Author Topic: Get the leg irons ready - Corzine (Obama Bundler) is going to jail for fraud.  (Read 16626 times)

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can't we just seal the documents ala F&F?

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can't we just seal the documents ala F&F?


why?

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MF Global proves Enron-era (off-balance-sheet) accounting lives on
Yahoo ^ | 12/02/11 | Nanette Byrnes
Posted on December 2, 2011 9:45:46 AM EST by Libloather

MF Global proves Enron-era accounting lives on
By Nanette Byrnes | Reuters – 2 hours 14 minutes ago

REUTERS - The off-balance-sheet accounting methods that Enron and Lehman Brothers made famous in their epic failures years ago have a modern-day poster child: MF Global .

Like its predecessors, the bankrupt brokerage formerly run by Jon Corzine took advantage of an accounting maneuver to keep certain financial obligations off its books, making the firm look less indebted and thus less a risk than it really was.

On Thursday, Mary Schapiro, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, told a committee of Congress the SEC was investigating the accounting treatment that helped mask MF Global's exposure to risky foreign sovereign debt.

The fact that MF Global was able to use the technique highlights how off-balance-sheet moves are evolving as quickly as new accounting rules intended to stop them. Earlier this year, the Financial Accounting Standards Board changed its rules to bar an off-balance-sheet loophole that had helped Lehman Brothers get into trouble in 2008.

(Excerpt) Read more at in.news.yahoo.com ...

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Exclusive: MF Global mixed funds, transferred abroad
Credit: Reuters/Shannon Stapleton
By Christopher Doering

WASHINGTON | Fri Dec 2, 2011 8:42pm EST





WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Regulators investigating the collapse of MF Global have determined that the firm combined money between securities and futures accounts owned by customers, and transferred funds outside the country to at least one entity, a source said on Friday.

"The further we get into (the investigation) the more complex it is ... but we're making progress," the source said, adding that the commingling and transferring of money is making it harder for regulators to determine what money belongs where.

MF Global took futures segregated money and put it into the account for customer securities, essentially mixing futures and securities that were both owned by customers, said an official familiar with the matter.

Until now, it was believed that only customer futures accounts were affected.

The source also told Reuters that MF Global had been using customer funds for "several days if not weeks" rather than just a few days before the firm collapsed.

Regulators had previously thought the firm was using customer funds on the Thursday and Friday before it filed for bankruptcy on October 31.

CME Group, the Chicago exchange where MF Global traded, said it had reviewed the company's books a week before the bankruptcy and found no issues with the customer money.

If MF Global started improperly dipping into its customers' accounts long before the firm's collapse, the allegation would raise questions of why the regulators and auditors failed to spot such behavior.

Congress has already started asking questions about potential lapses in regulatory oversight of MF Global. The pressure on regulators would only increase if MF Global turns out to have misused customer funds over an extended period of time.

"Establishing the specifics of what happened is key to figuring out how the system failed and how to fix it going forward," Republican Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa said in a statement on Thursday. "Congress will need to keep drilling down."

MF Global collapsed in late October after the firm was forced to reveal that it had made a $6.3 billion bet on European sovereign debt.

An effort to sell the firm failed, partially due to the revelation that hundreds of millions of dollars in customer money were not where they should have been.

Investigators such as the Commodity Futures Trading Commission have been scouring the company's books, described as messy and unorganized, for the fund shortfall that has been estimated as much as $1.2 billion by the liquidating trustee.

However, regulators have been at odds with the trustee, believing that figure is too high.

(Additional reporting by Philip Shishkin; Editing by Gary Hill)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/12/03/us-mfglobal-funds-idUSTRE7B203J20111203


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Gary Gensler: A U-Boat Sent into the CFTC?
Submitted by EB on 12/04/2011 10:26 -0500



www.zerohedge.com



Alan Greenspan Ben Bernanke Bernie Sanders Citigroup Commercial Paper Commodity Futures Modernization Act Commodity Futures Trading Commission Credit Default Swaps default Enron ETC Fail Free Money Goldman Sachs goldman sachs Moral Hazard New York Times Nomination Robert Rubin Transparency


 

Although we would substitute "loophole expansion" for the term "de-regulation", inasmuch as the number of financial regulations has more than doubled over the last decade and a half and we have not had anything approaching free markets for well over a century (the received wisdom perpetuated by your oligarchs, notwithstanding), and would finger state-sponsored moral hazard along with free money handed out by the Fed as the primary driver of our financial predicament, the following exposes a number of important facts about the conflicted ex-Goldman Sachs alum that now runs (or did he recuse himself?) the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission, a government chartered institution, whose legacy should one day earn the dubious destinction of that which has institutionalized the trampeling of customer rights (see here for a most egregious example). - EB

Guest Post Submitted by MFGFacts.com

Who was Gary Gensler?

When Gary Gensler was nominated to head the CFTC, most Americans had never heard of him. Yet he had been cruising the inner Beltway of D.C. and halls of influence for years under the radar of most.  Genlser succeeded Brooksley Born who was given a very rough time by the club of Summers, Rubin, Greenspan et. al  when she sounded the alarm bell on the rapid and unregulated growth of off-exchange derivatives. Born sought at least transparency as they “could pose potentially serious dangers to our economy.” Although appointed by Clinton, she never got his support and resigned from her post. For more on her prescient warnings, view this fascinating PBS documentary.  As more collapses happen, the failure to regulate off exchange derivatives from CDO’s to re purchase agreements are increasingly understood to be a prime source of financial collapse.

Lobbying for Loopholes

Back to U-boat Gary. While still at Goldman Sachs brought Robert Rubin (yes, also from GS) recruited Gensler in 1997 to join him as Assistant Secretary for Financial Markets. Later he was promoted to Undersecretary for Domestic Finance in 1999.  Here he worked on the changes to regulation assuring that credit default swaps and other off exchange derivatives were free from regulation.  During the Enron disaster these were called “The Enron Loophole.”

In 2000 Congress passed the Commodity Futures Modernization Act, sponsored by Senator Phil Gramm (and John McCain’s campaign Economic Adviser).  This act was written to keep off exchange derivatives unregulated and, as many are now discovering, opening “Mac Truck sized loopholes” allowing expanded access to customer funds for off exchange, but rated instruments beyond US Treasuries. Gary Gensler was the Treasury’s under secretary for domestic finance and it was his job to assure lobby that the CFMA got through Congress and signed into law.

Cheering the Confirmation

Gensler’s confirmation flew through Congress in 2009, but it was not cheered by all, especially the informed public.  The New York Times named it  “troubling”  at the time and Salon came out with a damming article, “The Oligarch’s President."    Senator Tom Harkin, of the Agriculture Committee, at the time  released a statement of “concerned about the de-regulatory orientation in this nominee’s past.” Senator Bernie Sanders tried to block it and was one of the two votes against Gensler with the strong statement:

… I cannot support his nomination. Mr. Gensler worked with Sen. Phil Gramm and Alan Greenspan to exempt credit default swaps from regulation, which led to the collapse of A.I.G. and has resulted in the largest taxpayer bailout in U.S. history. He supported Gramm-Leach-Bliley, which allowed banks like Citigroup to become “too big to fail.” He worked to deregulate electronic energy trading, which led to the downfall of Enron and the spike in energy prices. At this moment in our history, we need an independent leader who will help create a new culture in the financial marketplace and move us away from the greed, recklessness and illegal behavior which has caused so much harm to our economy.

Like Brooksley Born, Sander’s lone and prescient voice was ignored by the cheering mob in Congress. Gensler’s nomination was approved.

So how did a guy like this who was a key member of the Washington Beltway Demolition Derby get appointed as Chair of the CFTC?  How did this happen after it was known that the loopholes Gensler had a hand creating and defending known loopholes in regulation that were pivotal to the mortgage banking collapse? Those things do not matter in Washington. Independence has no value.

Gensler served as senior economic adviser to the Hillary Clinton in the 2008 campaign.  When her campaign closed shop, he jumped into the Obama camp as a fundraiser and adviser.  Once elected, the Obama transition team then charged him with charge of the reviewing the SEC.

Prior to this Gensler was active in Democratic party politics, appointed treasurer of the Maryland Democratic Party in 2003. He emerged as a major donor contributing more than $220,000 to Democratic party candidates and committees from 2002.  This figure includes the more than $72,000 in 2008 shortly before his appointment.

Washington D.C. is filled with souless hacks.  Such men and women reduce themselves to be nothing more than instruments of others.  We saw that on display at the hearing this week called by the Agriculture Committee where Chairman Gensler was asked to testify.  His prepared statement did not address the purpose of the hearing, but instead offered more about the Swaps market concluding with meaningless platitudes, “This is why the CFTC is working so hard to ensure that swaps-market reforms promote more open and transparent markets, lower costs for companies and their customers, and protect taxpayers. Thank you, and I would be happy to take questions.”

