were redeemed at their par value.

              If we return to our housing analogy, let's imagine
              you've arranged at the outset of your housing
              investment to sell the property at a pre-arranged
              price. The sale will occur simultaneously with the
              end of the tenancy and that of your loan.

              In the meantime, you can have the house
              reappraised as often as you like in order to
              establish its value based on current transaction
              values in your neighborhood (for a trading book,
              that process is known as "marking-to-market").
              Remember, however, that you have already
              contracted to sell the house at a set price at the
              end of your ownership period. Provided your
              buyer is reliable, you needn't concern yourself
              with any of the fluctuations in the value of the
              house between the time of its purchase and the
              sale.

              Corzine's reassurance didn't satisfy the analysts
              who were listening closely; they wanted hard
              numbers to make their own assessment. "Henri,
              are you able to break out the 0.7 million [loss in
              the principal trading activity] between market-
              making losses and maybe mark-to-market
              writedowns related to the European sovereign
              portfolio?" asked Howard Chen of Credit Suisse,
              addressing the question to MF Global's CFO,
              Henri Steenkamp.

              "There is zero [loss] related to the European
              sovereign portfolio," Corzine interjected. These
              were his trades and no one was following them
              closer than he was.
              The analysts already had the breakdown of the
              trades by country and by maturity, and Corzine
              had spent quite a bit of time describing the trades
              and their risks during his prepared remarks. "Why
              are we discussing this?" he must have thought to
              himself, "These positions haven't moved and
              even if they had, the losses would vanish at
              maturity."

              The analysts weren't letting up. Roger Freeman
              of Barclays Capital followed Howard Chen.
              Among other points, Roger wanted to know what
              kind of haircut banks were currently requiring on
              the same bonds (the haircut is the discount
              between the face value of the bonds and the
              amount they are willing to lend). Corzine and
              Steenkamp found themselves quoting prices for
              specific European sovereign issues. It's
              completely unheard of for the executive
              management of a broker-dealer to know the
              prices of individual bonds in the firm's inventory.

              Instead of quelling concerns, each new question
              was drawing more attention to the trades and
              raising newones. This was just what Corzine
              wanted to avoid: He understood the risks
              attached to this European sovereign debt
              exposure and he was managing the positions
              personally -- that should have been the end of it
              as far as he was concerned. Corzine felt the
              trades had become a distraction, that they had
              "clouded [investors'] perceptions with respect to
              our other progress."

              You'll have to stick around
              In a very narrow sense, Corzine was right: A
              default on those bonds remains unlikely and
              market risk would have had no impact if MF
              Global had been there to collect at maturity. The
              trade would almost certainly have been profitable;
              unfortunately, the size of the trade itself created
              a material risk that the firm would never see the
              maturity date. In the context of a wider set of
              risks -- earnings volatility, a credit downgrade,
              and liquidity risk, to name but three -- he was
              dangerously wrong.
              Years earlier, Corzine displayed the same rigid,
              compartmentalized thinking under eerily similar
              circumstances. While he was head of the fixed
              income division at Goldman Sachs, he was eager
              to put a large position in farm credit bonds and
              sought approval from the two co-senior partners
              of the firm, Robert Rubin and Stephen Friedman,
              explaining that the expected return was attractive
              and the risk of default was virtually nil as the
              bonds had the implicit backing of the U.S.
              government. The issuer was Farmer Mac, a new
              government agency that has a similar function to
              that of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for
              agricultural and rural properties.
              Impossible or just highly unlikely?
              Rubin and Friedman challenged Corzine, asking
              him what would happen in a crisis scenario in
              which the government declined to stand behind
              Farmer Mac. In his autobiography, In an
              Uncertain World, Rubin recounts:
              "That's silly." Corzine replied. It was
              inconceivable to him that the government would
              not honor its moral obligation, and in a sense he
              was right. But Steve and I didn't want Goldman
              Sachs to cease to exist after 130 years because
              something that we agreed was virtually
              inconceivable actually happened ... the decision
              to limit the risk was right.

