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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Kashya Hildebrand Speaks – Sinks Hubby?


I wrote about Kashya Hildebrand’s inappropriate FX trades the other day. The story has some new legs today (Bloomberg). The wife of the president of the Swiss National Bank (SNB) has done the one thing she never should have. She talked. Any chance this affair had of falling off the radar screen was lost when she went on Swiss TV.

A recap:

-8/15/11 Kashya sells CHF 400,000 short against the dollar at USDCHF .7936.

-9/9/11 the SNB devalues the CHF.

-10/4/11 Kashya covers the short and earns an FX profit of CHF 75,000 ($83,000). The return is 16.5% of the amount traded. She did this in just 50 days (120% annualized).

-November 2011 an employee of Sarasin Bank, Basel steals the information about Kashya’s trades and leaks it to a Swiss politician, Christoph Blocher.

-There is a formal investigation. On Friday night, 12/23/11, the SNB makes a public announcement that the FX transactions have been reviewed and there is nothing improper about them. The timing of the release of information was clearly an effort to bury the story.

-1/3/2012 Kashya goes on TV in what appears to me like a snotty and inappropriate defense of her actions.

Kashya’s words:

“My interest in the dollar purchase was motivated by the fact that it was at a record low and almost ridiculously cheap.”

I think this is bullshit. Yes the dollar was cheap at the time. There was a global panic occurring. To counter-trade the market at precisely the time the CHF was hitting all-time highs takes balls and an extraordinary sense of timing.

Kashya may have committed a fatal error with those words. She teed this up. Now there has to be a follow up. I’ve been trading FX for years. There is no way in hell that Kashya just happened to luck out. There is only one possible exception. If she was a regular trader of the USDCHF, she might be able to justify the impeccable results of the 8/15 trades. But if she can’t demonstrate that she was a repeat "banger" in the FX markets, then the idea that she just happened to think the CHF was “cheap” and was worthy of a spec, falls very, very flat.

It is a fact that 70 to 80 percent of the financial transactions of the Gallery are in dollars. The reason is that the artists come from many different ethnic groups, and that we participate in many art fairs around the world.

Kashya is attempting to argue that her FX trading is directly related to her art gallery business. Oh really? If that were the case, this story would never have made the headlines. If she had purchased a specific painting that was priced in dollars it could be argued that the transaction was in the normal course of her business. Importers hedge their FX exposures all the time. That’s not what happened here.

There was no painting that was being hedged. If there were, Kashya would have shown an invoice long ago. This was an outright speculation on her part. The proof is that she never took delivery of the dollars she bought. When she had a big unrealized gain, she did what any smart spec would do, take the profit.

Some personal color on this. Kashya worked for Moore Capital fifteen years ago. Guess what? During that same period, I was playing hard in the FX markets. Check my Bio. I knew Moore from back then. Louis Bacon was running the show. Moore was then (and still is) on the very top of the list of big hitters in the FX markets. They had deep pockets, great traders and they were wired.

There are no laws on the books (that I know of) regarding insider information and FX trading. Information is the key to success. Information comes in the form of expensive data systems. It also comes the old-fashioned way, word of mouth. That was true in 1995. It’s no different today. Kashya worked in a shop that understood how money was made in FX. You don't forget these lessons. FX has always been about the money, and how to get more of it.

Here's my suggestion to Kashya and Philipp Hildebrand, the Swiss media (who are reading this, thanks!) and Christoph Blocher:

Publish the FX trading activity for Kashya Hildebrand for the past 12 months. There are only two possible outcomes:

A) Kashya was a regular FX trader. She bought and sold CHF against other currencies on more than one occasion over the course of a year.

B) The 8/15 speculative transaction was a one-of-a-kind event.


Which one is it? If it is A, then Kashya repeatedly abused her position. She put her husband at risk for conflict of interest considerations. Philipp would have been an ass to let her do any regular trading. If scenario A is proven, then Philipp looks very bad indeed. It would have been extraordinary poor judgment on his part if this were the case.

If it is B, then Kashya is damned. She had to have a very specific reason to do an FX spec. If it’s shown that this was a unique event, then it’s compelling evidence that she acted with specific foreknowledge. She was wired, just like the firm she used to work at was famous for being.

A or B, I think that Kashya’s attempt to defuse this issue has backfired. She has put herself (and her husband) in a difficult corner. She has offered up an excuse for her actions.  Now it’s time to reveal some facts. Either way, it will look bad.

The outcome of this is far from certain. If Kashya is either caught in a lie, or shown to be a regular FX trader, it could easily mean the end for Mr. Hildebrand. This affair just makes the SNB look silly. That won’t be tolerated for long.

