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    #25
    $1.2 Billion Vanishes From MF Global
    In late October, the market suddenly realized that
    the emperor had no clothes at MF Global (OTC:
    MFGLQ). And as revelers all over the U.S. gutted
    pumpkins in preparation for Halloween, the
    centuries-old brokerage was financially gutted as
    counterparties stepped away.
    On Halloween, MF Global became a ghost itself,
    but the week prior to the bankruptcy filing was
    utter chaos for the company. As one former MF
    Global employee recounted, CEO Jon Corzine
    faced the distress head-on, pacing the trading
    floor and directing his troops in hopes of finding a
    way to save the company after the massive bet
    on European debt that he championed effectively
    doomed it.
    Even as internal levers were pulled, MF Global
    hired investment bankers from Evercore (NYSE: 
    EVR  ) to work on finding a buyer with deep
    enough pockets to save the flagging broker. Most
    major financial companies thumbed their noses
    at the possibility of buying it -- they figured they
    could swoop in and pick over the pieces post-
    failure. However, heading into the weekend it
    looked like a deal would come together.
    Electronic-exchange-focused broker Interactive
    Brokers (Nasdaq: IBKR  ) was at the table, and
    the talks looked promising. As an MF Global
    employee that was present for those final days
    recounted, "We all thought there was going to be
    a deal and we were going to be saved."
    But at the eleventh hour, disaster struck. It was
    found that futures customer funds -- money
    which is legally required to be carefully set aside
    and clearly accounted for -- were missing. Initial
    media reports suggested as much as $1 billion
    was unaccounted for, but the number was quickly
    dropped to $700 million, then $600 million. But
    as far as the Interactive Brokers deal was
    concerned, the exact amount of the shortfall
    didn't matter one whit -- what was very clear was
    that a lot of client money had vanished. Buying
    MF Global was suddenly akin to buying real
    estate on Three Mile Island in late March of
    1979. The deal was quashed and MF Global was
    left with no other choice than to file for
    bankruptcy.
    Following the bankruptcy filing, it would take
    James Giddens -- the bankruptcy trustee of MF
    Global's broker subsidiary -- a full three weeks of
    working through the company's books to offer an
    "official" estimate of the shortfall. On Nov. 21, he
    announced that "$1.2 billion or more" had
    disappeared from the segregated customer
    accounts.
    Sacrosanct
    Whether we're talking about a bank, an equities
    broker, or a futures broker like MF Global, it's
    clearly bad when deposited customer money
    goes missing. However, there are safety valves
    for bank depositors and stock market investors.
    The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. protects
    banking customers to the tune of $250,000.
    Meanwhile, the Securities Investor Protection
    Corp. steps in with up to $500,000 per customer
    to help equity investors when a stock broker fails
    and doesn't have adequate funds to make its
    customers whole.
    There is no such insurance backstop for futures
    customers. What the futures industry has relied
    on instead are "segregated accounts" that put
    customer money in a safe side-pot that is legally
    off-limits for the broker to use to directly fund its
    operations or back its own proprietary trading
    positions.
    Ask futures customers about segregated
    accounts, and nine times out of 10 they'll tell you
    that those accounts are sacrosanct.
    Where's the money, Corzine?
    The possibility that Jon Corzine authorized the
    customer funds to be pulled out of segregated
    accounts to plug holes in the company's balance
    sheet is in some ways a very logical scenario. As
    we've detailed in this report, Corzine created an
    atmosphere where serious challenges to his
    power and decisions were basically nil. In the
    turbulent scrum that took place as they tried to
    save the company, it seems even less likely that
    a Corzine directive would be denied.
    This scenario would provide a tidy denouement
    for those of us breathlessly waiting for resolution.
    Corzine would be criminally culpable, civil suits
    could plunder his personal assets, and
    prosecutors could fit him for a new kind of striped
    suit and send him on a long vacation with Bernie
    Madoff.
    This would also likely work out well for regulators,
    including MF Global's primary self-regulatory
    organization, CME Group (NYSE: CME  ) . If
    Corzine acted criminally, it may let those
    regulators off the hook to some extent. It doesn't
    necessarily take a regulatory failure for somebody
    to act criminally. After all, robbery is illegal, but if
