Welcome login | signup
Language en es fr
OccupyForum

Forum Post: MF Global Clients Burned TWO Times! /// Other People’s Money: Corzine & ‘Wall St.’ Financing

Posted 12 years ago on Nov. 21, 2011, 11:15 a.m. EST by MonetizingDiscontent (1257)
This content is user submitted and not an official statement

MF Global Clients Burned TWO Times

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/mf_claims_go_missing_JjJOyx2yBXc25XTeKN9sJI

-By Kaja Whitehouse / November 24, 2011-

Folks who got stuck with bum checks from Jon Corzine’s defunct brokerage firm MF Global... http://www.nypost.com/t/MF_Global ...are getting bounced a second time.

This time, it’s by the MF Global trustee’s claims process — set in motion yesterday to help burned customers get their money back.

The claims process allows those with accounts to recover 60 percent of the $5.5 billion in MF’s accounts frozen after it emerged that $1.2 billion was missing from accounts that should have been segregated, and therefore safe.

But folks who cashed out of their MF brokerage accounts leading up to the Wall Street firm’s Halloween collapse — and received checks from MF for their account balance, only to see them bounce — are not addressed by the claims process, The Post has learned....

Continue Reading Here

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/mf_claims_go_missing_JjJOyx2yBXc25XTeKN9sJI#ixzz1exjbo3pr


Other People’s Money

Corzine & ‘Wall St.’ Financing

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/other_people_money_bnv7Yjd8IAli3dAJfSbK7M

-November 23, 2011-

The meltdown of MF Global is a striking lesson in the degree to which our finance firms and our elected officials often do business in the same way — regardless of claimed ideology. It’s particularly telling because of the way MFG head Jon Corzine... http://www.nypost.com/t/Jon_Corzine ...moved from Wall Street to government and back.

Back when Corzine ran for governor of New Jersey, he promised to bring fiscal stability to state finances and reduce the crushing property-tax burden on homeowners. Banking on a reputation for financial wizardry from his Wall Street days, he also boasted that he could expand access to health care, fund universal pre-kindergarten in public schools and pump billions into subsidized housing.

That platform made Corzine a darling among big-government types, who found it astonishing that a former Goldman Sachs... http://www.nypost.com/t/Goldman_Sachs ...chief could preach such “unabashed, old-fashioned liberalism,” as The New York Times put it. Once he became governor, however, the only way that Corzine could live up to his promises was through sharply higher taxes on some residents and accounting gimmicks of the sort that 21st century Wall Street and government often share in common.

After all, Corzine now has to explain not just the collapse of MF Global, thanks to his series of risky bets on European bonds, but also how some $1.2 billion in MF Global’s customer accounts, which are supposed to be kept separate from the firm’s own capital, seem to have disappeared. If the firm misused the money, someone is likely to go to jail....

Read the rest of this article Here

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/other_people_money_bnv7Yjd8IAli3dAJfSbK7M#ixzz1exlwGGiH


Anger mounts as MF Global Clients See $3 Billion Still Stuck

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/insight-anger-mounts-mf-global-clients-see-3bln-190836206.html

"More than $3.3 billion or 60 percent of total customer funds at the time of the bankruptcy are still frozen."


Money Found in Britain May Belong to MF Global

By BEN PROTESS and AZAM AHMED | New York Times

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/money-found-britain-may-belong-115508178.html

-November 28, 2011-

About $200 million in customer money that vanished from MF Global is believed to have surfaced at JPMorgan Chase... http://dealbook.on.nytimes.com/public/overview?symbol=JPM&inline=nyt-org ...in Britain, according to people briefed on the matter. The discovery could be the most significant breakthrough in a monthlong hunt for the missing funds.

During MF Global's last chaotic days, the brokerage firm overdrew an account at JPMorgan, according to another person who is close to the matter. Some investigators now believe the firm used customer funds to patch at least some of the hole, which would have been a significant breach of federal law.

MF Global transferred the roughly $200 million in the days before the firm filed for bankruptcy, said the people, who requested anonymity because the investigation was incomplete.

