I was surprised that there was no 5th Amendment stuff. I’m sure that Levander was pushing for that. But Corzine really didn't have much of an option. If the former Senator/ Governor pled the fifth he would have been convicted in the public’s eye.
So Jon talked, but he said nothing. You can be absolutely certain that Corzine spent many hours with his lawyers fielding question that might have been asked by the congressional committee. When Corzine seemed to stutter, pause, look up at the ceiling groping for the right words to use, it was just a very well orchestrated and practiced acting job.
Jon made one response that I thought was significant. He said several times:
"I never intended to break any rules.”
This could mean anything, but consider that this canned response was formulated word for word by Levander. I think what Corzine was saying was that he may have authorized some actions in the later stages of MFG’s existence that ultimately led to the expropriation and loss of customer funds. He is trying to establish that whatever he may have said (or signed), he did not understand the consequences. Whether this is true or not, I don't know. We might find out at some point that some clown in the treasury department at MFG asked JC a question in the middle of the panic:
“We could re-hypothecate the seg accounts and plug the gap tonight! Should we do that?”
And Jon could have looked up and said:
“Do what you can!”
The problem with the “I never intended” defense is that it doesn’t work for a CEO who should have know better.
**************************************
Bob voted with his feet. He closed off all open positions. He got back to cash. Then he requested a wire transfer for the balance(s). He left a small operating balance in the accounts in order to keep them open. This fellow was small potatoes. Two of the accounts were under $20k. The other was $215k. Wire transfers to a bank were requested.
According to Bob, the wires went out on Wednesday, October 26 (four days before BK). All three wire transfers were received on Thursday October 27.
But on Friday, October 28, the bank that had received the funds reversed the wire transfer for the larger amount. The transfers for the two smaller amounts were not reversed.
This is highly unusual. It is extremely difficult to reverse a wire transfer. Wire transfers are considered to be Immediately Available Funds or “Good Funds”. Absent a court order, the only way to reverse a wire transfer is when the remitting bank provides a letter of indemnity ("LOI") to the receiving bank. I’ve written these letters. They would look something like this:
To: ABC Bank
From: XYZ Bank
Reference: Wire Transfer #123456 date 10/26/2011 for $215,000 for further credit to "Customer Name", Account #AB3355
We hereby request that you immediately debt the account of (Customer Name) for the full amount of the transfer and return the funds to us.
If you comply with this request we hereby agree to hold you free and harmless of any consequences that may arise as a result of this request.
XYZ Bank
Basically XYZ has to give ABC a blanket guarantee that they will not get hurt by the request.
Here’s the rub. I’m told that in the matter at hand, the "XYZ" bank operating on behalf of MFG was JPM.
If I’m right that a LOI was required to claw back a wire transfer, then - assuming my information is correct, and I think it is - it had to have been JPM that wrote the indemnity letter. (No one would have acted on a LOI from MFG on 10/28).
I'm speculating quite a bit. But it’s still worth considering. At this point, anything is worth considering. We are six weeks past the BK. As Corzine and all the others said today, they have no clue where the missing money is. There has been any army of forensic accountants (FBI & KPMG) toiling night and day. No one has found the money. That's crazy to me.
A possible daisy chain:
(1) MFG orders XYZ Bank to make a money transfer.
(2) XYZ makes the transfer.
(3) After the transfer has been made (or during the same day) XYZ issues a letter of indemnity (“LOI”) and obtains a refund of the transfer.
(4) The initial wire transfer is accounted for (correctly) at MFG as a reduction of the customer account liabilities (Segregated account).
(5) When the money comes back into XYZ (pursuant to the LOI) it is not credited back to the Seg./customer account. (The fog of war factor? Deliberate?)
(6) After the money has been returned to XYZ bank, it appears to be "unrestricted funds" of MFG. It gets commingled. Someone grabs the money to offset a claim. The Chinese Wall between the Seg. account and MFG corporate account has been broached. Once the money is commingled, it is impossible to figure out who owes what to whom.