    a thief is bent on robbing a bank, he or she will
    do it anyway.
    This seems to be the scenario that the CME is
    pushing -- according to congressional testimony
    from CME Chairman Terry Duffy and a timeline of
    events released by the CME, not only were there
    potentially prohibited loans made from customer
    accounts, but Corzine may have known about the
    loans. However, at the time of this writing, the
    CME's account was uncorroborated and the
    details were under wraps on who from MF Global
    was talking about Corzine's knowledge of the
    loans and what exactly was said.
    And while there are those who think it
    inconceivable that Corzine would have acted
    illegally, times of extreme stress can often drive
    people to do things that they wouldn't otherwise
    dream of doing.
    Or not...
    As cleanly as the Corzine-as-criminal scenario
    would wrap up the MF Global case, there are
    good reasons to doubt that that's how it went
    down. Corzine was a wealthy and well-connected
    man, which promised him a perfectly comfortable
    life even if MF Global failed. And unless the
    former senator was willing to add perjury to his
    rap sheet, if he had criminally authorized the use
    of client funds, there's no way he would have
    said the opposite during multiple testimonies in
    front of Congress.
    It's important to remember, too, that in a large,
    global organization -- financial or not -- the CEO
    is responsible for setting up the right systems
    and effectively delegating responsibilities.
    This leaves open the very real possibility that,
    without his knowledge, somebody at a level well
    below Corzine made the decision to funnel client
    funds to the company's balance sheet in a
    desperate attempt to keep the ship from sinking.
    This doesn't necessarily let Corzine off the hook,
    though. As noted above, it's a major part of the
    CEO's job to put the proper systems in place. In
    fact, regulations implemented through Sarbanes-
    Oxley -- a bill that Corzine co-wrote while he was
    a senator -- require that the CEO and CFO sign
    off on the effectiveness of the controls over
    financial reporting. For instance, for fiscal 2011,
    both Corzine and MF Global CFO Henri
    Steenkamp signed off on the fact that they had:
    Designed such disclosure controls and
    procedures, or caused such disclosure controls
    and procedures to be designed under our
    supervision, to ensure that material information
    relating to the Registrant, including its
    consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us
    by others within those entities.
    If those proper "controls and procedures" were in
    place, a breach of segregated client funds should
    have set off loud, blaring, obnoxious alarms that
    would have alerted management to that breach.
    If it turns out that those proper controls weren't in
    place, Corzine and Steenkamp could face both
    civil and criminal charges.
    It's also possible that the proper procedures were
    in place, but an employee was simply determined
    to illegally circumvent those systems -- perhaps
    in some misguided belief that it would help save
    the company and curry favor with Corzine or
    other members of management.
    Flabbergasted!
    Of course there's also the possibility that
    malfeasance isn't present here at all. Multiple
    former MF Global employees that we spoke to
    think that the missing money may simply be the
    result of a bookkeeping error. They believe it's
    unlikely that there was deliberate wrongdoing
    involved, particularly on the part of Corzine.
    Former MF Global trader Mike Fitzgerald
    emphatically stated that he'd be "nothing less
    than flabbergasted" if it turned out Corzine did
    something nefarious. Even TV stock jock Jim
    Cramer -- who was a former Goldmanite himself -
    - stepped up to defend Corzine on CNBC, saying
    Corzine is "not a bad man."
    To be sure, in the best of days the accounting
    and bookkeeping for a global brokerage firm is
    complex. And these were anything but the best of
    days for MF Global as it scrambled to pull out of
    a tailspin. News reports have quoted people
    close to the situation as describing MF Global's
    books as "a disaster." In testimony before the
    House Agriculture Committee, Corzine spoke to
    the chaos that reigned in the final days before
    the bankruptcy, and suggested that the amount
    of money that was shifted around could make
    things very difficult to pick through.
    And yet the longer the process drags on, the less
    likely the "bookkeeping error" scenario seems.
    With forensic accountants and FBI investigators
    working with former MF Global employees to
    untangle the books, it seems highly unlikely that
    an accounting misstep -- or even a series of
    missteps -- would take more than a month to