Some investigators suspect that the transfer to JPMorgan was the first major misuse of customer money at MF Global, the commodity brokerage powerhouse once run by Jon S. Corzine, the former Democratic governor of New Jersey. Authorities are also looking into whether JPMorgan initially questioned the source of the cash and sought proof from MF Global that it was complying with regulations, one of the people said.

The authorities believe MF Global failed to give JPMorgan full documentation for the cash, the people briefed on the matter said. But the bank's concerns hardly mattered because the money had already been transferred to the account in Britain. It is unclear whether investigators can recover the $200 million.

Representatives for both MF Global and JPMorgan declined to comment. A spokesman for the MF Global trustee, James W. Giddens, declined to comment.

JPMorgan has long been thought to hold some of the money that disappeared from MF Global. As one of MF Global's primary banks, JPMorgan has been a persistent presence in the firm's demise and the messy aftermath. The bank loaned to MF Global until its waning days and has been a vocal and tenacious presence as a creditor during the firm's bankruptcy hearings.

Rumors circulated briefly this month that the missing money had turned up at the bank. The reports were dispelled later in the same day, however, when investigators disclosed those funds had already been accounted for.

Some of the funds MF Global used to shore up its account with JPMorgan may have been legitimately transferred. Firms often keep a cushion of cash to protect customer accounts, which they are allowed to tap with certain restrictions. While the firm ultimately blew through that buffer, it is unclear when that happened and if it intentionally used customer money.

Some industry lawyers liken JPMorgan's role in the MF Global bankruptcy to the bank's position in the messy collapse of Lehman Brothers... http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/lehman_brothers_holdings_inc/index.html?inline=nyt-org ...albeit on a smaller scale. As the nation's largest bank, JPMorgan is intimately involved in many large bankruptcies. In 2008, as Lehman Brothers was struggling to survive, JPMorgan officials demanded several billion dollars in collateral to meet margin calls. Lehman acquiesced, severely draining its liquidity.

In the case of MF Global, the process is further complicated since the roughly $200 million is believed to be in Britain, which has its own bankruptcy rules.

The transfer came after a relatively routine overdraw of an account MF Global held at the bank, the person close to the matter said. JPMorgan systems picked up the shortfall and sent an automated message to MF Global, said the person, who requested anonymity because the information was private. The firm complied with JPMorgan's request and transferred the money, the person said.

After receiving the money, JPMorgan raised questions about its origins but received few answers. Some investigators suspect that MF Global transferred the customer money to another unit of the firm and mixed it with the company's capital before sending it to JPMorgan.

Such a transaction would have masked that it was customer money. It also would have violated a guiding principle of the futures industry: never mingle customer money with firm money.

The roughly $200 million that is believed to be at JPMorgan is a fraction of the money thought to be missing. The total amount of cash that is unaccounted for is itself the source of much debate.

Shortly after Oct. 31, when the firm filed for Chapter 11, authorities suspected that about $600 million in customer cash was nowhere to be found. Last week, Mr. Giddens's office put the number at $1.2 billion. Some regulators and the CME, the exchange where MF Global did much of its business, have disputed the larger estimate.

The missing money has prompted a wide-ranging federal investigation. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission... http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/c/commodity_futures_trading_commission/index.html?inline=nyt-org ...is leading the search for the cash while the Federal Bureau of Investigation... http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/f/federal_bureau_of_investigation/index.html?inline=nyt-org ...and federal prosecutors in New York and Chicago are examining potential criminal wrongdoing.

Neither the firm nor Mr. Corzine has been accused of wrongdoing. The lengthy search is owed in part to shortcomings in MF Global's recordkeeping .

Representatives for the F.B.I. and the C.F.T.C. declined to comment.

Next month, a pair of Congressional committees will examine MF Global's collapse, which came after investors and customers fled the firm amid worries over its risky wagers on European sovereign debt. The Senate Agriculture Committee will hold the first hearing on Dec. 13, followed by the oversight panel of the House Financial Services Committee on Dec. 15.

