Former MF Global CEO Jon Corzine Will Likely Get Off Scot-Free
by Bob Adelmann
The
New American
Ten months
after stitching together the pieces of the MF Global collapse and
bankruptcy in October 2011, the New York Times reported that
criminal investigators arent
likely to file criminal charges against the prime suspect: CEO
Jon Corzine.
The unwinding
and spectacular collapse of the derivatives trading firm began with
a huge bet Corzine took with company money on risky European bonds,
using leverage approaching 40:1. The initial bet was $1.5 billion
but as he piled on, Corzines board of directors got nervous.
He was able to placate some say intimidate them with
his persona and a Powerpoint presentation and to let the trade ride.
Things began
to unwind for Corzine as wind of the huge trade which could
wipe out MF Globals capital five
times over if it went bad reached the ears of the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA). When officials at FINRA demanded
that MF Global increase its capital base to insure against the risk
of the trade going south, Corzine balked and took his case directly
to the SEC. Following his hasty visit to New York to visit with
SEC officials, the SEC demanded that Corzine raise $200 million
in new capital (instead of the $50 million Corzine offered) to offset
the risks of the trade.
It didnt
take long for credit rating agencies to learn of this demand, and
Standard & Poors dropped MF Globals credit rating
to junk status. From there it was just a matter of days.
Institutions
such as JPMorgan demanded more collateral which was amplified by
trading losses elsewhere in the company, forcing Corzine to move
some $891 million from his customers accounts to its broker-dealer.
As the Times noted,
MF Global dipped again and again into customer funds to meet
the demands.
All told, MF
Globals customers were out an estimated $1.6 billion.
Corzine adroitly
sidestepped any responsibility in testimony he gave before congressional
committees investigating the matter, and his assistant treasurer
in Chicago, Edith OBrien, took the Fifth. Corzine knew that
any prosecution of his misbehavior would have to prove intent
rather than incompetence or error, and so he was careful in his
testimony before Congress:
I never intended
anyone at MF Global to misuse customer funds and I dont
believe that anything that I said could reasonably have been
interpreted as an instruction to misuse customer funds. [Emphases
added.]
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the rest of the article
August 20, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 The New American
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