              No outright bond default was required to destroy
              MF Global. Corzine was considering the risks of
              the trade -- such as default risk -- as if each one
              were self-contained. In his prepared statement to
              the House Committee on Agriculture on Dec. 8 --
              over a month after the bankruptcy -- he had the
              gall to remark that "as of today, none of the
              foreign debt securities that MF Global used in the
              RTM trades has defaulted or been restructured" -
              - as if that somehow mattered! He couldn't
              imagine that less-prominent risks could band
              together and produce the same result, with
              regulatory risk, business risk, and earnings risk
              combining to force a rating downgrade, thereby
              creating liquidity issues. Worse still, MF Global
              was holding a dangerous combustible perfect for
              igniting that process: leverage.

              MF Global was leveraged to a level that Corzine
              himself had recognized as imprudent. In October
              2010, just prior to his joining the firm, he told
              FinancialTimes in a video interview, "We have to
              be disciplined; we can't go running 30:1 leverage
              ratios on our balance sheet." In fact, that ratio
              was rarely below30:1 during Corzine's tenure. At
              30:1, a 3.5% impairment in the value of a
              financial firm's assets is all it takes to wipe out
              shareholders' equity.
              Leverage has other effects beyond magnifying a
              firm's losses; it also contributes to raising the risk
              of a credit rating downgrade. Ratings agency
              Moody's had told MF Global that it needed to
              manage its leverage ratio down into the 20-times
              range in order for it to keep its Baa2 rating, which
              was on negative watch and had been throughout
              Corzine's tenure.
              When you're at risk of a downgrade, a Baa2
              rating isn't a great place to start from, either. 

              It's "medium grade, may possess some
              speculative characteristics," and "Ba" is below-
              investment grade, i.e., junk status. If you're a
              soap manufacturer, a rating downgrade doesn't
              harm your activity per se; if your business is
              money, on the other hand, peoples' perception of
              your ability to repay your obligations is like the
              oxygen level of your franchise. The lower it
              drops, the more difficult it becomes to operate;
              below a certain level, it's terminal. 

              Under those circumstances, it behooved MF
              Global to manage its relationship with the ratings
              agencies with exceptional care and consideration
              -- they were certainly more important than any
              client. As the former senior partner of Goldman
              Sachs, it must have been difficult to swallow the
              fact that MF Global did business at the pleasure
              of Moody's and Standard & Poor's.

              MF Global had a solid-looking risk management
              organization -- on paper. Its hierarchy of different
              risk committees overseeing every flavor of risk
              (market, credit, liquidity, operational, etc.)
              resembles the one at Goldman Sachs, which is
              the gold standard for risk management on Wall
              Street. However, Corzine -- who "strongly
              endorsed" the trade -- was outside that hierarchy
              since he reported to the board exclusively.
              Although he discussed the trade with the board
              and with MF Global employees, as CEO, there
              was little chance he would receive open or
              adequate feedback from people whose reporting
              lines all ended on his doorstep. Corzine was, in
              effect, negotiating position limits directly with the
              board.

              In 2010, Michael Roseman, at the time the firm's
              chief risk officer, actually presented Jon Corzine
              with several sobering potential scenarios in the
              event of a credit rating downgrade. Corzine
              rebuffed him, dismissing the most pessimistic
              scenarios as unrealistic -- perhaps even
              impossible. In January 2011, 

              Roseman was informed that the chief risk officer
              role was being handed to someone else; he left
              MF Global in March after a handover period.

              On Oct. 25, trading volume in MF Global shares
              surged more than 10 times from the previous
              day's volume. By 4 p.m., the stock had lost 48%
              of its value. Two days later, Moody's and Fitch
              Ratings administered the death blow by
              downgrading MF Global to junk status. The
              company's fate was no longer in Corzine's
              hands, as the downgrade triggered margins calls
              and requests for customer redemptions, sparking
              a classic run on the broker. Five days later, on
              Oct. 31, MF Global filed for bankruptcy in the
              U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of
              New York. 