For the first time, lawmakers are looking to publicly question Mr. Corzine, who spent five years on Capitol Hill as a Democratic senator from New Jersey. He resigned as head of the firm earlier this month. In addition, they hope to call as a witness MF Global's chief operating officer, Bradley Abelow, who served as Mr. Corzine's chief of staff when he was governor of New Jersey. Mr. Abelow and Mr. Corzine have not responded to the request from lawmakers on the House committee, according to a person with knowledge of the matter who was not allowed to speak publicly. It is unclear if the two men will agree to attend.

The deadline for a response is approaching. Should Mr. Corzine and Mr. Abelow decline, the committee can subpoena the executives.

(((View this article Here))) http://finance.yahoo.com/news/money-found-britain-may-belong-115508178.html

9 Comments

9 Comments


Read the Rules
[-] 1 points by MonetizingDiscontent (1257) 12 years ago

::::::::::::::::Corzine: "Simply Does Not Know Where The Money Is"::::::::::::::::

::::::::::::::Presenting Jon Corzine's Complete Testimony To Congress::::::::::::::

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/corzine-simply-does-not-know-where-money-presenting-jon-corzines-complete-testimony-congress

-12/08/2011-

Probably far more anticipated than the monetary announcements out of BOE (which just announced it is keeping rates at a record low of 0.5%, but no more QE), or even the ECB, and certainly far more than the latest and not greatest European summit which begins today, is the 9am testimony out of the House Agriculture Committee by one "Honorable" Jon S. Corzine, as well as the Q&A that will follow. Naturally the Q&A will be the focus, but as for the prepared remarks, they have just been released and are presented below. The choice selection:

"Obviously on the forefront of everyone’s mind – including mine – are the varying reports that customer accounts have not been reconciled. I was stunned when I was told on Sunday, October 30, 2011, that MF Global could not account for many hundreds of millions of dollars of client money."

"I remain deeply concerned about the impact that the unreconciled and frozen funds have had on MF Global’s customers and others. As the chief executive officer of MF Global, I ultimately had overall responsibility for the firm. I did not, however, generally involve myself in the mechanics of the clearing and settlement of trades, or in the movement of cash and collateral. Nor was I an expert on the complicated rules and regulations governing the various different operating businesses that comprised MF Global. I had little expertise or experience in those operational aspects of the business."

"Again, I want to emphasize that, since my resignation from MF Global on November 3, 2011, I have not had access to the information that I would need to understand what happened."

"It is extremely difficult for me to reconstruct the events that occurred during the chaotic days and the last hours leading up to the bankruptcy filing....I simply do not know where the money is..."

::::::::::::Continue Reading Here::::::::::::

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/corzine-simply-does-not-know-where-money-presenting-jon-corzines-complete-testimony-congress

:::::Translation - he pleads da FIF:::::


[-] 1 points by MonetizingDiscontent (1257) 12 years ago

Pictures From A Latvian Bank Run As MF Global Commingling Comes To Town

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/pictures-latvian-bank-run-mf-global-commingling-comes-town

-11/24/2011-

If anyone is wondering why the collapse of MF Global after the discovery of its commingling and theft of client funds was the single worst thing that could happen to market confidence, then look no further than the small Baltic country of Latvia where precisely what Jon Corzine's firm did to its clients, has happened at the bank level. Businessweek reports: http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-11-24/lithuanian-prosecutor-lists-snoras-shareholders-as-wanted.html ..."Lithuanian prosecutors issued an arrest warrant for Vladimir Antonov and Raimondas Baranauskas who are former shareholders of Bankas Snoras AB.

Both men are suspected of embezzlement and document forgery, the Prosecutor General said in a statement on its website today.

Baranauskas is also suspected of accounting fraud and abuse of authority, it said." Kinda like Jon Corzine, if not by the actual authorities, then by everybody else. And just like in the US where the lack of confidence in the system following the MF filing, so in Latvia the people have decided to hit the ATMs first and ask questions later. "“This money was the bank’s clients’ money,” said Irena Krumane, head of Latvia’s bank regulator, on Latvian Television last night. Krajbanka will most likely be liquidated because the bank doesn’t have the resources to meet depositor and creditor demands unless the Lithuanian government decides to recapitalize the lender, said Janis Brazovskis, the lender’s administrator, in an interview with Latvian Independent Television program 900 Seconds today...