    ferret out. Furthermore, while the CME's timeline
    shows that the missing funds were initially
    thought to be an accounting mishap, it notes that
    by the early-morning hours of Oct. 31, MF Global
    reported to them that "the deficiency is real."
    Flight of the red herring: Rule 1.25
    In the wake of MF Global's collapse and, in
    particular, the revelation of the missing customer
    funds, a lot of focus -- particularly from
    lawmakers in Congress -- has been put on the
    Commodity Exchange Act's rule 1.25, which
    dictates the way in which futures brokers can
    invest customer funds. Much of the focus
    appears to stem from confusion over what
    exactly the rule means.
    First of all, from a big-picture perspective, it's not
    unusual at all for a financial company to earn
    income for itself by investing customer funds. The
    entire banking business model is built on
    redeploying deposits in interest-earning
    investments, including mortgage loans. Equities
    brokers such as Charles Schwab (Nasdaq: 
    SCHW  ) can also invest customer cash balances
    to earn interest income. Even payroll giant ADP 
    (NYSE: ADP  ) invests customer funds during the
    short interval between when the client gives them
    the money and when it has to go out to tax
    authorities or the client's employees.
    For futures brokers like MF Global, it is likewise
    permitted for them to invest customer funds to
    earn interest income. Rule 1.25 simply details
    what types of investments are kosher. The only
    reason that 1.25 should be an issue in the MF
    Global case is if there was reason to believe that
    overly loose parameters in the rule had
    something to do with the missing client funds. At
    the time of this writing, there has been no solid
    evidence that client funds had anything to do with
    the repo-to-maturity trade that led to the
    company's collapse, or that the missing customer
    funds have anything to do with overly risky
    investments that were permitted under 1.25.
    In fact, it seems that the only reason that 1.25 is
    a hot topic among lawmakers -- besides their
    lack of understanding of what the rule is -- is that
    there was some appearance of fishy dealings
    around proposed changes to the rule prior to MF
    Global's collapse. Corzine and other high-level
    executives at MF Global had met with regulators
    from the Commodity Futures Trading
    Commission to push back on changes that would
    cut back on what was allowed under rule 1.25.
    Today, those meetings look sketchy in light of MF
    Global's collapse, but MF Global was one of
    several futures brokers that was campaigning
    against the rule change. Plus, just because
    Corzine was pushing back on the rule change
    doesn't necessarily mean that there was
    something underhanded going on -- in fact, it
    could be said that he wouldn't be doing his job
    as CEO if he didn't advocate for the company
    when regulations threatened to crimp the
    business.
    Not that the CFTC has been helpful in clearing
    up the misunderstanding around rule 1.25. In a
    very desperate-seeming move after MF Global's
    collapse, the regulator passed the "MF Global
    rule" which went ahead with the previously
    considered changes and curtailed futures brokers'
    ability to invest in sovereign debt or borrow
    money from customer accounts via repurchase
    transactions. We believe that it will eventually be
    revealed that what was permitted under rule 1.25
    was not the cause of MF Global's missing funds,
    which will also show that the CFTC's rush to
    implement the "MF Global rule" was a cheap ploy
    to save face and make it look like the regulator
    was doing something in response to MF Global's
    collapse.
    And all of the rest
    In our conversations with MF Global customers,
    former employees, regulators, lawyers, and other
    experts, it seemed at times that there were as
    many theories about the missing money as there
    are sweaters in Jon Corzine's closet. Some were
    simply variations of the scenarios presented
    above. Others were far more creative and
    sounded more like something out of a John
    Grisham novel.
    With significant facts still yet to be uncovered, it's
    certainly possible that something surprising, or
    even bizarre, happened here. As they say, fact is
    often stranger than fiction. However, at the time
    of this writing, we believe that one of the
    scenarios presented above will eventually be
    proven by investigators.
    But no matter what happened to the money, MF
    Global customers have had to deal with the fact
    that a huge amount of money is missing and
    much of the rest of their deposited funds were
    frozen for an extended period of time. This has
    created hardship for thousands of customers that
    were directly involved with MF Global.