              Jon Corzine had been CEO for 587 days.

              Comment


                #19
                on a positive note...I got my money back from them today. Just in time for xmas.

                Comment


                  #20
                  #6
                  " the emperor showed them the label sewn inside
                  his worn-out suit. 'Goldman,' they said
                  admiringly. 'They are the finest of weavers. We
                  were wrong to doubt him.'"
                  -- "Emperor Corzine's Goldman clothes,"
                  Financial Times, Nov. 2, 2011

                  Global(OTC: MFGLQ) is a unique event in the
                  annals of American corporate history: To my
                  knowledge, it's the first time a CEO
                  singlehandedly bankrupted his firm through
                  actions that the board of directors was not only
                  knowledgeable of, but had indeed expressly
                  sanctioned. "That takes some talent!" quipped
                  Roderick Hills, a former chairman of the SEC,
                  when I put this to him -- and the deeper you dig,
                  the more surreal things become. I looked at
                  three groups that had an oversight role with
                  regard to MF Global and how they performed in
                  this farce. Only one came out of the review
                  unscathed.

                  If the opening premise wasn't enough for you, let
                  me add that I've never seen a board with more
                  financial experience -- all of the directors had
                  worked in finance. 

                  David Gelber, in particular, had been the chief
                  operating officer of ICAP -- the world's largest
                  inter-dealer broker -- as well as COO of HSBC
                  Global Markets, on top of having held senior
                  trading positions in foreign exchange and
                  derivatives at Citibank and HSBC.

                  Overseer No. 1: The board
                  Let's imagine that you're in charge of hiring a
                  senior trader who will be responsible for a new
                  proprietary trading desk that is a key part of your
                  firm's turnaround strategy. You're doing this in
                  the context of extremely challenging markets in
                  the aftermath of the worst financial crisis since
                  the Great Depression.

                  A headhunter you sometimes work with thinks
                  she's got a great candidate. "In fact," she says,
                  "you'd be lucky to get him."
                  "There is one thing, though," she continues,
                  "Nothing serious, mind you. It's just that he hasn't
                  worked in finance for over a decade and the last
                  time he held day-to-day trading responsibilities
                  was almost a quarter of a century ago."

                  Relevant vs. non-relevant
                  Once you set aside the very impressive title of
                  former senior partner of Goldman Sachs, and
                  focus on specific, relevant information, the
                  proposition above reveals itself in all its glorious
                  absurdity, a choice that could only be the product
                  of collective madness or extreme desperation.
                  And yet, that's exactly the choice that the MF
                  Global Board of Directors made.

                  The board hired Jon Corzine for the job and
                  almost immediately gave him the authority to
                  make gazillion-dollar trades. I'm not referring here
                  to the official hiring of Corzine as CEO, but to his
                  unofficial hiring as senior trader when the board
                  allowed him to become directly involved in the
                  firm's proprietary trading in addition to his
                  executive responsibilities. Doing so, they violated
                  a cardinal principle in risk management:
                  Segregation of duties.

                  Breaking the first rule
                  Nick Leeson bankrupted Barings Bank in 1995
                  because he could settle his own trades, but in
                  this case, Jon Corzine didn't exploit the situation
                  to conceal any activity -- on the contrary: The
                  European sovereign debt trades were disclosed
                  to the board, and to analysts, accountants, and
                  shareholders. Instead, it enabled him to "strongly
                  advocate the [European sovereign debt] trading
                  strategy" -- his words -- at the board level.

                  As CEO, Corzine reported exclusively to the
                  board, so he was outside the established risk
                  management hierarchy. Normally, a trader would
                  need to justify any limit request at multiple levels
                  as it escalates through the organization. Although
                  Corzine did have to go through the charade of
                  having the chief risk officer formally request
                  increased position limits for the European
                  sovereign debt trade, he was effectively
                  negotiating directly with his board. Once that was
                  the case, no amount of risk committees or
                  sophisticated analytics could help.