Depositors can withdraw 50 lati a day beginning today for the rest of the week, said Krumane at a press conference."

At today's rate this is about $95. Which is why what happened next, as shown in the pictures below, was to be completely expected, and is a perfect indicator of the collapse in liquidity and credibility of our own system where commingling, unlike in Latvia, goes unpunished.

See Some Photographs Here: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/pictures-latvian-bank-run-mf-global-commingling-comes-town


Corzine’s Broker License EXPIRED YEARS AGO… FINRA let him run MF Global Without One.

http://maxkeiser.com/2011/11/21/corzines-broker-license-expired-years-ago-finra-let-him-run-mf-global-without-one/

-November 21, 2011-

(((Joy riding is the perfect analogy!)))

[-] 1 points by MonetizingDiscontent (1257) 12 years ago

::::::::::::::::CME’s Reputation gets a Stress Test::::::::::::::::

http://www.suntimes.com/business/9063964-420/cmes-reputation-gets-a-stress-test.html

-November 25, 2011-

(ChicagoSunTimes) "...MF Global, one of the largest clearing firms in futures, declared bankruptcy on Halloween. Its chairman, Jon Corzine, made a bad investment on European debt and the firm may have broken rules to try to save itself. Federal regulators identified $600 million missing from its customer accounts, an amount the trustee hired to settle its affairs later estimated at $1.2 billion. The deficit occurred even though CME said MF Global came up clean in an audit it conducted late in October. CME blamed MF Global for raiding customer accounts after its auditors left."

"But CME is involved here because it clears, or legally guarantees, the trading on its markets. It sets itself up as the first financial backstop for customers and firms when a clearing member fails, and that’s what MF Global was. Yet it took CME three weeks to present a $550 million guarantee to the bankruptcy court to assist the process of returning some customer money...."

::::::::::::Read the Full Article Here::::::::::::

http://www.suntimes.com/business/9063964-420/cmes-reputation-gets-a-stress-test.html


[-] 1 points by Edgewaters (912) 12 years ago

If anyone is wondering why the collapse of MF Global after the discovery of its commingling and theft of client funds was the single worst thing that could happen to market confidence, then look no further than the small Baltic country of Latvia where precisely what Jon Corzine's firm did to its clients, has happened at the bank level.

More deregulation is the answer to what has obviously become a criminal culture among banks. You see, once we deregulate the banks entirely, there will be no laws at all governing them and therefore they won't possibly be able to break the law. Problem solved!

[-] 1 points by MonetizingDiscontent (1257) 12 years ago

:::::::Did Someone At FINRA Do Corzine A Favor And Waive His Registration Requirements?:::::::

http://www.forbes.com/sites/billsinger/2011/11/04/did-someone-at-finra-do-corzine-a-favor-and-waive-his-registration-requirements/

Here’s a bit of Wall Street arcana:

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s (“FINRA”) website provides this information at: http://www.finra.org/Industry/Compliance/Registration/QualificationsExams/RegisteredReps/Qualifications/p011102

---Who must register as a representative?---

Anyone actively involved in the member’s investment banking or securities business must be registered as a representative with FINRA. Their duties may include supervision, solicitation, or training of persons associated with the member.

---Definition of Representative---

:::::::::::NASD Membership and Registration Rule 1031(b):::::::::::

---Who must register as a principal?---

Persons associated with a member, enumerated below, who are actively engaged in the management of the member’s investment banking or securities business, including supervision, solicitation, conduct of business, or the training of persons associated with a member for any of these functions are designated as principals. Such persons shall include:'

  • Sole Proprietors

  • OfficersPartners

  • Managers of Offices of Supervisory Jurisdiction, and

  • Directors of Corporations.