As questions were asked, more than once Gensler replied he could only speak only as allowed by his legal council…

Mr. Gensler talked much, but said little.  On Monday, the CFTC will finally, and after much delay, vote on rule a required under the Dodd-Frank act removing a brokers’ ability to use their clients’ excess margin, or collateral for future trades, in corporate notes, bonds and commercial paper.  The very changes to CFTC rule 1.25 that Gensler worked so hard to put in place 12 years before.  The changes John Corzine and Laurie Ferber, MF Global’s general counsel, lobbied hard in recent months to protect and  keep in place.

Expect Mr. Corzine to say nothing when he appears to answer to the American people.  Such are the the government servants delivered to us.

 

* * *

For our own presentation of Gensler as giddy-as-a-schoolgirl power-hungry regulator (indeed, he said he was "tickled pink" by his new authority, and had autographed copies of Dodd-Frank by Bernanke, Shapiro, Geithner, etc. on his desk) and the CFTC's directive as soon-to-be price fixer in chief, see our article from November, 2010: Ex-Goldmanite Gary Gensler "Tickled Pink" as CFTC Ramps Up for Price Fixing. -EB

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Claim: Clinton Collected $50K Per Month From MF GlobalFormer president's new firm Teneo Strategy was hired to boost Corzine.

by Neil W. McCabe12/05/201167



Comments William J. Clinton (left) and Jon S. Corzine

A former MF Global employee accused former president William J. Clinton of collecting $50,000 per month through his Teneo advisory firm in the months before the brokerage careened towards its Halloween filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Teneo was hired by MF Global’s former CEO Jon S. Corzine to improve his image and to enhance his connections with Clinton’s political family, said the employee, who asked that his name be withheld because he feared retribution.

“They were supposed to be helping Corzine improve his image as a CEO—I guess you can tell how that went,” he said. Corzine resigned as CEO and chairman November 4.

Before Corzine joined MF Global in May 2010, the firm was a smart and well-run commodities broker, a culture that was turned upside-down by his leadership style, he said.

“The traders would be shaking their heads,” he said. “They would come back to their desk and say, ‘Well, I thought we were going to do this—but Corzine would come by and do something else all by himself,’” he said.

The Teneo contract with MF Global lasted at least five months, he said. “The board cancelled it after Corzine resigned.”

The source, who is no longer associated with MF Global, said Teneo is a dual-track company with one side devoted to merchant and investment banking and the other side set up to provide image and strategy consulting services.

Clinton is the chairman of the company’s advisory board. His duties and compensation have not been released. The other member of the board is former British prime minister Tony Blair​.

Two of the three founding partners are very close to the former president and his wife, Secretary of State Hillary R. Clinton. They are Douglas J. Band, who is the former president’s counselor and has served on his personal staff since 1995 and Declan Kelly, who earned the “Hillraiser” status in the secretary’s 2008 run for president for bundling more than $100,000 for the campaign.

Another prominent member of the Clinton political family is Tom Shea​. Shea is a senior vice president for Teneo Strategy and served as Corzine’s chief of staff, when Corzine was the governor of New Jersey.

Kelly sold his public relations firm Financial Dynamics in 2006 to FTI for $340 million, and stayed with that company until July 2009, when he joined the State Department as the Economic Envoy to Northern Ireland.

The source said, “Kelly was given a job they created out our whole cloth.” The job did not exist previously.

“He basically got to ride around developing a book of business, while he waited for his non-compete clause to run out,” he said.

Kelley and the former president traveled together networking and making introductions at international conferences and events, he said.

The Secretary of State also traveled with Kelly, including the October 2010 U.S. – Northern Ireland Economics Conference, which Kelly organized and at which the secretary was the featured speaker.

The secretary announced that she accepted Kelly’s resignation May 11.

Teneo landed its first major client June 1, when the Rockefeller Foundation gave Teneo a $3,447,150, six-month contract to help plan the foundation’s 2013 centennial.

The foundation is another member of the Clinton’s extended family. It gave Clinton its Lifetime Innovation Achievement Award July 27 and the foundation is listed as a between $1 to $5 million contributor to the William J. Clinton Foundation, along with several members of the Rockefeller family who are listed as individual contributors.

[In the preparation of this story, several emails and phone calls were placed to Teneo, MF Global and the State Department for comment. In each case, there was no response.]



http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=47938


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Congress subpoenas Corzine on MF Global collapse

 
 Jon Corzine, chairman and chief executive officer of MF Global Holdings, speaks during the Sandler O'Neill + Partners global exchange and brokerage conference in New York June 9, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Lucas Jackson

By Alexandra Alper and Charles Abbott

WASHINGTON | Fri Dec 2, 2011 1:53pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. House committee voted to subpoena Jon Corzine to testify before Congress about the collapse of MF Global, after the former CEO refused an earlier invitation.

The move intensifies pressure on Corzine, who has been largely absent from public view since he resigned as chief executive early last month. His lawyer had previously told the committee that the former New Jersey governor would be unable to attend a hearing set for December 8, the panel's chairman said on Friday.

The House Agriculture Committee is holding the hearing to examine the collapse of the futures brokerage and the search for hundreds of millions of dollars in missing customer funds.

"It is this committee's responsibility to shed light on the facts and circumstances surrounding the bankruptcy," said Frank Lucas, the Republican chairman of committee.

A spokesman for Corzine and his lawyer, Andrew Levander, declined immediate comment.

MF Global filed for bankruptcy on October 31, after $6.3 billion in risky bets on European sovereign debt spooked investors and an effort to sell the company failed.

Investigators are searching for as much as $1.2 billion in missing customer money, which regulators said the company may have diverted for its own needs.

It is in Corzine's best interest to invoke his right to avoid self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, said Barry Pollack, a criminal defense attorney at Miller Chevalier.

But Pollack said public figures "are genetically predisposed " to give their side of the story.

"His best case scenario in testifying is that they use him as a punching bag. His worse case scenario is that he provides testimony that can subsequently be used by law enforcement authorities putting together a criminal case against him," Pollack said.

U.S. regulators are investigating MF Global's business practices, including its accounting and disclosures. The FBI also has shown an interest in the missing funds.

Congress is holding a series of hearings examining whether regulators and company insiders could have done more to prevent the failure and protect investors, traders and farmers who may be out hundreds of millions of dollars.

The Senate Agriculture Committee and a House Financial Services panel have also called on Corzine and others to testify later this month.

In addition to governor, Corzine served as a U.S. senator from New Jersey and, before that, CEO of Goldman Sachs in the late 1990s. He took over as head of MF Global last year after failing to win reelection as governor.

Lucas told reporters on Friday that the House Agriculture Committee had requested that Corzine appear and received a letter from Corzine's attorney saying he would not be available on December 8, the requested date.

"We are putting the pieces in place to compel testimony," Lucas said. "It is too important to let slide."

Friday's vote to issue a subpoena was unanimous with bipartisan backing.

"I am in full support of the endeavor we are undertaking today," said Representative Collin Peterson, the committee's top Democrat. "It is imperative that we hear directly from all those involved."

The House Agriculture Committee also expects to hear from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, two of the many regulators responsible for overseeing MF Global.

A committee aide said the panel last issued a subpoena in 1996.

Neither MF Global nor its executives has been charged with wrongdoing.

(Reporting by Alexandra Alper and Charles Abbott in Washington, additional reporting by Grant McCool in New York; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and Dave Zimmerman)


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http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/12/02/us-mfglobal-missing-account-idUSTRE7B12AD20111202


Incredible.   Corzine/gentsler/Obama/biden  all should be sent to jail for this.   

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Dec 5, 7:06 PM EST

2 ex-MF Global employees sue Corzine, other execs

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Two former employees of failed brokerage MF Global have sued its top executives and directors, including ex-CEO Jon Corzine, the former governor and senator from New Jersey.

The two employees say the executives lied about MF Global's finances and encouraged workers to put their retirement savings into company stock that later plummeted.

The two are Monica Rodriguez, who was MF Global's head of credit for the Americas, and Cyrille Guillaume, managing director of its commodities and stock division in London. Guillaume and Rodriguez are seeking class-action status for everyone who got company stock as a benefit of working for MF Global after May 2010.

A Corzine spokesman declined to comment on the suit, which was filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Manhattan.

MF Global failed after making a disastrous bet on European debt. It filed for bankruptcy court protection Oct. 31. Corzine resigned as chairman and CEO a few days later.

An estimated $1.2 billion or more may be missing from MF Global customer accounts. Regulators are investigating whether MF Global used money from customers' accounts for its own needs as its financial condition worsened. That would violate securities rules. The FBI is investigating whether the firm violated any criminal laws.

MF Global employees were required to take part of their compensation in company stock, the suit says. A separate plan also allowed them to buy company shares at a discount. If they had known the firm's actual financial condition, "they could have refused to buy in or insisted on compensation arrangements that were all cash," said Jacob Zamansky, one of the attorneys representing Rodriguez and Guillaume.

"Corzine encouraged MF Global employees to invest their retirement savings and compensation in company stock, and he destroyed their wealth with his risky and outsized bets on (European) debt," Zamansky said. "He should be held personally accountable for his actions."

