• Featured
  • Australasia
  • The Americas
  • Europe
  • Africa
  • Market
  • Precious Metals
  • Resources
  • Currencies
  • Real Estate
  • The Bonner Diaries

Jerome Kerviel, France’s Worst Ever Financial Mishap


By Adrian Ash • February 4th, 2008 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

Adrian AshCity correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and formerly head of editorial at Fleet Street Publications Ltd, Adrian Ash has been studying and writing about the investment markets for the last 9 years. He is now head of research at BullionVault - giving you direct access to investment gold, vaulted in Zurich, on US$3 spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.

See All Articles by This Author

  • None Found
Filed Under: Europe

Jerome Kerviel, fast-overtaking John Law as France's worst-ever financial mishap, claimed on his most recent resumé to enjoy judo and sailing, as well as running up $7.1 billion in losses for his employers in his spare time.

Something of a loner according to the world's media (only 11 friends on Facebook - can you imagine!), he's also been called a "computer genius" by his colleagues at Société Générale in Paris.

But that genius earned him a mere €100,000 last year - "peanuts in the banking world" as the British press puts it. What gives?

Jerome Kerviel studied economics at Nantes and then Lyon (one of France's top 10 universities), before joining SocGen as a back-office drone in 2000. He worked on risk-control and security systems for two years, before graduating to Trading Assistant (a.k.a. middle-office drone) on the European equities desk, plugging numbers into SocGen's stock-market derivative positions.

"He spoke very little, answering questions with nothing more than a yes or a no," whispers a colleague, aghast. Behind the weirdo stare, however, this low-grade bean-counter was in fact a criminal mastermind - or so everyone says - bent on gambling three times SocGen's entire stock-market cap by "hacking through four separate fire-walls" according to French finance minister Christine Lagarde.

Monsieur Kerviel then chose "very specific operations which didn't involve any cash movements...placing transactions which did not require immediate confirmation" from senior management, says Jean-Pierre Mustier, head of corporate & investment banking at SocGen.

Judging by the public statements of SocGen's management, Jerome Kerviel also kept a white fluffy cat and hid a fish-tank stocked with piranhas just below the trap-door in his hallway. "The nature of his fictitious and fraudulent operations were constantly evolving," pleads Daniel Bouton, SocGen's CEO, in an interview with Le Figaro.

"And when the control systems detected an anomaly, he managed to convince control officers that it was nothing more than a minor error."

Sacre bleu! This sad loner was able to fool all of the people pretty much all of the time, including the time when SocGen's risk-management team got down to scrutinizing his book. They'd even been alerted by Eurex - the European derivatives exchange - that something was more than a little amiss with Kerviel's positions.

Didn't the 2,600 people apparently working in "risk management" at France's second largest bank bother to dig deeper? Ahhh...but Kerviel was a criminal genius, remember. Everybody says so. Albeit a criminal genius stuck in bean-counting roles for six years who managed to scrape barely half the average stock-trader's salary when he finally got a trading position.

It could have happened anywhere, or so everyone agrees - even if Kerviel did lack the brains and balls to really get ahead in the competitive, cocky world of financial trading.

On the other side of the trade, meantime - and protecting the world's investors and savers from the skew-eyed evil geniuses working Excel spread-sheets at French investment banks - sit the regulators. You might think they're too busy already keep up with today's brightest financial brains. But just wait until the politicians are finished trying to cover their own derrieres.

"We have to put a stop to this financial system which is out of its mind and which has lost sight of its purpose," spat French president Nicholas Sarkozy on a trip to India last weekend.

"The point of a financial system is to lend money for economic activities, which, in turn, generate profits. It is not to go and speculate on different activities which create enormous flows and profits in a few hours."

Oh really? Just what does Monsieur Le President think derivatives are used for today - creating economic value through prudent lending? Jerome Kerviel struggled to make $150,000 a year in a job that regularly pays nearer $300,000 plus year-end bonus. Even when the authorities at Eurex queried his trading, the "risk management professionals" at SocGen fell for his schtick (it seems) and missed the sheer size of the positions he'd built up.

Either that, or they did know what was happening...and the rumors of a €300,000 bonus ($447,000) if Kerviel's high-risk model paid off are more than just chatter.

It's not just the high-octane world of derivatives tom-foolery that's bamboozling government regulators and their elected bosses, however. "The failure of Northern Rock, while primarily a failure of its directors, was also a failure of its regulator," reckons John McFall, the UK member of parliament who's just led an official inquiry into Britain's first banking run in 130 years.

"We propose the creation of a new post of Deputy Governor of the Bank of England and Head of Financial Stability," his report concludes - seemingly unaware that the BoE already has a deputy governor responsible for financial stability.

Sir John Gieve was appointed Deputy Governor in Jan. 2006, with specific responsibility for the Bank's Financial Stability work.

