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MF Global's Bankruptcy Erodes Trust In Brokerages

Mf Global

First Posted: 11/12/11 11:19 AM ET Updated: 11/12/11 11:19 AM ET

NEW YORK (David Henry, David Sheppard and Matthew Goldstein) - Almost two weeks after the bankruptcy of commodities firm MF Global, customers at rival firms are all asking the same question: How safe is my money?

MF Global's collapse is confronting clients across the industry with the harsh truth that while their accounts may be termed "segregated" that does not mean they are off-limits from trouble at a commodity futures firm, much less backstopped by any government insurance fund.

MF Global revealed to regulators during its October 31 bankruptcy that it was short perhaps $600 million in customer funds - money which the firm was supposed to keep in "segregated" accounts maintained under a raft of laws and regulations.

The concerns among investors have reached such a pitch that futures exchange operator CME Group announced late Friday that it will provide a guarantee for $300 million of the missing money in the MF Global case.

"I've lost a good deal of money already over this. Now I'm a big boy who should have known better, with over 25 years experience in the futures industry, but what they were doing with client funds is to me outrageous," said Stuart McClellan, an independent trader from Norfolk in the United Kingdom, who previously worked for Schroders in London.

McClellan has more than $110,000 tied up in MF Global, which he doesn't know if he will get back.

"Using the excess collateral in clients' funds to trade is not illegal, but to my mind it's immoral. There is a huge risk," he said.

Futures commission merchants, as brokers in the industry are known, have always been allowed, with certain restrictions, to invest customers' so-called "excess margin," or the funds in their accounts over and above the collateral required to maintain trades. The brokers then book any profits for themselves.

Segregation simply means that customer deposits can't be mixed with the firm's own money or used to cover firm expenses. They must always be available for customers to trade with or withdraw at a moment's notice. In other words, customer segregated money isn't some big cookie jar for the firm to dip into when it is short on cash.

"That is what is so shocking about MF Global's situation," said Michael Greenberger, a former director of the Division of Trading and Markets at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and now a law professor at the University of Maryland.

"If that stability is not present, people will not want to go into what is already a highly volatile trading environment," he said.

Now with each passing day that missing money has not been found, there is growing concern that MF Global may have abused its legal latitude with the segregated customer accounts.

The fear is that MF lost the segregated funds in bad trades or used them illegally to meet other obligations. By this time, traders and investigative sources say, it should have been possible to trace the money, if it still exists, in some account with another financial institution.

Some traders who tried to withdraw funds from MF Global prior to the bankruptcy received checks that bounced.

Commodity traders and investors are now saying they will demand their brokerage houses reveal exactly what they plan investing customer funds in.

Don McAfee, a private investor from the San Juan Islands in Washington state, said he had been a "novice" trader of commodities who had become interested in the sector, in part because he saw less risk from the fate of individual banks and brokerages than in equities or bonds.

"It was a way of diversifying out of just playing stocks, and I was very attracted to the fact you did not seem to have any counterparty risk," McAfee said, who has around $220,000 still frozen at MF Global.

"In the future I am going to want an ironclad guarantee that my account is fully segregated. And if it's not I need to know that at most it's being invested in U.S. Treasuries, not commercial paper or foreign bonds."

PRESSURE MOUNTS ON RIVALS

Brokers at rival firms, who had perhaps hoped to benefit from the disappearance of one of their fiercest competitors, are fielding endless calls from concerned customers and fearing a run on their own accounts.

"I'm getting calls from people, wanting to know if this could happen again, if I can give them proof that the banks I'm dealing with are okay and that their money is safe," said one broker on the floor of the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) on Thursday, who asked not to be identified.

"That's never happened to me before. There's a lot of fear,' he said.

Other traders said they were looking to spread their accounts across multiple brokers to limit their risk, after watching friends and colleagues locked out of the market over the past two weeks. Others said they were looking into insuring their funds.

