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US: Bear Stearns hedge fund managers indicted
By Andre Damon
24 June 2008
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Federal prosecutors indicted two former Bear Stearns hedge
fund managers on charges of securities, mail, and wire fraud last
Thursday. Funds operated by the two executives, Ralph Cioffi and
Mathew Tannin, folded in June of last year, taking some $1.6 billion
of investor funds down with them.
Cioffi and Tannin are the first Wall Street executives to be
prosecuted in connection with the credit crisis. The collapse
of their funds came relatively early in the crisis, during the
spring of 2007, and their failure helped set off a fire sale that
led ultimately to the Federal Reserve bailout of Bear Stearns
in March of this year.
The legal charges against the two are based on their having
misled wealthy investors as to the real values of the funds shortly
before they collapsed. The managers sought to add additional capital
to ensure their solvency, and allegedly sought to paint the opportunity
in the best possible light for prospective investors. Believe
it or not Ive been able to convince people to add more money,
Tannin wrote in an email exchange with a colleague.
Ralph Cioffi also faces insider-trading charges after allegedly
moving $2 million of his own assets out of the fund before warning
other investors. Bear Stearns has already settled over a dozen
shareholder lawsuits against the two men.
The funds generated profits by borrowing money in the short
term to make investments in longer-term mortgage-backed securities.
These obscure assets were given very high credit ratings by rating
agencies, and subsequently were valued independently of market
pricing by the hedge funds own models. This strategy led
to massive short-term gains; one of the funds saw a 40 percent
return in 2006 alone.
But these gainsrepresenting little more than leveraged
speculation on the real estate bubbleconcealed equally great
risk. The funds assets plunged in value when sub-prime mortgage
borrowers started defaulting on their loans in record numbers,
and, despite the alleged concealment of the funds real value
by their managers, they could not raise enough capital to cover
their obligations.
Cioffis attorney noted that, although the two funds were
among the first to suffer from the crisis, dozens of the
largest financial institutions have lost over $300 billion to
date on the same investments.
Matt Tannin is innocent, he is being made a scapegoat
for a widespread market crisis, said his attorney Susan
Brune.
Indeed, prosecutors subjected the two defendants to the perp
walk, parading them in handcuffs before the television cameras
outside the federal courthouse in Brooklyn. The scene was broadcast
on the nightly news by all the major networks.
To the extent that the two are scapegoats, it is
because their case is emblematic of the thoroughgoing rot that
pervades the whole financial system. Following the hedge funds
collapse, it has become evident that their strategy was semi-fraudulent,
and that its leadership likely crossed over the line of legality.
But this could be said about a great deal of Wall Street activity
in recent years.
A hedge fund manager recently wrote in to the Financial
Times advice column, saying, I genuinely dont
believe it is possible to do [my] joboutperforming other
fund managers and equity indiceswith any consistency. I
believe the industry is based on the lie that fund managers add
value through skill, rather than luck. There are, of course,
ways to force luck, and Wall Street found many such
measures. After all, how could hedge fundssuch as those
run by Cioffi and Tanninconsistently outperform expectations
by a margin of 20 percent?
The answerto put it bluntlywas to inflate returns
by hiding risk. This is what the two funds specialized in, and
what brought them huge returns and plaudits from analysts. But,
ultimately, the Bear hedge fundstogether with others that
sprung up to create, distribute, and buy mortgage-backed securitiescould
only be profitable so long as housing prices continued to rise,
and imploded after the bubble began to deflate.
The indictment of the two managers is among the most high profile
of numerous cases of rogue and illegal trading that
have come out in recent months. Morgan Stanley announced last
week that it had lost some $120 million after a rogue traders
deals went sour. This follows announcements from Credit Suisse
and Lehman Brothers along similar lines. In January, Société
Générale, the French Bank, accused low-level trader
Jérôme Kerviel of contributing to the loss of some
4.9 billion ($7.6 billion).
The reality is that, if these unauthorized trades had turned
out to be profitable, the traders who organized them would have
been branded as innovators and handed huge bonuses.
Wall Street has become a place where the line between legitimacy
and illegality, violation and compliance is routinely blurred,
where unimaginable sums are awarded for risk-takers
who get lucky. As one trader who made a great deal of money in
mortgage-backed securities recently told this writer: Was
what I did wrong? I hope not.
The indictments came alongside a continued influx of reported
bank losses. Lehman brothers confirmed this week that it suffered
a $2.8 billion loss in the second quarter, and Morgan Stanley
announced Wednesday that its profits fell by 58 percent compared
to the second quarter of 2007. A large section of the losses$1.7
billioncame in the form of debt write-offs, but a significant
portion came from trading in commodities prices. We made
a contrarian bet on energy that went wrong, said the firms
chief financial officer, sounding more like an apologetic gambler
than a major executive. But we will make bets where we feel
they are warranted, he continued.
Meanwhile the overall economic outlook has continued to worsen.
After predicting a deepening of the US slowdown, the Royal Bank
of Scotland observed in a report last week that People are
beginning to wake up to the view that 2009 growth will be stagnant
and weaker than 2008.
John Paulson, a top-earning hedge fund manager in 2007, observed,
Were only about a third of the way through the writedowns,
adding, There are a lot of problems out there and it will
continue to be felt through the year. We dont see any signs
of stabilizing. Paulson predicts that total write-offs stemming
from the credit crisis may total $1.3 trillion. A recent report
by the IMF echoed these sentiments, noting that the US economy
would likely stagnate despite tax rebates and low
interest rates.
Under these conditions, the banks are working to curb their
speculative excesses, smooth out their balance sheets and purge
bad debt. As the super-rich make a show of getting their house
in order, they will move to condemn those executives and fund
managers who committed the most flagrant offenses against billionaire
shareholders. But the people most responsible for the crisis
the senior executives of Bear Stearns, Morgan Stanley, Goldman
Sachs, etc.and the massive public harm that it caused, not
to mention the system of financial parasitism itself, have remained
essentially free of public scrutiny.
See Also:
US: New bank losses shake financial markets
[12 June 2008]
US workers paying the price
for Wall Streets debacle
[16 May 2008]
In midst of recession, multi-billion-dollar
paydays for US hedge fund managers
[17 April 2008]
Shades of 1929: Bear Stearns
collapse signals deepest crisis since Great Depression
[18 March 2008]
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