    Furthermore, it has had a chilling effect that
    reaches much more broadly than MF Global, as
    futures traders all over the country wonder
    whether this might be a sign that the system is
    simply broken.

    Comment


      #26
      That is the last entry

      Note what cotton noted. There is a an epidiemic
      of contagious trading-skepticism spreading
      throughout the world, isn't there.
      Trust Greece? Italy? Yes, well.

      Canada has a chance that comes in a million to
      establish a global trading institution. There ia a
      need. Opportunity. Canada has a good financial
      reputation. Product. Alberta and Saskatchewan
      both have supportive environments for the
      establishment of a trading centre.
      The ability of so many young educated farmers
      to support and participate in a trading centre is a
      huge asset.

      Comment


        #27
        Lol,i'm glad i dont like apple pie.

        Comment


          #28
          You are lucky, Ridgerunner. I have an update
          entry.

          Before most of the world knew MF Global (OTC:
          MFGLQ) was preparing to file for bankruptcy,
          regulators knew that customer money had been
          moved. Much of it, an estimated $1.2 billion at
          last count, is still missing.

          Former MF Global CEO Jon Corzine has sworn
          before Congress that he doesn't know where the
          missing money is. At least one regulator is now
          challenging that story.

          In explosive testimony during the House
          Agriculture Committee hearings on MF Global
          last week, CME Group (NYSE:CME  ) Executive
          Chairman Terry Duffy said that at roughly 2 a.m.
          on the morning MF Global declared bankruptcy,
          the company told representatives of the U.S.
          Commodity Futures Trading Commission and
          CME that "customer money had been transferred
          out of segregation to firm accounts."

          In similar testimony before the Senate on Dec.
          13, Duffy said an agency auditor participated in a
          phone call where an MF Global employee
          indicated Corzine knew the firm had loaned
          customer cash to a European affiliate.

          Unnamed sources pointed to missing customer
          funds as early as two weeks after the bankruptcy,
          but Duffy's testimony represents the first time a
          high-level executive had gone on record to state
          definitively that MF Global had commingled
          accounts. More damaging? The CME knew
          about it.

          But who knew what, and when, goes far beyond
          executives in a hearing. Customers, introducing
          brokers, and MF Global traders paint a picture of
          warning signs and weak-kneed regulators who
          failed to take action in the days, weeks, and
          years leading up to MF Global's death. This is a
          closer look at what they witnessed.

          Rich Ilczyszyn, a former MF Global trader who
          now runs iitrader.com, arrived for work at the
          Chicago office at 6 a.m. that Halloween morning.
          From the outset, he was told that "offset only"
          trades were being allowed that day; brokers could
          only exit positions on behalf of their clients. An
          email from the firm's back office verified the
          order.

          "It was a huge red flag," Ilczyszyn says. He and
          several colleagues attempted to reach the New
          York office to get clarification but the phone lines
          were jammed. A short time later, the computer
          system went down. "Clients couldn't get out of
          the market at all," Ilczyszyn says, "which is a
          dangerous proposition when you're talking about
          leveraged futures positions that can skyrocket or
          collapse within minutes."

          Until arriving at the office that morning, Ilczyszyn
          wasn't especially concerned about the bankruptcy
          rumors he'd heard over the weekend. "We'd seen
          this sort of thing before."
          Ilczyszyn was in a good position to know. He had
          been a trader with Lind-Waldock since 2002,
          then went to Refco when the latter bought the
          first. But then Refco went bankrupt and was
          swept up by MF Global. Ilczyszyn was unaffected
          because Lind-Waldock remained its own
          operation, with its own CEO.
          Corzine changed that by putting the MF Global
          brand on every business unit. It would be the first
          of many changes in the new regime. "I felt the
          difference right away," Ilczyszyn says, but he
          also never saw any signs that MF Global was
          about to implode. "I can't even imagine how
          something like this could happen."

          Fingers are quick to point at Corzine. His
          testimony on Friday, Dec. 8 in front of the House
          Committee on Agriculture didn't help his case
          much; Corzine gave vague, generic answers that
          came just shy of taking Fifth Amendment
          protection against self-incrimination.
          Yet he also has supporters. Says one former
          trader for the principal strategies desk: "Beyond
          everything that happened, [Corzine] was the guy
          who knew everyone's names, he was walking
          around, smiling, saying hello to people ... I mean,
          he was like the dear leader."
          He says this without irony, not realizing it's a
          name most often applied to North Korea's Kim
          Jong-il.

          For all the praise, there were criticisms of
          Corzine as well, many of which centered on his
          restructuring of the firm. By all accounts, MF
          Global was a company with many silos. Mike
          Fitzpatrick, a former MF Global oil trader, notes
          this isn't unusual in older commodities firms.
          "Cocoa, metal, wheat ... all are their own little
          fiefdoms."

          A series of mass hirings and firings over the past
          two years had only exacerbated the problem. In
          2009, MF Global had expanded its fixed income
          team and created a new institutional sales team,
          both of which brought on a slew of new hires.
          The company had three chief financial officers in
          four years.

          Upon his arrival in March 2010, Corzine
          continued to restructure the company and made
          several of what multiple insiders describe as
          questionable hires. "When I got the chance to
          see Corzine and his people, I was not
          impressed," says Ilczyszyn. "These were the
          same people you always see who were 'good on
          paper.'"

          For customers, blame isn't as important as
          restitution. Steve Meyers, owner of Grainbelt
          Commodities, tried to get his business out of MF
          Global the Friday before the bankruptcy. "I
          ordered a bunch of wires sent out. They got back
          to me when it was too late to do anything and
          claimed they couldn't find wiring instructions for
          my account," he says.