I do wonder if there are any FX implications attached to all of this. My guess is that if we were to get a surprise new head of the SNB there would be no change to the 1.20 EURCHF peg. At least not right away. But if there is a change at the top at the SNB, I suspect the life span of the peg will be shortened.

We may well have a situation where the market is forced to ask the question:

“Now that the brainchild of the peg is gone, how much is the SNB willing to intervene at 1.20?”

If the market forces this issue, it will have broad consequences. A speculative attack on the CHF would upset all markets. Thanks in advance Kashya!
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17 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. Bruce spotted doors A and B, but missed door C:

    Kasha is a FX trading whiz, AND she and the hubby never discuss FX policy to avoid conflict of interests.

    And Kasha has the order dates and analysis to back up regular successful trading independent of any last minute inside tips from hubby whenever he was making big decisions, announcements, and the like.

    Course, Door C is as small as the eye of a needle.

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  3. There's no consequences for the employee who leaked the info? Even if it's all innocent, didn't she think about how this would look? Also, did she really need the money? I assume these guys are at least millionaires couple times over. Risk it all for tens of thousands?

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  4. The lady should have gone with cattle futures.
    That appears to be the proven way to make money without anyone suspecting insider influence.

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  5. Just for the record, this author never removed anyone's comments as suggested above. I don't know how to remove one.
    bk

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  6. According to German media the employee who leaked the info pressed charges against himself (for breaking bank secrecy) and Hildebrand (for insider trading) at the police and got fired the same day. There is some speculation that it wasn't the wife but Hildebrand himself that did the transactions. On Thursday he will make a statement about this.

    http://www.faz.net/aktuell/wirtschaft/unternehmen/anzeige-wegen-insiderhandels-zentralbankchef-will-privatgeschaefte-aufklaeren-11592548.html

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  7. Bruce -

    I've had comments to this board that were critical of you removed. Your suggestion that this happens without your knowledge is absurd.

    Second - her explanation that it was a one time spec cannot be summarily dismissed as you attempt. It's possible and reasonable. It's certainly stupid for her to trade given her husbands position and the story should have legs but your conjecture here is weak.

    On another note - good call on the peg if Hilly goes by the wayside. That's the sort of insight that drives people to this site.

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  8. I should qualify my above comment by saying that I am a big fan of this site - if you want to remove my comment questioning your integrity on this matter please feel free, my initial reaction when faced with a pattern is one of suspicion.

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  9. I say again, I have never removed a comment. I do not have the capacity to do that.

    Blogspot is a Google product. I know there is some level of surveillance of these pages as I have gotten emails from a Google moderator about one thing or the other.

    It's possible that someone at Google deleted your comments. You must have said something pretty ugly to get them to delete it???

    Anyway, for you, the moderators at Google and anyone else out there:

    Say as you wish.

    I can take anything. I was married for 23 years and worked on Wall Street for 30. Nothing offends me any longer.

    bk

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  10. Nothing more ugly than what I just said. Certainly no profanity or anything that would trigger an automatic screen. Thanks again for the good work, I regret jumping to conclusions.

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  11. You know what's particularly interesting? Kashya's attitude that she's entitled. And, that "anyone would do it" ... because it was like picking up found money. However, if she were a maid in a hotel, she'd be fired.

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  12. Did her husband "sink?" Or did he float?

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  13. You know what's particularly interesting? Kashya's attitude that she's entitled. And, that "anyone would do it" ... because it was like picking up found money. However, if she were a maid in a hotel, she'd be fired.

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  14. the Swiss National Radio tried tonight to downplay the scandal and criminal act and insisted, on what wonderful excuses Hildebrand had given this afternoon.
    The Powers That Be seem to be very interested in keeping Hildebrand in power, they did get away in bailing out UBS with 60 billions CHF in 2008, had the bank declare a loss of 20 billions the same year and allowed the management to rake in 2.5 billion as bonuses, "for outstanding achievements???".. there was some pribble-prabble in parliment, but no serious action..
    Caveman

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  15. Is Kaysha a Muslem ? Is Philipp a Muslim through the mariage?

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  16. "Die In dieser Passage weist Philipp Hildebrand seinen Kundenberater bei der Bank Sarasin sinngemäss an, in Zukunft ohne sein Einverständnis keine Aufträge mehr von seiner Ehefrau Kashya für Devisentransaktionen entgegen zu nehmen."

    Hat er gut gemacht da die BCC bank in Abu dhabi auch von Pakistanern in die Knie gezwungen wurde LOL

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  17. What’s is her art gallery? In the words of Jeremy Collier, “Vanity is a strong temptation to lying; it makes people magnify their merit, over-flourish their family, and tell strange stories of their interest and acquaintance.” If she has an art gallery, these are works of the art of deception.

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