A question for any of those many MFG account holders: Did any of you have a similar experience with wire transfers? If so, could you let me know? I’d love to get to the bottom of this mystery.
Bkrasting@gmail.com
Note: I'm aware that in the final days, MFG issued checks to customers that bounced. This is similar to the wire transfer issue I describe. But it is also a different kettle of legal fish. There are many reasons for a check to bounce. Checks, unlike wire transfers are not "good funds". To claw-back a wire transfer requires significant human intervention. Banks do not write LOIs without carefully considering the consequences. There's always a signature on an LOI......
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Bruce, you bet Levander had that masterfully planned. He had Corzine functionally invoke the 5th. "Here's my statement and gosh, mea culpa. But no mens rea! No mens rea!"
ReplyDeleteI would say it's self-serving brilliance, or brilliant self-servingness (word?), except my kid does it all the time. It's the old "but, Mom, I didn't mean to!" defense.
As for the reverse wires, umm, I'm just shuddering and shivering and huddling and so forth.
SarBox requires Corzine to know at his official level.
ReplyDeleteLegal Checkmate.
Does .gov uphold the rule of law or continue to abrogate it.
That reverse wire story is incredible. The relative lack of news coverage of MFG has been really disturbing; if the reverse wire is more than an isolated incident, I think I'm shuddering and huddling like Lawyers Mom.
ReplyDeleteThat isn't the first reverse wire story I have heard. A summary of the reversed wires would tell a frightening tale that important people would rather keep quiet. For the general lack of main stream media attention MFG has gotten, the story keeps hanging around thanks to the enormous sleaze and corruption factors. There is so much smoke, no one can find the fire.
ReplyDeleteYeah, that's what stands out for me, too.
ReplyDeleteThe lack of discussion of SarBox in the press and the generally low level of coverage.
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ReplyDeleteI have no info for these wire transfers stuffs. But nonetheless I learnt something from MFG.
ReplyDeleteYou have one way of getting guarantees for your money by, oddly, taking open positions on listed exchanges.
If, as it was the case, the firm goes belly up, your account is the first one to be moved out to another firm as the exchange needs to do its clearing with you.
The bad idea is to be cash only. In that case, you're last to go, and first to end up in the "whose money is this" mess described by Bruce.
I hope I won't have to use that trick anytime soon...
Along the same lines, what I thought was most telling in the ft article about Corzine's testimony was:
ReplyDeleteMr Corzine said he “never intended to authorise anyone” to tap into customer funds in the dying days of the firm. He added: “Someone could misinterpret ‘we’ve got to fix this’, which I said the evening of October 30.”
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7818bace-2191-11e1-a1d8-00144feabdc0.html
Which is basically the same thing that you refer to in the top of your column.
I'm glad you're continuing to provide your insight on the lost money. The whole electronic banking system is shockingly fragile to me. The hackers you have to be afraid of is not the people outside, but the people inside. It hasn't derailed so far only because the insiders have too much incentive to keep looking good, but if push comes to shove, you're getting shoved. Theoretically, you can hire lawyers, trace the steps and sue for lost money, but possession is 9/10ths of the law. Especially when you're fighting against pillars of the system, as XYZ bank appears to be.
It boggles my mind that a wire transfer can be reversed so easily two days after it occurred. I hope the people counseling/protecting Corzine have their money taken from them like this someday.
ReplyDeleteSo what do us small fish do, that have accounts with, say UBS, as a brokerage, and have equities in 401ks, and a joint acct. with a few precious metal funds? Just asking? Do we yank them from the brokerage house or what?