          Later, instead of receiving the wire transfers he
          had requested, Meyers received approximately
          $500,000 in checks by mail, one of which was for
          $350,000. "Nobody in their right mind would send
          out a check," Meyers says. "In fact, if I had ever
          ordered one, they wouldn't have done it."
          The checks bounced.

          There were other warning signs. In the weeks
          leading up to the bankruptcy, MF Global
          instituted what appears to have been a
          crackdown on margin calls. "I generally don't
          have margin calls but when I did, I'd get a call
          immediately," Meyers recounts. "They started to
          require 100% margin up at all times, even for day
          trading. It was a telltale sign that they were either
          really cutting back on risk or something's going
          on here."

          Others say MF Global had been changing for a
          while. In 2008 and 2009, Jeff Malec, CEO and
          founding partner of Attain Capital, says MF
          Global staff became more difficult to work with;
          there was more paperwork and red tape with
          opening accounts. 

          Commission payouts were rarely done correctly.
          "We had customer assets in the tens of millions
          with MF Global," Malec says. "So, perhaps not
          small, but small in comparison to their large
          business, and most importantly, made to feel
          small." Attain severed its relationship with MF
          Global in mid-2009.

          But some customers, like Don Miller, didn't notice
          anything different about the way MF Global was
          operating. Miller dealt specifically with S&P
          futures and equities, and maintained an almost
          entirely cash account at MF Global. He was one
          of the most affected when excess cash was
          frozen.

          "I've had to shut down my business," he says,
          echoing Meyers. "I have no capital to work with."
          His daughter's $30,000 tuition bill is due, and
          Miller had expected to pull the money from his
          business. "I'm scrambling now."

          Peter Lamoureux, president of Everest Asset
          Management and trustee for unwinding overseas
          operations during Refco's scandal-tainted 2005
          bankruptcy, states that in the case of MF Global,
          small is an illusion. "The MF Global failure might
          look small, but we're still talking about billions in
          contracts that could have a material impact on
          certain types of commerce," he says. "Not
          solving this issue is tantamount to inviting
          another fiscal crisis."
          "Saying MF Global has 'just 30,000 accounts'
          misses the point that some accounts could have
          served 1,000 clients," Lamoureux says. "We
          really don't know the multiplier effect at work
          here."

          On Friday, Dec. 9, a judge approved a $2.2
          billion transfer of funds to MF Global commodities
          customers. It was the third such distribution since
          the bankruptcy, and brings the total of returned
          funds to $4.1 billion. A petition from the early
          days of the bankruptcy put MF Global's assets at
          $41 billion.

          JPMorgan Chase, (NYSE: JPM  ) MF Global's
          primary lender, has filed for "super-priority"
          creditor status for the $26 million credit line it
          extended to MF Global Holdings to fund the
          brokerage's bankruptcy. If granted, funds
          released in the future would go straight to the
          bank.

          James Koutoulas is CEO of Typhon Capital and
          lead counsel for the Commodity Customer
          Coalition, or CCC, which represents more than
          8,000 MF Global customers. Koutoulas filed an
          objection to JPMorgan's request for super-priority
          status on behalf of the group. "We're simply
          asserting that if MF Global commingled funds
          from customer accounts, or cannot properly
          account for them, JPMorgan can't lay claim to
          those funds as if they were their own," Koutoulas
          says.

          Several customers also object to MF Global
          Trustee James Giddens' relationship with the
          large bank. Giddens, a partner with the law firm
          Hughes Hubbard & Reed, admits his firm
          represented JPMorgan Chase in 2009 and 2010
          but claims the bank's billings accounted for
          roughly one-tenth of 1% of the firm's annual
          revenue.

          Though JPMorgan's connection to MF Global is
          increasingly complex, it is but one of several
          banks facing lawsuits for its potential role in the
          brokerage's collapse. Bank of America (NYSE:
          BAC  ) ,Citigroup (NYSE: C  ) , Deutsche Bank
          (NYSE: DB  ) , Goldman, Jeffries Group, and the
          Royal Bank of Scotland were also named in a
          suit alleging the large banks covered up issues
          that eventually led to MF Global's bankruptcy.
          HSBC (NYSE: HBC  ) also finds itself in a tight
          spot, as it's unable to determine whether a
          customer or the trustee is the rightful owner of
          gold bars and silver contracts it is storing for MF
          Global.