                  Are you now ready to step deeper down into the
                  rabbit hole with Jon Corzine? It turns out that he
                  was in an almost identical situation earlier in his
                  career at Goldman Sachs.

                  As I mentioned in the previous chapter, 1994 was
                  a traumatic year for Goldman Sachs. As the Fed
                  executed a series of interest rate hikes beginning
                  in December 1993, Goldman's fixed income
                  division -- of which Corzine was the co-head --
                  produced losses totaling hundreds of millions of
                  dollars over a period that stretched from the
                  beginning of the year through the summer. 

                  The losses had a devastating effect on morale
                  and partners were gravely concerned as they
                  watched Goldman's losing positions deteriorate
                  month after month the wealth they had
                  accumulated in their capital account. Forty
                  partners left Goldman at the end of 1994 -- a
                  much higher number than the normal attrition
                  rate.

                  Fool me once
                  One of the reasons 1994 was so painful was that
                  Corzine did not order the positions reduced
                  quickly enough, and one of the reasons for that
                  was that he had two roles: co-chief financial
                  officer and co-head of fixed income.

                   I can do no better than this former Goldman
                  partner who described the problem (the quote is
                  from Bill Cohan's superb book, Money and
                  Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the
                  World):
                  He [Jon Corzine] wasn't independent. You just
                  really need independent control functions and it
                  is just critical that you have that to run any kind
                  of trading business. You need to have people on
                  the control side and the compliance side to
                  independently mark the books, to go head to
                  head with the traders, to have a totally
                  independent career track. And you need to look
                  at everything in terms of size.

                  That lesson applies no less to MF Global in 2011
                  than it did to Goldman Sachs in 1994.
                  The evidence is all over his bond sheets
                  Does all this sound too bizarre to be true? We
                  know for certain that Corzine was MF Global's
                  CEO and there is plentiful evidence of his trading
                  role. The Wall Street Journal reported that he
                  used to walk out of management meetings to
                  check the markets and that he himself placed
                  orders on occasion, based on a list of prices left
                  with an assistant. One trader I spoke to said that,
                  in contrast to the former CEO, Corzine "loved to
                  prowl the trading floor every day he was here." 

                  On Oct. 25, Corzine stated openly in his last
                  earnings call, "Our [European sovereign debt]
                  positions and the judgment about risk mitigation
                  steps are my personal responsibility and a prime
                  focus of my attention."

                  Another design flaw in the reporting lines
                  contributed to marginalizing the chief risk officer,
                  and with him, the risk function. 

                  According to the most recent 10-K report, "the
                  Chief Risk Officer ("CRO"), who reports to our
                  President and Chief Operating Officer, is
                  delegated certain authorities from the Board."
                  Given the structure, logic would dictate that the
                  CRO at minimum report to the board of directors
                  or a board committee rather than the president
                  and COO. In this case, the president and COO
                  happened to be Bradley Abelow, a former
                  Goldman Sachs partner who was the treasurer
                  and then the chief of staff in the New Jersey
                  statehouse while Corzine was governor.

                  It's certainly possible to identify other
                  weaknesses within MF Global, but I prefer to
                  repeat the two most important points: First, other
                  than Jon Corzine himself, the board of directors
                  bears the heaviest responsibility in MF Global's
                  failure. Second, the board's gravest mistake --
                  other than hiring Corzine in the first place -- was
                  to ignore a cardinal rule of risk management: the
                  segregation of duties. Once they allowed Corzine
                  to wear two hats as an executive and a trader,
                  the odds of the firm failing increased
                  exponentially.

                  Overseer No. 2: Regulators
                  For now, we'll ignore the role of the regulators in
                  regard to the issue of segregation of funds --
                  we'll be addressing this later in the series.
                  Instead, we'll focus on regulators' performance in
                  monitoring the firm and its risks.