After Moody's Investors Service downgraded MF Global's credit rating on Oct. 24, the company's stock dropped from $3.55 a share to $1.86 the following day. With MF Global in bankruptcy, the shares are nearly worthless; in May 2010, they traded around $8.

Several other class-action suits on behalf of MF Global shareholders also have been filed against Corzine and other top executives, and they are being consolidated by the court.

On Friday, the House Agriculture Committee voted to subpoena Corzine to testify at a hearing Thursday about his role leading MF Global. A committee spokeswoman said Corzine was served the subpoena.

Two other congressional panels announced plans to vote on subpoenas for Corzine.

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The Rise and Fall of MF Global Chief Jon Corzine

With the collapse of MF Global, Jon Corzine stands in the middle of the missing-billion-dollar crossfire. How the finance golden boy went from star governor to news-headline disgrace.
 
by Michael Daly  (/contributors/michael-daly.html)  | December 5, 2011 12:00 AM EST

 Illustration by Jimmy Turrell for Newsweek





On other mornings, the leather upholstered chair at Esquires barbershop could have been a throne, from which Jon Corzine (/articles/2011/11/05/jon-corzine-s-sloppiness-dooms-mf-global-and-any-other-firm-he-touches.html)  would rise to stride supreme up the street where he had made his name and his fortune. But on this gray, drizzly dawn just before Thanksgiving (/articles/2011/11/25/stop-rewriting-thanksgiving-and-the-rest-of-history.html) , the once mighty 64-year-old emerged from the shop at 14 Wall Street looking sunken and defeated. He moved up the block with a skittish quickness, his blue blazer hanging almost scarecrow-loose on his shoulders, as he nervously raised and lowered a coffee cup to his face, seemingly not so much to take sips as to conceal his face—lest somebody recognize him and maybe ask the big question:

“Where’s the money?”

The money being up to $1.2 billion in customer funds that had vanished after the implosion of the investment firm he ran, MF Global (/articles/2011/12/02/jon-corzine-subpoenaed-to-testify-before-congress-about-mf-global-s-collapse.html) . The immediate cause of the eighth-largest bankruptcy in American history was a $6.3 billion bet on European debt that Corzine had declared was a sure thing. He seems to have been blinded less by greed than by need, a need to elevate little-known MF Global into the league of Goldman Sachs, where this son of an Illinois tenant farmer had risen to become CEO, only to be deposed more than a decade ago.

Apart from a press release in which he announced his resignation as MF Global’s CEO and expressed “a great sadness” for “what has transpired,” Corzine has maintained a shamed and, in the view of many, shameful silence, so successfully avoiding the press and angry investors that CNBC jokingly put his face on the side of a milk carton.

That silence may end as early as this week with a bipartisan tar-and-feathering before Congress. The House Agriculture Committee has voted in a rare unanimous moment to subpoena Corzine to appear on Thursday, and he will also likely be called by a committee in the Senate, where he himself served before resigning to become the governor of New Jersey. Corzine in public office was the most progressive of politicians and often stuck to his principles at whatever the cost. But at MF Global, that same willful confidence and indifference to public opinion combined with an outsize sense of himself to create disaster. What made Corzine so admirable in the Capitol and the statehouse could conceivably land him in the big house with the likes of Bernie Madoff.

Corzine is either the worst of the good guys or the best of the bad guys. He does not seem to be a thief. The question is whether he allowed hundreds of millions in customer funds to be lost in a last-ditch effort to stave off MF Global’s collapse. One senior executive of the firm insists that nobody was more stunned by the money’s disappearance than Corzine himself.

“I can’t believe the fuck-up we just discovered,” the executive heard Corzine say in the hours after the collapse.

This same MF Global executive suggests that what is largely missing from press accounts of the firm’s demise is the condition MF Global was in when Corzine first became CEO last year. The firm has been described as a “bastard stepchild,” spun off by its parent the Man Group after it acquired the remnants of Refco, which had collapsed after its CEO stole hundreds of millions of dollars (Refco CEO Phillip Bennett pleaded guilty in 2008 to 20 counts of securities fraud and is serving a 16-year term). The new company had then been rocked when one of its traders lost $140 million in unauthorized wheat deals.

When Corzine arrived, MF Global was a losing proposition in dire need of new revenue streams and, according to one executive, leveraged an astonishing 50-to-1. The executive, who requested anonymity, says the rating agencies warned Corzine at the outset that they would downgrade the firm’s credit if he did not swiftly increase profitability.

Corzine set about cutting costs, laying off those he deemed unnecessary and bringing in new talent. He raised MF Global’s stature by persuading the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, whose president is his old Goldman pal William Dudley, to name it one of only 20 “primary dealers” authorized to underwrite U.S. government debt.

While he was building up his firm’s reputation at home, ironically his core strategy focused on Europe and buying burgeoning government debt in Italy, Spain, Belgium, Portugal, and Ireland.

He explained that the firm was taking advantage of “dislocations,” where seemingly irrational fears of government default resulted in comparatively high yields in short-term debt. Corzine believed there was absolutely no chance those financially troubled nations would go broke before the bonds reached maturity a year hence.

Thanks to a little magic called repurchased or “repo” agreements, the firm was able to take out loans to buy the bonds, using those same bonds as collateral—thereby incurring monumental debt to buy monumental debt. The interest on the loans was lower than the interest produced by the bonds, and the difference translated into what Corzine considered virtually risk-free profits: $47 million in one quarter and $38 million in the next, with much more promising to come.

 Jon Corzine in 2009., Chris Hondros / Getty Iamges

Corzine was so convinced his bet was a sure thing that he failed to heed what he himself was preaching as a visiting professor at Princeton University. He gave a lecture in September 2010 on the importance of learning lessons from the financial disaster of 2008. “We need to address the accumulation of debt at every level of our society,” Corzine declared.

Corzine had then hopped in a car whose chauffeur happened to be a Mafia loan-shark victim, and returned to MF Global. By this point the company was betting $6.252 billion on European debt.

MF Global’s board repeatedly expressed concern about the size of the position, according to a published account by Bloomberg. And Corzine is said to have repeatedly reassured them that his strategy was foolproof. What made the looming disaster more perplexing was that Corzine is not a Madoff or some other type of Wall Street greedster. His friend and former fellow New Jersey senator Robert Torricelli figures Corzine remained haunted by his sudden fall from power at Goldman Sachs in 1998 and failed to understand how much Wall Street had changed since then.

“A split in him and a disconnect in time,” Torricelli says.

As for the rating agencies, which so famously abetted the subprime-mortgage insanity, the senior MF Global executive says they met regularly with Corzine and were aware of his strategy all along. Less pliable was the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, which instructed MF Global to increase the amount of actual money it kept on hand to back up the loans. Corzine had better luck winning over the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, headed by another former Goldman buddy, Gary Gensler. The CFTC was considering a change in something called Regulation 1.25, which allowed a firm to borrow otherwise segregated customer money to buy short-term securities. The CFTC was poised to curtail the practice, and prohibit it altogether with foreign sovereign debt, when MF Global urged the CFTC in writing not to “fix something that’s not broken” and Corzine met personally with Gensler. The vote on the change was put off.

All seemed to be working in Corzine’s favor until the market turned on him this summer. MF Global reported a disastrous third quarter that, combined with further economic turmoil in Europe, prompted Moody’s to drop its rating on MF Global’s debt to a notch above junk on Oct. 24. Corzine held a conference call with investors the next day and spoke of “the most volatile period I’ve ever experienced,” adding, “I wasn’t around in 2008 because I took a time-out for other purposes.” He nonetheless told investors not to be alarmed. “We will be back on track,” he pledged.

Two days later, Moody’s and Fitch dropped MF Global’s rating to junk. Investors fled in the equivalent of a run on the bank, giving Corzine a real-life lesson in the principle formulated long ago by British economist John Maynard Keynes and taught in all business schools: “Markets can remain irrational far longer than you or I can remain solvent.”

By Oct. 30, Corzine seemed to have averted a catastrophe by passing the bastard stepchild onto another foster parent. A deal to sell MF Global’s assets to Interactive Brokers Group was all but finalized when auditors noticed that some $600 million of customer money was missing—an estimate that would eventually rise to as much as $1.2 billion.

The roots of Corzine’s rise and fall may go back all the way back to an 18th-century John Corzine of Dutch extraction who, according to the Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois, “at one time owned 60 acres in that portion of New York City known as Wall Street.” The 18th-century Corzine sought bigger and better things by heading west, and two generations later the Corzines had settled in Christian County, Ill. The most direct descendants became a well-to-do clan of merchants. Others stuck to agriculture, including Jon Corzine’s grandfather, who did well enough to establish a 2,500-acre farm. The grandfather began to hedge against the vagaries of weather and market by dealing in the commodities exchange. That led him into banking, and he became prominent in local politics, until it all came crashing down in the Great Depression.