          Another battle, Miller says, is that the trustee
          doesn't seem to understand the nature of the
          case he's working. Meyers agrees, and says
          working with the trustee's office has been an
          endless source of frustration: "The claims forms
          they put together don't even make any sense. It's
          clear they don't have an understanding of the
          futures market."

          Giddens isn't the only official under fire, and
          rightfully so. A timeline issued by the CFTC
          detailing its involvement with the MF Global case
          offers platitudes but little in the way of action. 

          CFTC "worked with" the trustee, "addressed
          questions," "has been in regular contact with,"
          "encouraged," etc. Not the language of a
          determined regulator demanding customer
          restitution.
          Perhaps it's to be expected. In the wake of MF
          Global's disastrous quarterly earnings on Oct. 25,
          CFTC officials spent several days on-site at MF
          Global specifically to obtain segregated account
          financials. On Oct. 31, when they learned of the
          customer funds shortfall, rather than working in
          tandem with securities regulators, CFTC kicked
          the MF Global bankruptcy to the SEC and
          Securities Investor Protection Corporation. 

          The SIPC, in turn sought Giddens, who had
          worked with the agency seven times previously --
          most recently on efforts to unwind Lehman
          Brothers. The decision was considered, made,
          and implemented in less than three hours, from
          2:30 a.m. until 5 a.m., according to the timeline.

          As the document explains it, CFTC was "unable"
          to initiate a bankruptcy proceeding for a
          registered futures clearing merchant such as MF
          Global. SIPC therefore had to be involved. What
          isn't clear is why CFTC never asked to be
          involved in the unwinding and return of futures
          and commodity customer assets when Giddens,
          the trustee, was being appointed.

          Repeated attempts to get clarification from CFTC
          officials have thus far been denied. In the
          meantime, Commission Chairman Gary Gensler
          has recused himself from the agency's
          investigation into the MF Global bankruptcy, citing
          a potential conflict of interest arising from an
          association with Corzine that dates back to their
          days working together at Goldman.
          Getting back to even
          "I'm not special," Meyers says. "I'm not unlike
          thousands of brokers who are going through the
          same thing. And we have lost faith in the system
          because the industry was nowhere for us."

          Ilczyszyn understands Meyers' frustrations, and
          takes his customers' losses personally. "We're all
          trying to help our clients. We're talking about
          millions of dollars. It's our reputations on the line.
          The reach of this thing is amazing."
          Fitzpatrick says, "I was always under the
          impression that the clearinghouse would make
          everyone whole."
          Dean Tofteland, the Minnesota farmer who's still
          waiting for tens of thousands of dollars to be
          unfrozen, understands the risk inherent in the
          business. On balance, he believes business
          failure is part of the economy and improves the
          overall system.
          "A bankruptcy is a bankruptcy," Tofteland says.
          "When you fail, that's a fact of life, but there
          needs to be an efficient outcome for the
          customer."

          "I feel that the industry had a moral obligation to
          its current and future customers to ensure a
          process is put in place to make sure that
          customers are made whole," Miller says. "I ask
          myself: What's the right thing to do?"

          Comment


            #29
            Holy smokes Parsley... you have been busier than the check-outs in Regina
            today.... which were crazy.

            So the info you have gleaned claims that MFG used the hypothecation of customer
            accounts to secure loans at 1% to buy Italian and Spanish bonds which paid 5% at
            maturity, and the loans and bond maturities were synchronized.. known as repos.

            The 4% spread was easy money for MFG .. so it seemed.

            However, the bonds were being downgraded by the rating agencies before
            maturity, and the repo contracts required more collateral as the bond ratings
            reduced.

            BTW Repos are off balance sheet entities... by GAAP... but shouldn't be IMHO.

            MFG was quickly running out of funds... known as becoming illiquid.. and
            probably used more then the 140% of customer accounts which Cottonpicken
            correctly pointed out.

            MFG also had margin accounts and proprietary trading which was also requiring
            greater margins, especially as their own ratings dropped.

            BTW there is disagreement regarding the use of CDS insurance to cover their
            trades.

            I doubt if they could do the volume they did without hedging via CDS.

            Regardless, the rating agencies were also downgrading MFG, which dropped their
            share values...i.e. capitalization... and thereby quickly increased their leverage to
            about 40%.

            Without Eurozone support by the ESEF MFG insolvency was imminent.

            So we now wait for forensics to "find the money".

            Doesn't pass the smell test.

            Cheers... Bill

            Comment


              #30
              Oops again Parsley... leverage should be 40 times...
              not percent...... Bill

              Comment

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