                  MF Global is a situation in which I'm impressed
                  by regulators' actions -- and that's not often the
                  case. Back in mid-March, the Securities and
                  Exchange Commission sent a letter to the broker
                  asking them to defend their accounting treatment
                  of repo-to-maturity transactions and explain the
                  impact on their financial ratios (including
                  leverage) for the fiscal year ending on March 31,
                  2010. John Corzine had come onboard only a
                  week prior to that date and the only RTM
                  transactions the broker had on were backed by
                  U.S. Treasuries. This suggests MF Global may
                  already have been using aggressive accounting
                  in "de-recognizing" (i.e., removing) assets from
                  their balance sheet through that mechanism.

                  De-recognizing assets for fun and profit
                  This favorable accounting treatment may have
                  been part of the attraction of these particular
                  transactions for Jon Corzine as an easy way to
                  make some large bets without increasing the
                  stated leverage of the balance sheet. 

                  Here's how it works: It's possible -- under certain
                  conditions -- to treat the repo-to-maturity
                  transaction as if you were selling the bonds to
                  someone even though all you're doing is putting
                  up bonds as collateral on a loan. If you retain the
                  market risk, the default risk, and the credit risk
                  (and a few others), you own the bonds -- full
                  stop. Your house is collateral on your mortgage;
                  do you say you've sold the house to the bank
                  and remove it from your personal balance sheet?

                  To address the very distortion this treatment
                  creates, the Financial Industry Regulatory
                  Authority (FINRA, a self-regulatory body) asked
                  MF Global in June to boost the amount of capital
                  at its U.S. broker–dealer in recognition of its
                  exposure to its European sovereign debt trades
                  (which didn't figure on the broker's balance
                  sheet). Around mid-August, FINRA informed the
                  broker they would have to comply and make a
                  public filing to disclose it.

                  They disclosed the capital increase in an 8-K
                  filing on Sept. 1. Then The Wall Street Journal
                  picked up the story of the capital increase on
                  Oct. 17, and the death march began.

                  Ask and you shall receive
                  Investors and analysts could have asked
                  themselves the same questions that FINRA must
                  have asked itself: What is a repo-to-maturity?
                  What is the size of the positions? What are the
                  risks involved? The answers to all of these
                  questions and more are available in considerable
                  detail in the company's filings, particularly the 10-
                  K report for the year ending on March 31, 2011.
                  In terms of transparency, this was the furthest
                  thing from a rogue trading scandal.

                  In this case, FINRA could have saved itself the
                  time and effort if MF Global had no possibility of
                  using repos to mask leverage. A change in the
                  rule -- had it already been in place -- might have
                  saved MF Global from itself by constraining its
                  ability to put on proprietary positions in that size. 

                  Consider that once you add the $6.3 billion
                  European sovereign debt exposure back to the
                  firm's stated assets, the leverage ratio rises from
                  an already-high 30:1 to 35:1. DespiteAIG (NYSE:
                  AIG  ) , Bear Stearns, Fannie Mae, and Lehman
                  Brothers, we continue to see some financial
                  executives who are unwilling (or incapable) to
                  exercise due caution in the use of leverage.

                  Overseer No. 3: Credit ratings agencies
                  Ratings agencies aren't regulators, but they
                  certainly have an oversight function due to their
                  official status in the financial landscape. How did
                  the two most influential agencies, Moody's
                  (NYSE: MCO  ) andStandard & Poor's, perform?
                  The answer: Not well.

                  To their credit, Standard & Poor's (a unit of
                  McGraw-Hill (NYSE: MHP  ) ) did point out in an
                  April report on brokers that MF Global had a
                  "material exposure" to European sovereign debt;
                  unfortunately, the report said it was "concentrated
                  in higher quality issuers." At least the part about
                  the "material exposure" is right.

                  Standard & Poor's didn't, however, update its
                  warning in the Industry Report Card of Aug. 31.
                  By that time, MF Global had provided a sensitivity
                  analysis specifically for the European sovereign
                  debt positions which showed that an increase of
                  10 basis points in bond yields would produce a
                  $10.7 million loss (a basis point is one-hundredth
                  of a percentage point). 

