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Hands in your pocket; Hands in your pocket!

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    Hands in your pocket; Hands in your pocket!

    How on earth could this happen!

    "Single trader responsible for 4.9 billion euro bank fraud

    January 24, 2008 - 9:10PM

    Societe Generale said today a single rogue trader carried out a massive 4.9 billion euro ($8.22 billion) fraud at the French banking giant.

    Trading in the bank's shares was suspended on the Paris stock exchange after the revelation of the fraud along with a two-billion-euro loss stemming from the crisis in US subprime mortgage market.

    The bank said the losses cut its 2007 profit to 600 million- to 800 million euros ($1.01 billion to $1.34 billion) from 5.2 billion ($8.72 billion) in 2006 and that it had carried out a 5.5 billion euro ($9.23 billion) capital increase because of the fraud "and in order to strengthen its capital base''.

    "I have the duty to inform you that the management of Societe Generale has discovered an internal fraud of a considerable scope, carried out by a member of staff in its financing and investment division,'' chairman Daniel Bouton said in a statement released on the bank's website.

    The bank announced separately that the fraud was worth 4.9 billion euros and that it had also lost about two billion euros because of the US subprime meltdown.

    The new rogue trader has not been named but brings immediate comparisons to Nick Leeson, the British futures trader who lost $US1.5 billion at Barings, causing the failure of the venerable British bank in 1995.

    Boutin said the Societe Generale trader had been suspended and that legal action would be taken against him.

    He said the bank had also fired ``executives, including leaders, responsible for the supervision and controls on the operations concerned''.

    "The transactions which involved the fraud were simple - taking a position on shares rising - but hidden using extremely sophisticated and varied techniques,'' Boutin said.

    He added that he only found out about the fraud on Sunday and that the governor of the Bank of France had been informed.

    "The loss suffered is very big. All measures were taken on the spot to contain this. The failure of control procedures has been identified and corrected to avoid any new risk of a comparable nature.''

    Boutin sought to reassure investors despite the crisis, which he described as ``sad and regrettable''.

    "In effect, most of its areas, in France and abroad, have continued to give good and sometimes excellent operating results.''
    Boutin said the capital increase would more than compensate any losses from the fraud and the subprime damage and that it had been fully underwritten yesterday.

    The chairman insisted that the bank could rebound from the crisis and resume the long years of profits it has known.

    "I see there, with the support of our shareholders and the engagement of our staff, a profound reason for optimism.''
    The bank said in a separate statement that its rogue trader had been carrying out what it called ``vanilla futures hedging'' on European equity markets.

    It said the trader took out ``massive fraudulent directional positions in 2007 and 2008 beyond his limited authority.''

    "Aided by his in-depth knowledge of the control procedures resulting from his former employment in the middle office, he managed to conceal these positions through a scheme of elaborate fictitious transactions.''

    It said these were discovered and investigated on January 19 and 20.

    "The employee who has confessed to the fraud has been suspended and a dismissal procedure has been initiated. The individuals in charge of his supervision will leave the group.''

    The statement said that Societe Generale had also ordered a write-down of 2.05 billion euros ($3.44 billion) because of the subprime crisis.

    It said 1.1 billion euros was because of US residential mortgage risk, 550 million euros because of exposure to ``US monoline insurers'' and 400 million euros in additional provisions because of the problems."


    http://business.smh.com.au/single-trader-responsible-for-49-billion-euro-bank-fraud/20080124-1nye.html

    #2
    Simple answer-Scapegoat

    Comment


      #3
      http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/24f73610-c91e-11dc-9807-000077b07658.html


      this is an excellent article from a number of standpoints including that the markets have not been allowed to function. doesn't directly tie to tom's original post but still interesting.

      Comment


        #4
        Beats robbing a 7-11! Probably will do less time if any. I don't know if you can call him/her a rogue trader, considering all the bad subprime loans at CITI and other banks, just doing what everybody else is. All driven by greed and a corrupt system

        Comment


          #5
          Probably will not do any time. Might even survive the "dismissal procedure". The supervisor will be transferred to an easier position and more than likely recieve a raise. I wonder what it would take to get fired on the spot there.

          Comment


            #6
            Apparently trader did not personally profit, so it's incompetence and lack of controls.

            Comment

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