Corzine’s father toiled as a tenant on a leased 120-acre farm in Willey Station, not a 20th the size of the one the grandfather had owned. Jon Corzine later told the writer William Cohan, author of Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World, “My father never had a credit card, was afraid of any kind of financial risk because he saw what happened to his father.” Corzine’s father moonlighted selling farmers’ insurance, and his mother taught at the elementary school in nearby Taylorville. Jon Corzine met his future bride, Joanne Dougherty, there in the first grade.

“She’s a super gal,” says childhood friend Jack Marzotti. “They were the perfect couple.”

In high school, Corzine was captain of the basketball team and starting quarterback of the football team. Marzotti recalls, “Everybody liked Jon. He was a hard competitor, and driven, but I don’t think Jon had an enemy anywhere. Nobody talked ill about Jon. He was just one of those guys you were glad to know.”

Corzine was not enough of a basketball star to get recruited by the University of Illinois, but he was scrappy enough to make the team as a walk-on. Under threat of the wartime draft, Corzine joined the Marine Corps Reserve, which kept him out of Vietnam.

The writer Cohan would note that the son of the man who never had a credit card would use one to get through business school. “That’s true of all this baby-boom generation,” Corzine recalled. “They learned to borrow early and big.”

He was soon at Goldman Sachs, and he made partner at 33. At one point he called his father to say he had earned $150,000 in a single year without tilling so much as a row of soybeans. “You ought to come home,” his father is supposed to have said.

Corzine stayed in New York, but maintained a folksy friendliness, sporting a beard and sweater-vests in a realm of clean shaves and suits. He was nicknamed “Fuzzy” and was known to greet his fellow traders with a peace sign. The partners who vied with him for leadership found that Fuzzy was also stubbornly willful and unrelentingly ambitious. He became head of the trading division, which racked up incredible profits. Those were followed by huge losses that in other circumstances might have threatened his career. But when the head of Goldman Sachs quit, taking dozens of partners with him, the firm needed somebody who understood how to extricate it from the bad trades, someone who was popular enough to keep more partners from departing.

At 44, Corzine became CEO. Fuzzy proved imperial in his convictions about the direction the firm should take, and his No. 2, a hyperambitious and fellow Illinois farm boy named Henry Paulson, became a fierce rival. Corzine was confident he controlled enough votes on the executive committee for his position as he set off for a Colorado skiing vacation during Christmas 1998. He returned to discover a presumed ally had turned on him and Paulson had seized control of the firm.

The deposed Corzine sat in his big house in Summit, N.J., with some $350 million and no place to go on Wall Street that could equal where he had been.

He decided just six weeks later to run for the Senate.

Political consultant Robert Shrum showed him an early poll indicating that his Wall Street reputation led voters to consider him a middle-of-the-road moderate. Shrum remembers Corzine replying, “This is not me; I’m not going to run on this ... I’m going to run as a progressive because that’s what I am.”

After spending $63 million of his own money, Corzine was elected, and he proved as progressive as he had described himself. He was among the 23 senators who voted against the Iraq War, the first to speak out against the genocide in Darfur, and a champion of universal health care and universal access to college. He wrote much of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, and was accorded the honor of sitting in the presiding chair for the vote on this bill establishing new protections for investors in the wake of Enron. Corzine still bridled at being a junior member of a crowd of 100. He complained that he would have to “wait until I’m 80” to become a committee chairman and have the kind of sway he wanted. He had not yet finished his first term when he ran for governor of New Jersey and won.

Corzine never did believe the rules of risk applied to him, an indicator of which came in 2006, when he suffered near-fatal injuries in a car crash. He had not been wearing a seat belt, despite previous urging by staff members.

At the hospital, security guards were instructed not to admit under any circumstances a woman with whom Corzine had broken other rules at the risk of his marriage. Carla Katz was the head of New Jersey’s biggest public employees’ union. Corzine had met her when he was running for the Senate.

After the Corzines divorced, Joanne suggested that her husband’s affair with Katz was part of a moral lapse that began when he entered politics. He had kept his political principles, even his beard, but he was willing to use his Goldman connections to secure the support of New Jersey’s Democratic organization. “All day, people around him were telling him to do whatever he wants to do to get ahead, things that the Jon I’ve known since we were in high school would have never been comfortable with,” Joanne Corzine told a reporter after the divorce. “And I think it’s made him lose sight of anything but success, getting to where he wanted to get.”

Corzine may have come to feel he’d lost more with his family than he had intended to risk, and he cut things off with Katz, giving her what was estimated to be $6 million and forgiving a $470,000 loan. She seems to have continued to pursue him even as the state and her union were in contract negotiations, as suggested by emails that later appeared in the media.

“BTW, I had an over the top erotic dream about you last night. Bad boy!!” read one missive from her BlackBerry.

Complications in Corzine’s personal life still proved less of a hamper to his quest for a second term as governor than were the instances where he stood by his political principles. And the cost of political courage was exponentially compounded by his failure to understand how his actions are perceived. He seemed to imagine that commuters would be mollified by being told his turnpike toll hike was to be spread over 20 years, but the only number they heard was that the ultimate increase would be 800 percent. A senior aide terms Corzine “politically tone-deaf” and “the worst public-image manager you’ve ever met.”

“He just doesn’t get public opinion,” the aide says. “He never has.”

Corzine lost his bid for a second term to Chris Christie, 49 to 45 percent, and retired with no political future to his Hoboken penthouse, which overlooks the Hudson River and Manhattan.

He was then offered a chance for a new future in finance by an old Goldman friend. J. Christopher Flowers had struck out on his own to become a billionaire, and his investment firm was now a major stockholder in MF Global.

“Goldman was small when I joined it, too,” Corzine was quoted as saying.

As he renewed his life as a financial CEO, Corzine also remarried. He and his new wife, psychotherapist Sharon Elghanayan, look glowingly happy in the wedding photos, a perfect couple who had met not at the start of their lives, but were bound for a happy ending. In April of this year, the couple hosted a $35,800-a-plate fundraiser for President Obama in the elegant Fifth Avenue apartment she had received in her own divorce settlement. The guests were served chicken potpie, and the president spoke, saying, “Some of you know that Jon was a big supporter of mine in my first U.S. Senate race when nobody could pronounce my name.” There was talk of Corzine becoming the new Treasury secretary in the way of his old Goldman nemesis Paulson.

That dream vanished with MF Global’s collapse. Corzine would instead be returning to Washington as the subject of inquiries in both houses of Congress. Tea Party Republicans happily prepared to pillory a big-time Obama liberal from Wall Street. And the chairwoman of the Senate agriculture committee signaled that in the era of the 99 percent, Corzine should not expect any breaks from his former Democratic comrades. “The farmers, small-business owners, and others who trusted this firm are now facing tremendous hardship and may ultimately never recover all of their money,” Sen. Debbie Stabenow said. “Anyone engaged in wrongdoing in this matter must be swiftly held accountable, to help bring justice to victims.”

While preparing to defend himself, Corzine continues to pay regular visits to Wall Street—if only to sit in the throne-like chair at Esquires, as he has since the days when he gazed into the barbershop mirror and saw the CEO of Goldman Sachs reflected back at him. It bears noting that J. P. Morgan once kept an apartment on the uppermost floor of the 32-story building where Esquires is located, directly across the street from the New York Stock Exchange, which the tycoon singlehandedly rescued from itself during the Panic of 1907. For all his many virtues, Corzine had become the latest Wall Street sinner, the latest to have been blind to the lessons of the past.

With the help of his concealing coffee cup, Corzine was able to leave the barbershop and proceed up the block on that recent drizzly morning without being recognized. His driver was waiting in a black SUV with New Jersey plates, parked just down from Zuccotti Park and the Occupy Wall Street protesters. Corzine was no sooner in the front passenger seat than he was pulling away and riding down Broadway in the same direction as the famous bronze bull and federal bankruptcy court, where the big question is the missing money. He at least had on his seat belt.

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BOMBSHELL: Damning SEC OIG Audit of SIPC Raises Conflicts of Interest for MF Global Liquidation Trustee James. W. Giddens
Submitted by EB on 12/06/2011 08:27 -0500



Commodity Futures Trading Commission ETC Fee Application headlines Lehman Lehman Brothers MF Global Securities and Exchange Commission


 

While MF Global figurehead, Jon Corzine, has grabbed most of the headlines with respect to MF Global's demise, it is our hope that US Congressman investigating this debacle shine light on the racket that is SIPC--an organization that can appoint a crony insider who is unrestrained by bankruptcy laws on the amount of fees he can rack up.  The looting of the MF Global customer funds by the liquidation trustee, James W. Giddens (who has no experience with a futures broker liquidation, by the way)  must stop and not be allowed to be repeated. -EB

Guest Post Submitted by MFGFacts.com

The SEC Office of Inspector General published  a damning audit of the Securities Investor Protection (SIPC) Activities just this past March.   Yet most everything in it appears to have been ignored.  Prominent among the ongoing grave accountability problems inside SIPC are that Trustee Fees are excessive, with practically no oversight and absolutely no recourse.