                  This was almost identical to the equivalent figure
                  for U.S. government and federal agency
                  obligations ($10.6 million). But Spanish and
                  Italian bond yields are a lot more volatile than
                  U.S. ones. The higher the yield rises, the higher
                  the losses you suffer on your bonds (bond yield
                  and price are inversely related). Year-to-date, the
                  yield on the Italian two-year bond has ranged
                  between 2.3% and 7.9% -- a difference of 565
                  basis points. In comparison, the U.S. two-year
                  bond yield has stayed within a range of 70 basis
                  points.

                  Proprietary trading has a bright future behind it
                  Even the S&P update on Oct. 26 -- which placed
                  MF Global on "CreditWatch with negative
                  implications" -- still stated that the European
                  sovereign debt trades were client-related. The
                  ratings agency still hadn't understood that the
                  trades were entirely proprietary -- a massive bet
                  using the firm's own capital. 

                  The report even refers to MF Global's "plans for
                  future proprietary trading activity" -- perhaps they
                  meant funeral plans?

                  In an email, I asked the analyst who authored
                  the report to explain on what basis he had written
                  that. He referred me to the media relations
                  manager for financial institution ratings who
                  would only state that "we stand by our published
                  statements." Personally, when I find out that I've
                  written things that are demonstrably false, I
                  prefer to retract them.

                  S&P waited until Oct. 31 -- the day MF Global
                  filed for bankruptcy -- to downgrade MF Global.
                  As far as Moody's goes, I could find no evidence
                  of any warning or even mention of MF Global's
                  European sovereign debt positions at any time
                  prior to the first downgrade on Oct. 24. By its
                  own admission, Moody's understood the
                  magnitude of the firm's European sovereign debt
                  exposure only in the weeks leading up to the
                  bankruptcy and only after discussions with
                  company executives.

                  Moody's doublespeak
                  Al Bush, the Moody's analyst who covered MF
                  Global, said in November that MF Global's public
                  disclosure was "ambiguous and continues to be"
                  and stated that "we were surprised to find out
                  that they had a large off-balance-sheet
                  proprietary position in sovereigns." I can certainly
                  understand how an analyst that follows the
                  company might be surprised -- if they had
                  neglected to read the company's annual report.
                  Those comments are a bald-faced attempt at
                  whitewashing. 

                  As I described earlier, MF Global's disclosures
                  were clear, 
                  comprehensive, and frequent. Bush did not reply
                  to an email asking him how to reconcile his
                  surprise with a set of specific disclosures I
                  referred him to.

                  In any case, the "ambiguous disclosure" defense
                  doesn't hold water. Even if MF Global's
                  disclosures were ambiguous, the size of the
                  positions alone should have compelled the
                  analyst to address any ambiguity with the
                  management.

                  Comment


                    #21
                    As farmers, we can learn from a failed process;
                    and push for changes so deja-boys doesn't bite
                    us in the ass. Business farmers are pro-active,
                    and take time to understand the fine print that
                    affect them. Futures trading us a good tool. We
                    have be aware of how a good tool gets tooled
                    around with. Next segment coming up Am I the
                    only one who finds this riveting? Pars.

                    Comment


                      #22
                      No your not Bonnie,glad you sank your teeth into it.

                      My conclusion is disintergation of confidence.

                      Blow back?unknown to me

                      (my spelling is so bad my spell check doensnt work)

                      Comment


                        #23
                        See the vaccum?

                        See the opportunity?

                        Farmer owned ,government insurance deposit
                        quarantee,corporate governance,lean mean killin
                        machine,clearing trades with 100% quaratees,giant
                        globes of liquidity looking for this home,gladly paying
                        a percentage for confidence in a grown up country of
                        WESTERN CANADA

                        Comment


                          #24
                          Why, Clyde, I may have packed a lunchkit of ripe
                          ulterior-motive fruit, just ready for plucking. pars

                          Comment

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