::::::::::::Continued, read more Here::::::::::::

http://www.forbes.com/sites/billsinger/2011/11/04/did-someone-at-finra-do-corzine-a-favor-and-waive-his-registration-requirements/


[-] 1 points by MonetizingDiscontent (1257) 12 years ago

::::::::::::JP Morgan to buy MF Global’s London Metals Exchange stake::::::::::::

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/22/us-jpmorgan-lme-idUSTRE7AL1AJ20111122


:::::::::::JP Morgan leverages their balance sheet beyond Enron levels?:::::::::::

http://maxkeiser.com/2011/11/22/jp-morgan-leverages-their-balance-sheet-beyond-enron-levels/

-November / 22 / 2011-

[-] 1 points by MonetizingDiscontent (1257) 12 years ago

::::::::::::::::::::A JP Morgan/MF Global SILVER CONNECTION?::::::::::::::::::::

http://maxkeiser.com/2011/11/22/a-jp-morganmf-global-silver-connection/

November 22, 2011

JP Morgan made a MASSIVE adjustment of PHYSICAL SILVER into its REGISTERED VAULTS, moving over 1 MILLION OUNCES from eligible into REGISTERED OVERNIGHT!

*JP Morgan adjusted 1,103,280 ounces out of eligible vaults, and into registered vaults.

JPM’s registered inventories TRIPLED from 557,265 ounces to 1,660,545 ounces on Tuesday! Is JPM preparing for substantial delivery demands for December?

The similarity between the 1.1 million ounce adjustment into registered by JPM and the 1.4 million ounces of registered silver that remain not eligible for delivery due to the MF Global fiasco is striking.

Perhaps JPM is moving to prevent a COMEX default due to the 1.4 M ounces of registered physical being unavailable for delivery, and JPM is receiving massive amounts of notices of intents to stand for delivery as everyone realizes they do not want to end up like Gerald Celente

-Dale-


::::::::::::::::MF Global Trustee Says Shortfall Could Exceed $1.2 Billion::::::::::::::::

http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/11/21/mf-global-trustee-estimates-shortfall-could-be-more-than-1-2-billion/?ref=business


[-] 1 points by MonetizingDiscontent (1257) 12 years ago

MF Global Trustee Says Commingling Shortfall May Be Double Previous Estimate, Could Reach "$1.2 Billion Or More"

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/mf-global-trustee-says-commingling-shortfall-may-be-double-previous-estimate-could-reach-12-bil

-11/21/2011-

The day after MF Global filed, we calculated... http://www.zerohedge.com/news/mf-global-trustee-says-commingling-shortfall-may-be-double-previous-estimate-could-reach-12-bil ...that contrary to widely accepted media expectations that the client theft at MF Global was limited to "only" $600 million, the true client loss (and thus, MF Global executive felony) was in fact up to $1.5 billion. Sure enough, three weeks in the Trustee has come to see things in a comparable light.

From Reuters: "The trustee liquidating MF Global Holdings Ltd'sbroker-dealer unit said on Monday that the apparent "shortfall" of customer funds may be larger than the futures brokerage had reported prior to its bankruptcy. "

The trustee believes that even if he recovers everything that is at U.S. depositories, the apparent shortfall in what MF Global management should have segregated at U.S. depositories may be as much as $1.2 billion or more," the trustee, James Giddens, said in a statement. He added that the amount could change. Giddens also said he expects in early December to transfer 60 percent of what is in segregated customer accounts for U.S. futures positions, pending court approval. He said the transfer would require $1.3 billion to $1.6 billion to implement, exhausting much of the assets under the trustee's control.

MF Global was run by former Goldman Sachs & Co chief and New Jersey governor Jon Corzine before its Chapter 11 filing on Oct. 31. The filing came after the New York-based company revealed that it made a $6.3 billion bet on European sovereign debt. Corzine resigned on Nov. 4."

In other news, major Chicago-based exchanges are fine (no seriously: they got some very sweet preferential terms in the account transfer... to the detriment of former MF Global accounts). And it goes without saying that Corzine has not even been questioned yet.

[-] 1 points by MonetizingDiscontent (1257) 12 years ago

::::::::Gerald Celente: Uncovering a Smoking Gun Behind The MF GLOBAL Scandal::::::::

(((Video))) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6weHpFCrxdw&feature=player_embedded#!


Corzine’s Broker License EXPIRED YEARS AGO… FINRA let him run MF Global Without One.

http://maxkeiser.com/2011/11/21/corzines-broker-license-expired-years-ago-finra-let-him-run-mf-global-without-one/

November 21, 2011

(((Joy riding is the perfect analogy!)))