Rogue Traders: Not as Rare as You Think

by Nancy Zambell | December 22, 2011 7:00 am

Yesterday, I began a series of articles highlighting some of the most heinous Wall Street shenanigans that affect investor’s pocketbooks. My first topic was the recent failure of MF Global[1] and how overleveraging can have far-reaching effects, on both corporations and their investors.

Today, let’s turn to rogue trading — a long-accepted Wall Street practice (as long as the profits are piling up!).

A widely accepted definition of rogue trader[2] “is an authorized employee making unauthorized trades on behalf of his employer.” At least, that’s what managers call them when these employees lose scads of company money. But what most investors don’t realize is that the practice is pervasive and can go on for years. And instead of being punished for it, when these “rogues” make their employers tons of money, they’re wined and dined, patted on the back and paid mega-bonuses.

We only hear about them when their big bets go badly awry, such as:

These few examples barely scrape the surface of the kinds of huge trades that take place on a regular basis on trading desks at the world’s largest financial firms.

You don’t hear about the ones that make the banks significant sums of money. But it’s common knowledge in this world that those profits are encouraged — and celebrated — and a blind eye is turned to their “unauthorized” nature.

And while it’s certainly fitting that these “rogue traders” are severely punished, what about their supervisors — the same ones who are lauding them when their bets go well?

The answer is not much. Sure, the next rung up — sometimes even the CEO — often lose their jobs, but rarely do they suffer criminal charges or even fines. Yet, they certainly participate in the rogues’ profits.

The problem is systemic. The reason these folks get hired for the trading desks is that they’re risk-takers, and on average, taking huge risks can also bring huge rewards — just like the overleveraging I wrote about yesterday. And just like greed that created the housing boom and subprime mortgage markets and eventually resulted in the biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression.

When the money is rolling in, the powers on Wall Street ignore all the warning signals. It’s only when they’re caught flat-footed by bets gone awry do they promise to clean up their acts.

We’ve heard the same tune since the massive savings and loan failures of the late ’80s. Banking reform is still on the lips of every regulator since the financial meltdown and the 2008 recession. But they really don’t make any long-term changes. Instead, they give lip service to “self-policing,” and hey, you don’t have to be a genius to see how well that’s working. So far, the score is banks score 100, consumers and investors 0.

Tune in next for “5 Ways to Protect Your Portfolio from Wall Street’s Excesses.”

Endnotes:

  1. recent failure of MF Global: https://investorplace.com/2011/12/a-lesson-about-greed-from-mf-global/
  2. rogue trader: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rogue_trader
  3. GE: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=GE
  4. SCGLY: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=SCGLY
  5. UBS: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=UBS

Source URL: https://investorplace.com/2011/12/rogue-traders-not-as-rare-as-you-think/