ReplyDeleteThe Bastard is GUILTY and should be arrested immediately!!! There is probable cause, especially after his lame interview in front of our worthless Congress. If anything, he has guilt by association just like a bank hold-up gang or a group involved in a death. We know he was involved, he was the leader!!!! Bankslaughter at a minimum. At least make him come up with his own bail money!! Justice is blind deaf and stupid in America. If this rouse was tried by the 99% or the OWS crowd, they would be tagged and dragged off immediately. Equal Justice??? No way, just More endless BS from worthless regulators and government!!
ReplyDeleteObviously, the "lack of intent" defense is in play due to a number of federal statutes requiring intent.
ReplyDeleteHowever, intent can be established by one's actions, words said, emails written, as well as one's background or experience in the field. For example: Is this a newly hired clerk who reversed the wire? Under whose instruction?
Keep in mind, former Illinois Governor Blagoveich claimed he had no intent to do harm, that he didn't make any money. A jury read through the claim and used common sense to convict.
In case you missed it, Blago was sentenced this week to 14 years imprisonment.
Bruce,
ReplyDeleteI have a question about the reversed wires:
Who can legimately initiate and send the reverse request? In the case you described, would it have to be MFG itself that initiated the request through their bank, who then send the request, or could MFG's bank initiate this themselves, even if MFG had the funds in the account? I am just wondering whether the reverse could be initiated by MFG's bank if that bank had a stake of some kind in MFG itself, and wanted to make sure that, in the event of a bankruptcy, those funds remained within MFG pending bankruptcy settlement.
The financial media focus has been on the missing/stolen customers money but nothing on the wider issues of why the FED gave MF Global Primary Dealer status, the role of leveraged money in trading and how that impacts the status of customer collateral. The financial media clearly wants to focus on Corzine as the bad guy and keep the discussions far away from leveraged trading and how these credit operations function,create profits,legally attach customer collateral, and provide a distribution channel for the FED to push up money supply.
ReplyDeleteI see a simple outcome - Obama just declares that Corzine was helping do God's work in the currency wars, then declares the investigative area a "battleground" and then detains all the investigators for an indefinite period. Straightforward stuff for the new USA.
ReplyDeleteI am aware of one "attempted" reverse wire. A commodity pool wired out a little over $2 million a few days before the bankruptcy. The pool operator was advised to immediately move the money out of the receiving bank, which she did. The day after the bk was declared the sending bank tried to recall the wire from the receiving bank but the funds were no longer there.
ReplyDeleteMy experience with MFG was that their wires always came from Harris Bank, not JPM. Also, I'm sure there were wires recalled but I wouldn't think anything approaching $1bb. It also seems like that would be something that would be very easy to track.
So does Bob have the LOI from his bank in hand?
ReplyDeleteObviously, after the first wire transfer, one should then wire transfer it a second time to yet another party. Now TWO entities have to collude to filch the money, and TWO entities have to write a LOI. Given that the second entity will have far less incentive to be party to a fraudulent transfer, it might help block it....i.e. "Nice LOI you have there, but the money isn't here anymore...so sorry"
ReplyDeleteMaybe if Jon had dark skin like Raj he would have been flogged and made to wear stripes
ReplyDeleteHello Bruce,
ReplyDeleteI was wondering if you read about rehypothecation as the main reason for missing funds at MF Global, and what your opinion is on how likely that might happen with other U.S. financial institutions?
http://newsandinsight.thomsonreuters.com/Securities/Insight/2011/12_-_December/MF_Global_and_the_great_Wall_St_re-hypothecation_scandal/
Best,
Grace
Grace.
ReplyDeleteRe-hypothication is a possible issue here. I don't really know. I have been following the Re-hypo story in the press. I'm working on a blog with another journalist re this topic.
I'm not sure of the Re-hypo implications. At the worst, it could bring the whole system down.
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ReplyDeleteOn "I never intended to break any rules.”
ReplyDeleteThis is like saying, I smoked but I didn’t inhale. What kind of crap shoot is this. And Congress took his line as good enough to take him off the hook. Such is the corruption when Congressmen recognize a brother among themselves.
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