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"MF Global and the great Wall St re-hypothecation scandal"

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    "MF Global and the great Wall St re-hypothecation scandal"

    "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.

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    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.

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    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.

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    More from the source: MF Global and the great Wall St re-hypothecation scandal

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    So that's how it's called - "re-hypothecate"
    Last edited by AtW; 11 December 2011, 23:22.

    #2
    http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2010/wp10172.pdf

    A defined set of customer protection rules for rehypothecated assets exists in the United
    States, but not in the United Kingdom. In the United Kingdom, an unlimited amount of the
    customer’s assets can be rehypothecated and there are no customer protection rules
    This is why it's so vital that we don't let those nasty Europeans interfere with the way we deregulate our bankers. (To be fair, it seems they aren't any different)
    Last edited by doodab; 12 December 2011, 08:59.
    While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by AtW View Post
      (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.
      No returns on unused sledges then?
      Coffee's for closers

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by AtW View Post
        Once transferred to the UK based company
        It could have been worse. It could have gone to those nasty foreigners in Switzerland or something.

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