The failure to free up client funds quickly after the bankruptcy was further undermining faith in the safeguards in the commodities market, said Michael "Mack" Frankfurter, co-founder of commodity trading advisor Cervino Capital Management LLC in Beverly Hills.

"There is unintended consequences and systemic risk evolving in this situation. It's not about what needs to be done going forward... It's about what needs to be done immediately to save the industry," he said.

WHO TO TRUST?

MF Global's standard agreement with customers permitted the firm to "borrow, pledge, repledge, transfer, hypothecate, rehypothecate, loan or invest any of the collateral" in customer accounts. The language is typical of agreements throughout the industry, said one longtime futures trader and industry consultant who did not want to be identified because he does work for CME Group.

The largest customers might be able to get that language tweaked in their favor a bit, perhaps with an agreement to split revenue earned on the customer deposits. But smaller investors generally have to accept the firm's plans for the use of excess cash in their accounts.

Trading in commodities has exploded over the past ten years, increasing by more than 600 percent according to some estimates, and bringing in a new breed of 'Mom and Pop' investors hoping to protect themselves against, and benefit from, the rising costs of food and energy.

The practice of firms using customer excess cash to make money has been a basic source of revenue for the industry for decades, if not centuries. In fact, it is revenue from those investments that has allowed the firms to cut their commission rates to attract more business.

The practice is codified in U.S. law and regulation, which until 2000 limited use of the funds to basically U.S. Treasury and state and municipal obligations. Over the next five years, the rules were eased to permit firms to use customer money to enter into repurchase agreements and buy foreign bonds, money market funds, and assorted securities.

When the financial crisis prompted second thoughts from the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the industry fought to stop proposals to cut back on how much the firms could do with customer money.

MF Global, which was led by ex-Goldman Sachs CEO and former New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine, teamed up with Newedge Group, a major competitor, and warned in a December 2010 letter that reducing the stream of revenue could force some futures commission merchants to shut down.

The Futures Industry Association, an umbrella organization representing futures traders such as Goldman Sachs Group and Jefferies & Company, as well as MF Global, also pushed back against plans to stop firms investing in foreign bonds and other riskier assets with customer funds. The proposal was eventually shelved.

The MF Global collapse prompted CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler to say November 7 that he will push again to tighten the restrictions. Industry experts say that may improve the security of segregated funds, but it could also force brokers to charge higher fees.

Meanwhile, the building outrage over the missing money is rattling industry veterans. Dennis Gartman, a board member of the Kansas City Board of Trade known for his daily market commentary, wrote Friday that if industry leaders do not act quickly to make good on the MF customer money, "the futures markets shall be under real and permanent assault."

Todd Thielmann, a former MF Global broker on the floor of the Chicago Board of Trade, said fear was spreading fast among customers.

"They've taken any excess money out of all firms now and they don't know who to trust."

(Reporting by David Henry, David Sheppard and Matthew Goldstein in New York. Additional reporting by Jed Horowitz, Barani Krishnan and Josephine Mason in New York, Samuel Nelson and PJ Huffstutter in Chicago; editing by Edward Tobin and Martin Howell)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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NEW YORK (David Henry, David Sheppard and Matthew Goldstein) - Almost two weeks after the bankruptcy of commodities firm MF Global, customers at rival firms are all asking the same question: How s...
NEW YORK (David Henry, David Sheppard and Matthew Goldstein) - Almost two weeks after the bankruptcy of commodities firm MF Global, customers at rival firms are all asking the same question: How s...
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08:59 PM on 11/19/2011
bankruptcyfixtoday.com
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
msjimmied
07:54 PM on 11/13/2011
The fact that customer's money was pledged tells you all you need to know about the mess that is Wall Street. How long till their customer's get their money back? Who is on the hook for it? The US taxpayer? What if it was your money? This will keep happening till we stick to our free market principles that the GOP loves to talk about, but when it gets hairy, they want us to bail them out. The "Job Creators" are the wealth destroyers through the market, the blood sucking FIRE sector, and the unrestrained fleecing of the American public. Watch...we will find out we're going to make the investors whole. Mark my words. Heck, America bailed out most of the banks in 2008, and we will keep at it to recoup our sunk investment in a system that is destined to blow up because we will not police it. Did they police it this time? Obviously not!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jeromettaylor
The Aliens were here 1st!
05:45 PM on 11/13/2011
MF Global brokers "borrowed" $600 million from their customers, gambled with it, and lost the money. Apparently, this is a routine industry practice.
Don't worry ! Half of the losses will be covered by insurance.......and no one will go to jail!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nanreh
05:04 PM on 11/13/2011
I hope these GAMBLERS/BANKERS/POLITICIANS STAY WARM IN JAIL FOR A LONG TIME.

Mr President this is a great opportunity to end GAMBLING IN WALL STREET, put these people in jail

MORE POWER TO OWS
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:55 PM on 11/13/2011
Don't trust anyone with your money if you money is just sitting don't leave it in anyone's care today the safest place is under your mattress if you are sitting on cash
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Olderandwiser55
getting older and wiser....
03:36 PM on 11/13/2011
"futures exchange operator CME Group announced late Friday that it will provide a guarantee for $300 million of the missing money in the MF Global case...."

This is much deeper that the story pretends...This is the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Not just an exchange but one that has merged and merged and is in control of trading the biggest futures. US Treasuries, Gold and silver, Oil....In 2006, CME purchased "Swapstream", an interest rate swaps electronic trading platform, based in London.
On October 17, 2006, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange announced the purchase of the Chicago Board of Trade for $8 billion in stock, rejoining the two financial institutions as CME Group, Inc. The merger will also strengthen the combined group's position in the global derivatives market.The merger officially closed on July 12, 2007.

On March 17, 2008, the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) accepted an offer from CME Group, the parent of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, to purchase NYMEX for $8.9 billion in cash and CME Group Stock.[16] The acquisition was formally completed on August 22, 2008, and the NYMEX systems were fully integrated by September 30, 2009.[17]

Huge merger....and we can all pretend we have many futures exchanges.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:36 PM on 11/13/2011
Dear Investors,

Pull your money and put it in a local credit union. Then join the OWS.

Fabini
olddognewtrick
Half full or half empty...It's the same
12:04 PM on 11/13/2011
My broker and I are working hand in hand to keep my balance well under the insurance limits...so far we have been succeeding beyond my wildest disappointments...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jose Hill
Predictor...has a good ring to it.
12:04 PM on 11/13/2011
I am beginning to believe that there is not a single trustworthy Wall Street firm around today.
realitybaby
Livin in realitybaby!
10:46 AM on 11/13/2011
The mission of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is to protect investors, maintain fair, orderly, and efficient markets, and facilitate capital formation.

LOL here's the SEC's mission statement - ITS HARD NOT TO LAUGH at it!
10:45 AM on 11/13/2011
I watch the markets , and like to keep up on what is going on in the country and the world . The trouble is people like Corzine are not watching , how can these suppose to be money experts still making major mistakes with other peoples money to this degree , like the were investing in penny stocks or horse betting . Everybody making the big bucks down at MF Global go directly to jail .
10:24 AM on 11/13/2011
Who was in charge of this group?
olddognewtrick
Half full or half empty...It's the same
12:05 PM on 11/13/2011
the same guy that turns out the light in your refrigerator when you close the door...
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FormerlyTCnSRQ
A Man On The Run..... No Escape Ahead
10:21 AM on 11/13/2011
Wall Street in general has lost the trust of the people. it's rigged. It's no longer a safe place to put your money...get out and find new places to invest...it's a ponzi scheme.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mondayboy
Rebel with a cause
10:12 AM on 11/13/2011
thieves, thieves all of them
08:40 AM on 11/13/2011
Trading in futures is gambling. If you risk your money in futures, it's your own fault. If you risk your money with a corporation that cannot be trusted, it's your own fault. Still, the government needs to regulate the financial industry a lot more.