Ah, but "the deputy governor should be someone with senior banking experience," counters Michael Fallon, another member of the Northern Rock inquiry. "You can't have someone like Gieve, a civil servant without any banking experience."

So who would you expect to hire instead? A senior banker looking to lose all his Facebook friends by stamping on their business models in between rounds of golf? Gieve is the perfect man for the job of monitoring financial stability, anyway, because what he does have is bureaucratic experience. In spades.

A career policy-wonk from the age of 24, Gieve really showed his own talents as Permanent Secretary to what used to be called the Home Office. (After it lost three political chiefs in only five years, the Justice Ministry as it's now known underwent something of a re-branding.) It was entirely "unfit for purpose" claimed one of the hot seat's brief incumbents - and running the department day-to-day was Gieve's responsibility.

Indeed, the man now charged with over-seeing the UK's financial stability seemed to have real trouble with his Excel spread-sheets back at the Home Office.

"Accounts contained numerous errors and internal inconsistencies," said the official auditor's report in Jan. 2006. He refused to sign off the Home Office's internal accounts for the last year of Gieve's tenure.

"In particular, amounts relating to cash, Exchequer funding and non-retainable income...were contradictory and did not reconcile between the different places in which they appeared in the accounts," the auditor stated.

"There were also material omissions and misstatements, for example the value of the private prison estate was incorrectly recorded in the accounts."

Sir John is no accountant, however. That's why he nabbed a deputy guv'nor-ship at the Bank of England three weeks before the auditor's report on his Home Office accounts was released. Just the man for the job!

"It is clear that the distinctions between different types of financial institution - banks, securities firms and insurance companies - are becoming increasingly blurred," announced Gordon Brown on taking office as UK finance minister in May 1997. Now enjoying the slings and arrows that go with being prime minister, "there is a strong case for bringing the regulation of banking, securities and insurance under one roof," he concluded back then, axing the Bank of England's supervisory role and giving it to a new 'super regulator' that would become the Financial Services Authority three years later.

Yes, the very same Financial Services Authority that failed in its duty to monitor and regulate Northern Rock.

"Is the creation of a such a regulator feasible," asked The Banker magazine in June 1997. "Will it necessarily be more effective, and should it be attached to the central bank? In a business dependent on trust and confidence why abandon a well respected institution in the hope that a less prestigious one will do better?"

Even the head of the Bank of England, "Steady" Eddie George himself (BA Cambs; career central banker; no private-sector banking experience whatsoever), found it hard to bite his tongue, despite winning independence on setting interest rates within one week of Gordon Brown (PhD Edin; career politician, plus a brief stint as lecturer & journalist; no banking or business experience whatsoever) becoming Chancellor of the Exchequer.

"Former BoE supervisors have expressed concern over whether credibility could be maintained in a single institution which is responsible for both the mis-selling of pensions and systemic risk," The Banker magazine went on.

"And BoE governor, Eddie George, has warned that the new and expanded [regulator] risks becoming over-bureaucratic and too inflexible in taking a one-size-fits-all approach to financial regulation.

"Other have worried over how the BoE staff, and the culture they bring with them, will blend into the new 'super-SIB' structure. Some fear the different purposes of regulation will themselves become blurred within a single organisation."

British readers might find all this...written almost 11 years ago...wearisomely familiar. The looming collapse of Northern Rock's aggressive short-term borrowing model was utterly missed by the Financial Services Authority last summer, even as the global credit crunch bit. It was left to the current BoE governor, Mervyn King (PhD Cambs; career academic; no private-sector banking experience whatsoever) to warn - vaguely - of the risks to stability posed by the UK's record credit binge.

But as Helen Liddell, then economic secretary to the Treasury, put it in May 1997, re-arranging the UK's regulatory structures was just a "management issue" which would be solved.

And government can resolve anything it chooses, right? Most especially the multi-trillion international financial markets...where the world's brightest brains sweat bullets trying to turn a quick buck even quicker.

Adrian Ash
For The Daily Reckoning Australia

Formerly City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and head of editorial at the UK's leading financial advisory for private investors, Adrian Ash is the editor of Gold News and head of research at BullionVault - where you can Buy Gold Today vaulted in Zurich on $3 spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.

VN:F [1.9.11_1134]
please wait...
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.9.11_1134]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)




P.S. to get The Daily Reckoning direct to your inbox sign up to our free e-mail newsletter or if you prefer to use RSS, subscribe to the Daily Reckoning RSS feed.

Related Articles:

  • None Found

About the Author

Adrian AshCity correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and formerly head of editorial at Fleet Street Publications Ltd, Adrian Ash has been studying and writing about the investment markets for the last 9 years. He is now head of research at BullionVault - giving you direct access to investment gold, vaulted in Zurich, on US$3 spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.

