Rogue Trading
This resource center provides readers with information on rogue trading, including information on Nick Leeson, one of the most infamous rogue traders in history who bankrupted Barings Bank via unauthorized trades, as well as Jerome Kerviel, the more recent trader at Societe Generale who lost over $7 billion. Preventing rogue trading comes down to the proper use of risk management systems and controls at broker-dealers and banks. Rogue trading happens regularly, according to Nick Leeson, in his exclusive interview with Advanced Trading, but most often the smaller incidents are dealt with and covered up. A rogue trader is a trader who acts independently of others - and, typically, recklessly - usually to the detriment of both the clients and the institution that employs him or her. In most cases this type of trading is high risk and can create huge losses. This page is a resource for readers who are looking for information on rogue trading and about how it can be prevented.Exclusive Interview With Nick Leeson: An Inside Look at Rogue TradingNick Leeson, the infamous trader who in 1995 bankrupted Barings Bank in a rogue trading scandal, offers advice in the wake of the Societe Generale debacle on how firms can prevent rogue trading. more...The Personal Side of the Baring's Scandal Rogue Trading News:Is the Risk Manager to Blame for the Subprime Crisis and the Societe Generale Scandal?Soc Gen: Kerviel Messages with Broker Revealed Soc Gen: Bank's Controls Didn't Work, says report Societe Generale: Could it Have Prevented $7.2 billion fraud? How Did the Societe Generale Fraud Happen? Societe Generale Fraud: A Timeline of Events World's Biggest Bank Frauds Remembering BaringsI clearly remember reading about Nick Leeson and the fall of Barings Bank in 1995. I was just a few years out of college in a foot-in-the-door position that wasn't all that exciting. To counter my boredom, I started reading my boss' Wall Street Journal before he got in. The news was interesting, but not thrilling - until I got to the Leeson scandal. |
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Rogue Trading Scandals Unfold
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Rogue Trading in History
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| 1995: Barings Bank. Nick Leeson accumulates $1.4 billion in trading losses betting on Nikkei futures traded on SIMEX | 1995: Daiwa Bank. After 11 years of hiding losses on illegal bond trades, Toshihide Iguchi is fired from Daiwa Bank in New York for incurring $1.1 billion in losses. He was sentenced to four years in jail. | 1996: Sumitomo. Over a 10-year period Yasuo Hamanaka engaged in speculative copper trading resulting in a $2.6 billion in losses for the bank. | 2003: Allfirst Financial. John Rusnak admitted to hiding $691 million in trading losses at Allfirst Financial, a subsidiary of Allied Irish Banks. | 2006: Aramanth Advisors. Energy trader Brian Hunter was trying to manipulate gas futures contracts on the NYMEX and ended up losing more than $6 billion and collapsing the hedge fund. | 2008: Societe Generale. Futures trader Jerome Kerviel racks up $7.14 billion in losses by circumventing the French Bank's risk management systems. |



Remembering Barings
Listen to Advanced Trading's exclusive interview with Nick Leeson