From the report:

Liquidations are similar to ordinary bankruptcy cases, it does not provide any limit on the amount of trustee fees in SIPA liquidations, unlike bankruptcy cases. Second, under SIPA, where payments are made out of the SIPC fund, courts have no discretion whatsoever to limit fees that SIPC has recommended for trustees or their counsel. Thus, even if a court finds the amount of fees awarded to the trustee to be excessive, it is required to approve such excessive fees if SIPC determines that the fees are reasonable. We found that in one case, a Southern District of New York bankruptcy judge deemed fees to be awarded to the trustee in a liquidation to be excessive, but found that he had no choice but to approve the fees.

Fees around the LBI liquidation are among those singled out as excessive, regardless the SIPC hired the same trustee for the MF Global, Inc liquidation.

According to the latest published report, the fees paid to the trustee and his counsels processing the Lehman claims for the period from September 2008 to September 2010 (24 months) totaled approximately $108 million. According to the fourth interim fee application, as of September 30, 2010, the entire administrative fees, including fees for accountants, consultants, etc., totaled approximately $420 million.

We hadn’t see anything yet.  October 24th Bloomberg reported that LBH had spent “642 million on its liquidation, with most of the money going for professional and consulting fees. Trustee James Giddens and his law firm, Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP, have earned about $169 million.”

No reviews of fees and a weak warning

An entire section of the OIG report is dedicated to the problem that “The SEC Does Not Review Fees SIPC Pays to Court-Appointed Trustees on a Periodicor Systematic Basis”

Remember, this is a government sponsored corporation, and in a time of the exploding bankruptcies in the financial sector we discover that there have been no reviews of fees paid to trustees since 2003 — almost a decade.

Disparagingly, the report continues that Unlike Chapter 7 or 11 bankruptcies  “with respect to SIPA liquidations, there is no equivalent provision capping fees and, thus, there is no statutory limit on the amount of fees a trustee can earn in a SIPA case.”

This must be repeated:  “no statutory limit on the amount of fees a trustee can earn in a SIPA case.”

So the the report is obliged to make  a number of recommendations to try and deal with excessive fees by Trustees.  But right now, even if SIPC complains (would they ever dare?) or seeks recourse on extreme fees, there is simply nothing a judge can do about it under current SIPC regulations

And with that, the audit report concludes with a weak warning that Congress might be called upon to get abusive conditions under control

“The Division of Trading and Markets, in consultation with the Commission, shall determine whether to request that Congress modify the Securities Investor Protection Act (SIPA) to allow bankruptcy judges who preside over SIPA liquidations to assess the reasonableness of administrative fees in cases where administrative fees are paid by the Securities Investor Protection Corporation.”

No Shame

If this is not bleak enough, note that the trustee for both Lehman Brothers and MF Global, Inc. has been also  the SIPC “house lawyer” for decades.  The SIPC is a private corporation and can hire whoever it wants.  A private corporation, albeit with a government charter and vast public responsibility.  The glaring conflicts for a corporation with this degree of accountability to the public, is beyond the pale by any standard of “good governance.”  Gidden’s own public profile reports, “He has been involved with SIPC from the time of its creation in 1970, served as counsel to SIPC in a variety of matters and has served as Trustee or principal counsel in seven major SIPC liquidations,  He has also served as a special funds administrator appointed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.”  Giddens is a is a member of the SIPC Modernization Task Force.  (Which means he is on the committee charged with things like updating the making of recommendations to Congress on any modifications to the Securities Investor Protection Act (SIPA) to fix things like lack of recourse due to excessive fees!)

Just as example of how a trustee get named by SIPC for the LBI liquidation two days before LBI  filed for bankruptcy on on September 15th, 2008. The SIPC had already decided who would be hired. In a September 13th letter  from Stephen Harbeck, head of SIPC tells the board “The situation is both very fluid and very “non-public”. Should it become necessary to take action, Jim Giddens of Hughes Hubbard and Reed will serve as trustee and counsel.”

There is no shame. In March we have a government report on lack of controls, accountability and the problems of Trustees gone wild.  And on October 31st, obviously ignoring the implications of the published audit, the SIPC hands over yet another liquidation to their main man, likely in the same manner of the LBI assignment.  MFG Facts and others continue to ask how is it that the CFTC abdicated their congressional mandate and pushed a Futures Commission Merchant into the jaws of SIPC who then with no competition, no regard of the recent OIG audit, and obviously no debate,  immediately handed it to James W. Giddens of the firm Hughes Hubbard & Reed?

Today Bart Chilton of the CFTC called for an insurance scheme just like SIPC for the futures industry.

 

www.zerohedge.com


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Senator Shelby slams CFTC over MF Global
Yahoo ^ | 11/6/11 | Dave Clarke and Sarah N. Lynch - Reuters




WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday criticized the Commodity Futures Trading Commission's handling of MF Global's meltdown and said its chief is "evading" questions about his role in overseeing the company.

Senator Richard Shelby said MF Global customers are waiting for their money to be returned while a "bewildered" CFTC searches for the funds.

"The victims of MF Global, I believe, deserve better," Shelby said.

Shelby made his comments at a Senate Banking Committee hearing on the implementation of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial oversight law. CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler is testifying at the hearing.

Gensler said in early November that he was not participating in the investigation of futures brokerage MF Global so he would not become a distraction or risk creating an appearance of a conflict of interest.

Gensler and Jon Corzine, who resigned as MF Global's chief executive early last month, worked at Goldman Sachs at the same time and held prominent positions. They both left the investment bank in the late 1990s.

"Holding the CFTC accountable for its regulatory failures, however, will not be an easy task," Shelby said. "Already Chairman Gensler has been evading questions about his role in the regulation of MF Global."

Shelby has requested that the CFTC's inspector general look into the agency's oversight of MF Global including Gensler's decision to recuse himself from the investigation.


(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...


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MF Global fallout delays U.S. farm seed, land deals

By Tom Polansek

CHICAGO | Tue Dec 6, 2011 12:49pm EST






CHICAGO (Reuters) - For the first time in 25 years, Minnesota farmer Dean Tofteland has missed his deadline to buy seed for next spring's corn and soybean crops.

With $200,000 of his money yet to be returned from the accounts of MF Global, his former broker, the 49-year-old farmer has missed a $5,000 discount for early buyers, and is watching friends and neighbors snap up the best varieties of seeds.

In the latest sign of how MF Global's failure is continuing to cascade across the commodity industry, Tofteland and other farmers who have yet to recover more than a third of their money from the bankrupt broker now find themselves in a cash crunch that risks rippling far beyond the futures market.

Some farmers have had to postpone purchases of land or equipment. Tofteland still expects to sow his 1,000 acres in the southwest corner of the state, but may have to borrow money to do so.

Still, the delay in returning billions of dollars in customer funds more than a month after MF Global filed for bankruptcy is starting to affect actual decisions on the farm. This threatens to cloud the outlook for U.S. crops, warn farmers who have been ratcheting up pressure on the bankruptcy trustee to move faster to disperse any cash he secures.

"That's pretty serious when you're raising food for the country and the world," Tofteland said.

For most farmers, the fact that their broker may have taken as much as $1.2 billion of customer money for its own use is bad enough. But the seasonal business of farming is now being disrupted since regulators still can't account for the missing funds, or even agree how big the hole is.

The chief regulatory officer for CME Group said on Tuesday the exchange was confident after more investigations that some of the higher estimates of the shortfall in MF Global customer funds were inflated. CME was MF Global's main regulator at the exchange level.

"The amount of money that we have tied up is significant," Tofteland said. "Because of this I've been delaying my seed purchase decisions."

Tofteland normally would have made his purchases at least two weeks ago to take advantage of discounts for farmers who buy early. He has avoided borrowing money in order to do so because he does not want to take on more debt but says he will consider a loan if the delay persists.

Tofteland worries his harvest next fall will suffer because the best-performing types of seeds will likely be sold out by the time he makes his purchases. He still plans to plant his crop in the spring.

DAWNING IMPACT

Farmers are among the thousands of former MF Global clients who are missing money from the brokerage. The firm run by former New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine, an ex-CEO of Goldman Sachs, collapsed on October 31 after making bad bets on European debt.

The bankruptcy had an immediate impact on farmers' abilities to hedge their crops at grain exchanges. Many had to liquidate positions or put up additional cash to meet margin calls after their accounts were transferred from MF Global to other brokerages.

Now, the collapse has begun to impact farm decisions that can directly affect output.

In Montana, Marty Klinker, who grows wheat and barley, is missing about $275,000 from his accounts at MF Global. He said the shortfall caused him to delay buying more than $500,000 worth of farm equipment, including a tractor and combine, from manufacturer Case IH.

Klinker didn't know whether he would eventually buy the equipment, which would replace older models on his farm. He said he has to decide by the end of the year to take advantage of prices he previously negotiated with the company.

Case is a brand of CNH, a majority-owned subsidiary of Italy's Fiat SpA. A Case spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

"We're right in the middle of year-end equipment decisions," Klinker said.

FARMERS CAUGHT OFF GUARD

MF Global's collapse has not completely halted farm purchases.

Stine Seed, which calls itself the largest independent U.S. seed company, has not seen a slowdown in sales, said Myron Stine, vice president of sales and marketing.

Yet, other agribusiness professionals confirm shockwaves from the bankruptcy have disrupted plans affecting crop production.

Diana Klemme, a broker for Midwest grain elevators and vice president of Grain Service Corp in Atlanta, said one of her clients was holding about $400,000 cash in an MF Global account at the time of its collapse. The client had to delay purchasing some land because the money had been frozen, she said.

Farmers were caught off guard by the disappearance of their money because it was held in segregated accounts considered to be immune from troubles at brokerages. Several farmers said they had felt it was safer to keep cash in the accounts than at local banks.

Congress is holding a series of hearings to examine whether regulators and company insiders could have done more to prevent MF Global's failure from hurting farmers and investors.

At a Senate Banking Committee hearing on Tuesday, Senator Richard Shelby criticized the Commodity Futures Trading Commission's handling of the meltdown, saying he thought former clients of MF Global "deserve better".

Farmers worry the cost of doing business could go up permanently due to the increased risk of keeping money in segregated accounts, making it more expensive to produce crops. For Klinker, whose oldest son is entering the family business, that could mean upgrading equipment less frequently than he has in the past.

"It impacts everything," he said.

(Reporting by Tom Polansek; Additional reporting by Jonathan Spicer in New York and Dave Clark in Washington; Editing by Dale Hudson)


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Jon Corzine to tell House panel he doesn’t know where customers’ money went
Washington Post ^ | 12/8/11 | David S. Hilzenrath




Jon S. Corzine, the former U.S. senator and New Jersey governor who presided over the collapse of the commodities brokerage MF Global, says he cannot explain what happened to “many hundreds of millions of dollars” that the firm was holding for customers. In testimony prepared for delivery to Congress on Thursday, Corzine says he was “stunned” to learn shortly before the firm sought bankruptcy protection at the end of October that MF Global could not account for the money. “I simply do not know where the money is, or why the accounts have not been reconciled to date,” the former MF Global chief executive says, according to the testimony.


(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...


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December 7, 2011, 4:07 pm Deal Professor
10 Questions for Jon Corzine
By STEVEN M. DAVIDOFF and PETER J. HENNING




Jon S. Corzine, the former chief of MF Global.Jon S. Corzine, the former chief executive of MF Global Holdings and a former Democratic senator from New Jersey, is being forced to return to Capitol Hill on Thursday morning.

The House Agricultural Committee subpoenaed Mr. Corzine after he resisted the committee’s request that he voluntarily answer questions.

It’s a reversal of fortune for the man once mentioned as a potential Treasury secretary. Mr. Corzine’s pain may be brief. Mr. Corzine is likely being advised by his lawyers to invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. We’ll soon find out if he listens to his lawyers.

If Mr. Corzine turns out to be more voluble, here are some questions the committee may want to ask:

1. You were chief executive of MF Global with day-to day responsibility for the entire operation. Yet, it appears that you were personally responsible for structuring and monitoring the $6.35 billion trade in sovereign European debt of Italy, Spain, Portugal, Ireland and Belgium — a bet that spooked investors and the ratings agencies, ultimately bringing down the firm.

You took on this responsibility despite the fact you had been a politician for more than a decade and were likely not as familiar with markets as you were when you were at Goldman Sachs. Why did you feel the need to personally trade for MF Global instead of having a trader or trading group do it? Who did you speak to structure and monitor this trade, particularly since you were preoccupied with running this entire business?

2. Your chief risk officer, Michael Roseman, warned you against this bet on troubled sovereign European debt, according to The Wall Street Street Journal. Mr. Roseman reportedly thought that the trade was too risky because MF Global did not have sufficient liquidity to sustain its positions if the firm was downgraded by the ratings agencies. Can you tell us what Mr. Roseman told you, whether his concerns were relayed to the board of directors and why you ignored his warnings?

3. As a follow-up, MF Global was heavily leveraged. After the experience of the financial crisis, when firms with high leverage ratios failed, why did you undertake a trade that appeared to consume more than half of your remaining capital?

4. MF Global was largely a brokerage firm when you took over. It did not regularly trade in sovereign debt for its own profit, at least not in the manner you did. Why did you feel the need to enter into large trading positions that the company had previously never taken, and do you think trading the firm’s capital in this manner was appropriate and expected by shareholders?

5. You apparently had significant contact with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and its chairman, Gary Gensler, about whether the agency should adopt regulations restricting broker use of client money to trade. Helped in part by your opposition, these rules were not adopted until after the collapse of MF Global.

Mr. Gensler worked for you at Goldman Sachs, and he has now recused himself from the investigation of MF Global. stating that he did not want to become a “distraction.” Can you describe your earlier conversations with Mr. Gensler, and do you believe that you had special access to the agency because of your history with Mr. Gensler?

6. There is still as much as $1.2 billion estimated to be missing in client money entrusted to MF Global. Were you aware that client money was being used to support MF Global’s trades, and if so, why did you not stop it? Who do you think is responsible for this misuse of client money?

7. Another follow-up. As MF Global’s chief executive, you had to sign off on its quarterly financial statements and attest to the firm’s internal controls. How could so much client money apparently be missing, and the records be described by a C.F.T.C. commission as a “disaster,” when you said the internal controls met all legal requirements?

8. Your board reportedly signed off on these trades. In fact, it appears that the board had sole oversight of these investments. What did you tell the board about this trade and do you think directors comprehended the risks?

9. Some 3,000 people have lost their jobs at MF Global, and customers will likely lose significant money. You resigned from MF Global, passing up a pay package of $12.1 million, but if Interactive Brokers Group had acquired your firm, you would have automatically received this amount. Your pay package appears to be a case of heads I win, tails I break even. Do you think that your compensation was appropriate in terms of incentives?

10. This trade was only a multiyear one but could have generated up to $750 million in profit. MF Global lost almost $79 million in 2010. Was it your intent to continue to engage in large trades like this one again to generate MF Global’s profits and, if not, what was your business plan for MF Global?


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Steven M. Davidoff, writing as The Deal Professor, is a commentator for DealBook on the world of mergers and acquisitions.



Peter J. Henning, who writes White Collar Watch for DealBook, is a professor at Wayne State University Law School.


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Jon Corzine "I Simply Does Not Know Where The Money Is" -- Complete Testimony To Congress
Zero Hedge ^ | 12/08/2011 | Tyler Durden

Posted on Thursday, December 08, 2011 10:18:41 AM by SeekAndFind

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."


(Excerpt) Read more at zerohedge.com ...


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Corzine sorry, puzzled by missing MF Global money
Yahoo Finance ^ | December 8,2011 | Sarah N. Lynch





Former MF Global chief Jon Corzine apologized to customers, employees and investors who have suffered because of the brokerage firm's collapse, but said he does not know where missing customer money is.

"Their plight weighs on my mind every day -- every hour," Corzine, a former U.S. senator, said in 21 pages of remarks prepared for delivery on Thursday before the House Agriculture Committee.

"I simply do not know where the money is, or why the accounts have not been reconciled to date," he said.

Corzine's contrite but defensive remarks are his first since MF Global's October 31 bankruptcy and his resignation days later. Revelations of massive bets on European sovereign debt caused markets to lose confidence in the firm.

The search for hundreds of millions of dollars in missing customer funds has sent reverberations through the farm belt and trading floors, and has attracted the attention of the FBI and federal prosecutors. Thousands of customers have had their money frozen.

"It appears to me that nobody has learned a thing from what's gone on here. Wall Street is operating as if 2008 never happened," said Collin Peterson, the top Democrat on the Committee, referring to the recent financial crisis.

In separate testimony, a top executive of futures exchange operator CME Group Inc said MF Global misused hundreds of millions of dollars of customer funds by moving the money to its own accounts, the strongest accusation yet against the bankrupt futures brokerage. "Transfers of customer funds for the benefit of the firm constitute serious violations of our rules and of the Commodity Exchange Act," CME Executive Chairman Terrence Duffy said in prepared remarks. CME, the biggest U.S. futures exchange operator, was a hands-on regulator of MF Global.


(Excerpt) Read more at finance.yahoo.com ...


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Corzine blames predecessors for MF Global's fall
Google ^ | 12/8/2011 | DANIEL WAGNER / AP



Jon Corzine will tell a House panel Thursday that he doesn't know the location of client money that went missing when MF Global failed. And he will argue that he inherited a firm doomed by the risks his predecessors took.

Yet Corzine says he accepts responsibility for the firm's risky bets and says its customers' losses weigh on his mind "every day — every hour."

The former U.S. senator was subpoenaed to explain how MF Global, which he led for about 20 months, collapsed into the eighth-largest bankruptcy in U.S. history and why an estimated $1.2 billion in client funds remains unaccounted for.

In prepared testimony for the hearing before the House Agriculture Committee, Corzine apologizes to "all those affected" by MF Global's failure. The company filed for bankruptcy protection on Oct. 31 after making disastrous bets on European government debt.


(Excerpt) Read more at google.com ...


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LOL.   Typical - blame someone else.   

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MF Global and the great Wall St re-hypothecation scandal
12/7/2011 COMMENTS (0)

By Christopher Elias (UK)





(Business Law Currents) A legal loophole in international brokerage regulations means that few, if any, clients of MF Global are likely to get their money back. Although details of the drama are still unfolding, it appears that MF Global and some of its Wall Street counterparts have been actively and aggressively circumventing U.S. securities rules at the expense (quite literally) of their clients.

MF Global's bankruptcy revelations concerning missing client money suggest that funds were not inadvertently misplaced or gobbled up in MF’s dying hours, but were instead appropriated as part of a mass Wall St manipulation of brokerage rules that allowed for the wholesale acquisition and sale of client funds through re-hypothecation. A loophole appears to have allowed MF Global, and many others, to use its own clients’ funds to finance an enormous $6.2 billion Eurozone repo bet.

If anyone thought that you couldn’t have your cake and eat it too in the world of finance, MF Global shows how you can have your cake, eat it, eat someone else’s cake and then let your clients pick up the bill. Hard cheese for many as their dough goes missing.

FINDING FUNDS

Current estimates for the shortfall in MF Global customer funds have now reached $1.2 billion as revelations break that the use of client money appears widespread. Up until now the assumption has been that the funds missing had been misappropriated by MF Global as it desperately sought to avoid bankruptcy.

Sadly, the truth is likely to be that MF Global took advantage of an asymmetry in brokerage borrowing rules that allow firms to legally use client money to buy assets in their own name - a legal loophole that may mean that MF Global clients never get their money back.

REPO RECAP

First a quick recap. By now the story of MF Global’s demise is strikingly familiar. MF plowed money into an off-balance-sheet maneuver known as a repo, or sale and repurchase agreement. A repo involves a firm borrowing money and putting up assets as collateral, assets it promises to repurchase later. Repos are a common way for firms to generate money but are not normally off-balance sheet and are instead treated as “financing” under accountancy rules.

MF Global used a version of an off-balance-sheet repo called a "repo-to-maturity." The repo-to-maturity involved borrowing billions of dollars backed by huge sums of sovereign debt, all of which was due to expire at the same time as the loan itself. With the collateral and the loans becoming due simultaneously, MF Global was entitled to treat the transaction as a “sale” under U.S. GAAP. This allowed the firm to move $16.5 billion off its balance sheet, most of it debt from Italy, Spain, Belgium, Portugal and Ireland.

Backed by the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), it was a clever bet (at least in theory) that certain Eurozone bonds would remain default free whilst yields would continue to grow. Ultimately, however, it proved to be MF Global’s downfall as margin calls and its high level of leverage sucked out capital from the firm. For more information on the repo used by MF Global please see Business Law Currents MF Global – Slayed by the Grim Repo?

Puzzling many, though, were the huge sums involved. How was MF Global able to “lose” $1.2 billion of its clients’ money and acquire a sovereign debt position of $6.3 billion – a position more than five times the firm’s book value, or net worth? The answer it seems lies in its exploitation of a loophole between UK and U.S. brokerage rules on the use of clients funds known as “re-hypothecation”.

RE-HYPOTHECATION

By way of background, hypothecation is when a borrower pledges collateral to secure a debt. The borrower retains ownership of the collateral but is “hypothetically” controlled by the creditor, who has a right to seize possession if the borrower defaults.

In the U.S., this legal right takes the form of a lien and in the UK generally in the form of a legal charge. A simple example of a hypothecation is a mortgage, in which a borrower legally owns the home, but the bank holds a right to take possession of the property if the borrower should default.

In investment banking, assets deposited with a broker will be hypothecated such that a broker may sell securities if an investor fails to keep up credit payments or if the securities drop in value and the investor fails to respond to a margin call (a request for more capital).

Re-hypothecation occurs when a bank or broker re-uses collateral posted by clients, such as hedge funds, to back the broker’s own trades and borrowings. The practice of re-hypothecation runs into the trillions of dollars and is perfectly legal. It is justified by brokers on the basis that it is a capital efficient way of financing their operations much to the chagrin of hedge funds.

U.S. RULES

Under the U.S. Federal Reserve Board's Regulation T and SEC Rule 15c3-3, a prime broker may re-hypothecate assets to the value of 140% of the client's liability to the prime broker. For example, assume a customer has deposited $500 in securities and has a debt deficit of $200, resulting in net equity of $300. The broker-dealer can re-hypothecate up to $280 (140 per cent. x $200) of these assets.

But in the UK, there is absolutely no statutory limit on the amount that can be re-hypothecated. In fact, brokers are free to re-hypothecate all and even more than the assets deposited by clients. Instead it is up to clients to negotiate a limit or prohibition on re-hypothecation. On the above example a UK broker could, and frequently would, re-hypothecate 100% of the pledged securities ($500).

This asymmetry of rules makes exploiting the more lax UK regime incredibly attractive to international brokerage firms such as MF Global or Lehman Brothers which can use European subsidiaries to create pools of funding for their U.S. operations, without the bother of complying with U.S. restrictions.

In fact, by 2007, re-hypothecation had grown so large that it accounted for half of the activity of the shadow banking system. Prior to Lehman Brothers collapse, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) calculated that U.S. banks were receiving $4 trillion worth of funding by re-hypothecation, much of which was sourced from the UK. With assets being re-hypothecated many times over (known as “churn”), the original collateral being used may have been as little as $1 trillion – a quarter of the financial footprint created through re-hypothecation.

BEWARE THE BRITS: CIRCUMVENTING U.S. RULES

Keen to get in on the action, U.S. prime brokers have been making judicious use of European subsidiaries. Because re-hypothecation is so profitable for prime brokers, many prime brokerage agreements provide for a U.S. client’s assets to be transferred to the prime broker’s UK subsidiary to circumvent U.S. rehypothecation rules.

Under subtle brokerage contractual provisions, U.S. investors can find that their assets vanish from the U.S. and appear instead in the UK, despite contact with an ostensibly American organisation.

Potentially as simple as having MF Global UK Limited, an English subsidiary, enter into a prime brokerage agreement with a customer, a U.S. based prime broker can immediately take advantage of the UK’s unrestricted re-hypothecation rules.

LEHMAN LESSONS

In fact this is exactly what Lehman Brothers did through Lehman Brothers International (Europe) (LBIE), an English subsidiary to which most U.S. hedge fund assets were transferred. Once transferred to the UK based company, assets were re-hypothecated many times over, meaning that when the debt carousel stopped, and Lehman Brothers collapsed, many U.S. funds found that their assets had simply vanished.

A prime broker need not even require that an investor (eg hedge fund) sign all agreements with a European subsidiary to take advantage of the loophole. In fact, in Lehman’s case many funds signed a prime brokerage agreement with Lehman Brothers Inc (a U.S. company) but margin-lending agreements and securities-lending agreements with LBIE in the UK (normally conducted under a Global Master Securities Lending Agreement).

These agreements permitted Lehman to transfer client assets between various affiliates without the fund’s express consent, despite the fact that the main agreement had been under U.S. law. As a result of these peripheral agreements, all or most of its clients’ assets found their way down to LBIE.

MF RE-HYPOTHECATION PROVISION

A similar re-hypothecation provision can be seen in MF Global’s U.S. client agreements. MF Global’s Customer Agreement for trading in cash commodities, commodity futures, security futures, options, and forward contracts, securities, foreign futures and options and currencies includes the following clause:

 “7. Consent To Loan Or PledgeYou hereby grant us the right, in accordance with Applicable Law, to borrow, pledge, repledge, transfer, hypothecate, rehypothecate,loan, or invest any of the Collateral, including, without limitation, utilizing the Collateral to purchase or sell securities pursuant to repurchase agreements [repos] or reverse repurchase agreements with any party, in each case without notice to you, and we shall have no obligation to retain a like amount of similar Collateral in our possession and control.”

In its quarterly report, MF Global disclosed that by June 2011 it had repledged (re-hypothecated) $70 million, including securities received under resale agreements. With these transactions taking place off-balance sheet it is difficult to pin down the exact entity which was used to re-hypothecate such large sums of money but regulatory filings and letters from MF Global’s administrators contain some clues.

According to a letter from KPMG to MF Global clients, when MF Global collapsed, its UK subsidiary MF Global UK Limited had over 10,000 accounts. MF Global disclosed in March 2011 that it had significant credit risk from its European subsidiary from “counterparties with whom we place both our own funds or securities and those of our clients”.

CAUSTIC COLLATERAL

Matters get even worse when we consider what has for the last 6 years counted as collateral under re-hypothecation rules.

Despite the fact that there may only be a quarter of the collateral in the world to back these transactions, successive U.S. governments have softened the requirements for what can back a re-hypothecation transaction.

Beginning with Clinton-era liberalisation, rules were eased that had until 2000 limited the use of re-hypothecated funds to U.S. Treasury, state and municipal obligations. These rules were slowly cut away (from 2000-2005) so that customer money could be used to enter into repurchase agreements (repos), buy foreign bonds, money market funds and other assorted securities.

Hence, when MF Global conceived of its Eurozone repo ruse, client funds were waiting to be plundered for investment in AA rated European sovereign debt, despite the fact that many of its hedge fund clients may have been betting against the performance of those very same bonds.

OFF BALANCE SHEET

As well as collateral risk, re-hypothecation creates significant counterparty risk and its off-balance sheet treatment contains many hidden nasties. Even without circumventing U.S. limits on re-hypothecation, the off-balance sheet treatment means that the amount of leverage (gearing) and systemic risk created in the system by re-hypothecation is staggering.

Re-hypothecation transactions are off-balance sheet and are therefore unrestricted by balance sheet controls. Whereas on balance sheet transactions necessitate only appearing as an asset/liability on one bank’s balance sheet and not another, off-balance sheet transactions can, and frequently do, appear on multiple banks’ financial statements. What this creates is chains of counterparty risk, where multiple re-hypothecation borrowers use the same collateral over and over again. Essentially, it is a chain of debt obligations that is only as strong as its weakest link.

With collateral being re-hypothecated to a factor of four (according to IMF estimates), the actual capital backing banks re-hypothecation transactions may be as little as 25%. This churning of collateral means that re-hypothecation transactions have been creating enormous amounts of liquidity, much of which has no real asset backing.

The lack of balance sheet recognition of re-hypothecation was noted in Jefferies’ recent 10Q (emphasis added):

 “Note 7. Collateralized Transactions
We pledge securities in connection with repurchase agreements, securities lending agreements and other secured arrangements, including clearing arrangements. The pledge of our securities is in connection with our mortgage−backed securities, corporate bond, government and agency securities and equities businesses. Counterparties generally have the right to sell or repledge the collateral.Pledged securities that can be sold or repledged by the counterparty are included within Financial instruments owned and noted as Securities pledged on our Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition. We receive securities as collateral in connection with resale agreements, securities borrowings and customer margin loans. In many instances, we are permitted by contract or custom to rehypothecate securities received as collateral. These securities maybe used to secure repurchase agreements, enter into security lending or derivative transactions or cover short positions. At August 31, 2011 and November 30, 2010, the approximate fair value of securities received as collateral by us that may be sold or repledged was approximately $25.9 billion and $22.3 billion, respectively. At August 31, 2011 and November 30, 2010, a substantial portion of the securities received by us had been sold or repledged.

We engage in securities for securities transactions in which we are the borrower of securities and provide other securities as collateral rather than cash. As no cash is provided under these types of transactions, we, as borrower, treat these as noncash transactions and do not recognize assets or liabilities on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition. The securities pledged as collateral under these transactions are included within the total amount of Financial instruments owned and noted as Securities pledged on our Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition.

According to Jefferies’ most recent Annual Report it had re-hypothecated $22.3 billion (in fair value) of assets in 2011 including government debt, asset backed securities, derivatives and corporate equity- that’s just $15 billion shy of Jefferies total on balance sheet assets of $37 billion.

HYPER-HYPOTHECATION

With weak collateral rules and a level of leverage that would make Archimedes tremble, firms have been piling into re-hypothecation activity with startling abandon. A review of filings reveals a staggering level of activity in what may be the world’s largest ever credit bubble.

Engaging in hyper-hypothecation have been Goldman Sachs ($28.17 billion re-hypothecated in 2011), Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (re-pledged $72 billion in client assets), Royal Bank of Canada (re-pledged $53.8 billion of $126.7 billion available for re-pledging), Oppenheimer Holdings ($15.3 million), Credit Suisse (CHF 332 billion), Knight Capital Group ($1.17 billion),Interactive Brokers ($14.5 billion), Wells Fargo ($19.6 billion), JP Morgan($546.2 billion) and Morgan Stanley ($410 billion).

Nor is lending confined to between banks. Intra-bank re-hypothecation is also possible as evidenced by filings from Wells Fargo. According to disclosures from Wachovia Preferred Funding Corp, its parent, Wells Fargo, acts as collateral custodian and has the right to re-hypothecate and use around $170 million of assets posted as collateral.

LIQUIDITY CRISIS

The volume and level of re-hypothecation suggests a frightening alternative hypothesis for the current liquidity crisis being experienced by banks and for why regulators around the world decided to step in to prop up the markets recently. To date, reports have been focused on how Eurozone default concerns were provoking fear in the markets and causing liquidity to dry up.

Most have been focused on how a Eurozone default would result in huge losses in Eurozone bonds being felt across the world’s banks. However, re-hypothecation suggests an even greater fear. Considering that re-hypothecation may have increased the financial footprint of Eurozone bonds by at least four fold then a Eurozone sovereign default could be apocalyptic.

U.S. banks direct holding of sovereign debt is hardly negligible. According to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), U.S. banks hold $181 billion in the sovereign debt of Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain. If we factor in off-balance sheet transactions such as re-hypothecations and repos, then the picture becomes frightening.

As for MF Global’s clients, the recent adoption of an “MF Global rule” by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to ban using client funds to purchase foreign sovereign debt, would seem to suggest that it was indeed client money behind its leveraged repo-to-maturity deal - a fact that will likely mean that very few MF Global clients few get their money back.

Written with contributions from Jack Bunker and Nanette Byrnes.

 

(This article was first published by Thomson Reuters’ Business Law Currents, a leading provider of legal analysis and news on governance, transactions and legal risk. Visit Business Law Currents online at http://currents.westlawbusiness.com. )   



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http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2011/12/corzine-stunned-that-mf-global-couldnt-find-missing-funds.html


Corzine 'stunned' that MF Global couldn't find missing funds
December 8, 2011 | 11:40 am    6414

As the first former U.S. senator to be subpoenaed by Congress in more than a century, Jon Corzine testified Thursday about the “last chaotic days” of MF Global, the trading firm that declared bankruptcy under his watch.

Corzine said he was “stunned” to learn that the firm could not locate hundreds of millions of dollars in client money in the days before the firm’s collapse, and said he had no idea where the money had gone.

Corzine was chief executive of MF Global when the firm filed for bankruptcy protection Oct. 31. He resigned from his post five days later.

“I simply do not know where the money is or why the accounts have not been reconciled to date,” he said in testimony before the House Agriculture Committee.

Client money should have been held in segregated accounts separate from those involving the firms’ own trading activity. The disappearance of the money has led to speculation that MF Global used customer funds to shore up risky bets on European sovereign debt.

“I never intended to break any rules,” Corzine said when asked whether he had ever authorized a transfer of customer funds from segregated accounts.

“There were an extraordinary number of transactions during MF Global’s last few days, and I do not know, for example, whether there were operational errors at MF Global or elsewhere, or whether banks and counterparties have held onto funds that should rightfully have been returned to MF Global,” Corzine said.

Corzine said he “strongly advocated" the trading strategy that led MF Global to accumulate more than $6 billion in holdings in European sovereign debt. But he said the company’s sovereign debt positions were not the cause of the firm’s collapse.

The sovereign debt was “a concern to the marketplace, make no mistake about that,” Corzine said. But he said customers’ confidence in the firm also was rattled by ratings downgrades and a failure on the part of MF Global management to communicate the reasons for the company's struggles.

“It often got conflated with Euro-sovereign positions, which there actually were no losses in,” he said.




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The Suits Commence: Two Former MF Global Employees Sue Jon Corzine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2011 12:37 -0500

Goldman Sachs goldman sachs MF Global


While the US Attorney General's office, presided by a very much embroiled in the Fast and Furious scandal Eric Holder, who at last check was spending 90% of his time frozen in carbonite, may believe that Jon Corzine is the homo sapiens equivalent of holy water, others appear to not share the sentiment. And as of today, two former employees have proceeded to sue Jon Corzine as fins.com reports. "Two former employees of MF Global have filed a class-action lawsuit against the firm's former Chief Executive Jon Corzine, other senior executives and board directors on behalf of themselves and current and former employees who acquired stock in the company while Corzine led the firm. The lawsuit, filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleges that the defendants provided false information regarding the company's financial condition and made statements that artificially inflated the stock price." Jon Corzine and the board breached their fiduciary duty to their employees and destroyed their careers and retirement savings," Jacob Zamansky, lead counsel for the plaintiffs, said in an email. The plaintiffs are Monica Rodriguez, the New York-based head of credit for the Americas, and Cyrille Guillaume, the London-based managing director of the commodities and stock division....If employees had known MF Global's true financial state, Zamansky said, "they could have refused to buy in or insisted on compensation arrangements that were all cash." And here is why Corzine's life is about to get very difficult now that the precedent has been set: "The employees did not file suit against MF Global, the company itself, because it is currently undergoing bankruptcy proceedings." One wonders how much more various Attorneys General need to see to perhaps consider to at least question the former CEO of Goldman Sachs, pardon, MF Global.

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