See All Posts by This Author

There Are 3 Responses So Far. »

  1. Comment by novosonic on 5 February 2008:

    duh! how do you go about cracking 4 firewalls ?

    VA:F [1.9.11_1134]
    please wait...
    Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)
    VA:F [1.9.11_1134]
    Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)
  2. Comment by Commenter on 5 February 2008:

    The key to great propaganda is to tell the public things that give convenient, grasp-able answers that sounds, looks and feels feasible or probable, but are actually crafty logical fallacies. Who was that infamous German propagandist that said something along the lines; if your going to tell a lie, to make it believable, make it a big one.

    VA:F [1.9.11_1134]
    please wait...
    Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)
    VA:F [1.9.11_1134]
    Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)
  3. Comment by Coffee Addict on 5 February 2008:

    I am extremely angry with myself for not putting up a post yesterday about the likely motivations of SocGen's directors and the need to investigate possible insider trading activities. It would have been an intuitive scoop. Now the news is everywhere. Errrrrr...#^!

    VA:F [1.9.11_1134]
    please wait...
    Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)
    VA:F [1.9.11_1134]
    Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Post a Response

Comment moderation policy: Port Phillip Publishing supports free speech and frank and open conversation. But we reserve the right to modify or delete your comments if we consider them to be offensive or in violation of any laws, including Australia's anti-discrimination laws

By submitting your comment you agree to adhere to our comment policy.


  • Why Should I Sign Up?   We Value Your Privacy
  • Master trader predicts next move for ASX...

    Latest Slipstream Trader Video Market Update Just In... watch for free below.


    One viewer said these prediction videos were “scarily accurate”... another said Murray Dawes was “well on the money”... To find out where the Slipstream Trader thinks the market is headed next, and what that could mean for your investments, click below now to watch his latest video update...

    8th February 2012 - Market Update

    It’s one thing to have a view on where the market is headed next... It’s another to have specific stock trading recommendations emailed to your inbox.

    To take a 90-day, no obligation trial of Slipstream Trader, click here
  • Search

    The Markets

    All Ordinaries4322.600  chart-34.500
    S&p/asx 2004245.300  chart-37.600
    Sse Composite Ind2351.981  chart+2.392
    Gold Sep 110.00  chart0.00
    Clj11.nym0.00  chartN/A
    Nikkei 2258947.17  chart-55.07
    Indu0.00  chartN/A
    S&P 5001342.64  chart-9.31
    Ftse 1005852.39  chart-43.08
    2012-02-10 00:50

    Most Comments

    • Australian House Prices Are Severely and Seriously Unaffordable (312)
    • Majority of Australians Believe House Prices Will Rise in Next Twelve Months (293)
    • Gas is the New Oil (256)
    • A Date for an Aussie House Price Collapse (251)
    • How to Profit From the Path of Progress (230)

    Archives

  • Headline Archive

  • Slipstream Trader

    Thousands now trade the markets who never thought they could...

    Breakthrough in trading techniques helps regular investors:

    • Determine how much to risk in a trade
    • Lock in profits while the position is still open...
    • Exit a losing position before a share tanks...

    If you thought trading was too complicated, prepare to be surprised... click here
  • Australian Wealth Gameplan

    "A rapid contagion is spreading.
    Even if you think you are relatively safe, this is a new, permanent risk. It will be with us for the next decade, or even two”.

    - Edward Morse, Veteran oil trader

    Right now a ‘paradigm shift’ is taking place that could present you with the single biggest investment opportunity of your lifetime.

    It also represents risks to your portfolio that could surpass those of the Global Financial Crisis fallout.

    Get full details in this just-completed presentation. (turn on your speakers)
  • Diggers & Drillers

    “Why a mining executive told me to F*** Off
    in front of a whole room of investors”
    Dr. Alex Cowie doesn’t have the most popular of jobs. At least – not inside the mining industry. For his readers, it’s another matter entirely.

    As Laurence says: “I have never bought a stock and got a 100% return before … thanks for providing the information for me to have that experience – and all within two months too!”

    Right now Alex has unearthed six “must buy” resource stocks for the year ahead. His method for finding them might annoy a few people in the industry… but it could help make a lot of money in 2012 too.

    Find out why, right here

  • Home
  • Newsletters
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Columnists
  • Contact Us
  • RSS

All content is © 2005 - 2011 Port Phillip Publishing Pty Ltd All Rights Reserved

We encourage you to republish our material, all we ask is that you provide a working text link back to the original article on this site.
Port Phillip Publishing Pty Ltd holds an Australian Financial Services License: 323 988. ACN: 117 765 009 ABN: 33 117 765 009
email: dr@dailyreckoning.com.au Tel: 1300 667 481 Fax: (03) 9558 2219
Port Phillip Publishing Attn: The Daily Reckoning PO Box 899 Braeside VIC 3195

Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Financial Services Guide

SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline