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Robespierre2.0
16th December 2008, 03:22
Banks and financial groups across the globe have disclosed they may have lost billions of dollars following a suspected $50bn fraud by the former chairman of the Nasdaq stock exchange.

HSBC was the latest banking giant to admit its exposure to what is believed to have been a pyramid-style scam, reporting it may have lost about $1bn.

Bernard Madoff, a 70-year-old Wall Street trader, was arrested on Thursday.

US authorities allege that Madoff used a fraudulent "pyramid" style scheme that delivered consistently strong, phoney returns to clients by fraudulently paying them using investments from new customers.

Investigators say he has confessed to defrauding investors via the scheme which collapsed when his clients asked for their money back due to the global economic downturn.

HSBC said its exposure to the scheme arose from loans it had provided to large clients such as hedge funds.

It was announced on Monday that the alleged fraud had forced the Chais Family Foundation, which gives away about $12.5m annually to Jewish causes, to
close.

Avraham Infeld, the foundation's president, said: "The entire fund was invested through Mr Madoff, and as a result the fund has been completely obliterated."

Infeld said all five staff at the organisation's headquarters in Jerusalem would lose their jobs.

Financial exposure

Banks in Europe, Asia and the United States have been affected.

More than $10bn of potential losses have been reported by firms still reeling from the effect of the US sub-prime mortage crisis.

Jeremy Batstone, head of research at Charles Stanley, Britain's largest stockbroker, said that the scandal was very damaging to reputations in the financial world.

"The last thing investors wanted as come to the end of what has been a cathartic year for the financial industry was the revelation of an alleged fraud of this nature," he told Al Jazeera.

"The size is unprecedented and doubtless will be very painful, not just for those investors who are involved directly, but for all investors who are concerned about the places in which they have invested their money, the fund management groups."

Shares in Santander, the biggest bank in Spain and the second-largest in Europe after HSBC, plunged on Monday after the lender said it had an exposure of more than $3bn dollars to Madoff Investment Securities in New York.

Royal Bank of Scotland said it could lose nearly $600m, while France's Natixis investment bank, already harmed by losses in the sub-prime mortgage market, put its maxiumum exposure at more than $600m.

Japanese financial giant Nomura said it could lose more than $300m dollars and officials in Seoul said South Korea's financial institutions had about $95m at risk.

Swiss newspaper Le Temps reported that private banks in Geneva could lose up to $5bn because of the alleged scam.

'Fundamental questions'

Bramdean Alternatives Limited, a British investment fund which said it had put about $31m in Madoff's company, said that the scandal raised "fundamental questions" about the US regulatory system.

"It is astonishing that this apparent fraud seems to have been continuing for so long, possibly for decades, while investors have continued to invest more money into the Madoff funds in good faith," it said in a statement.

The scandal comes at a time when hedge funds are suffering from poor performance, impairing their vow of yielding money whichever way the market turns.

Man Group, the world's largest listed hedge fund manager, acknowledged it was exposed to what it called "a systematic and comprehensive fraud" to the tune of $360m.

The AIMA global hedge fund trade association in a statement said it was "very disturbed" by the case, asking for "early and public disclosure of all facts about what went wrong".

"Clearly, lessons must be learned, restitution must be secured for investors, and processes/safeguards must be improved to prevent such a situation recurring."

Wow. I don't know what to say. I actually am amused, in a really morbid way- Just think of how our pro-capitalist friends are desperately trying to frame all this bad news in a way that 'government regulation' is still the problem.

Robespierre2.0
16th December 2008, 14:34
Impact of US bank 'fraud' deepens

The number of people and institutions affected by an alleged $50bn investment fraud continues to grow in what may be one of Wall Street's biggest scams.

A number of Jewish charities were particularly badly affected by the alleged fraud by Bernard Madoff, a Wall Street money manager and former chairman of the Nasdaq stock exchange, reports on Tuesday said.

British, French, Japanese and Spanish banks and funds also said investments totalling billions of dollars could be wiped off their balance sheets.

The scandal has also affected some of the world's richest people.

According to The Wall Street Journal, the Wunderkinder Foundation, the charity set up by Stephen Spielberg, the Hollywood film director, had invested heavily with Madoff.

Also affected was the Foundation for Humanity, set up by Elie Wiesel, a Holocaust survivor, the newspaper reported.

Charity closed

The Chais Family Foundation, a charity that gives away about $12.5m annually to Jewish causes, has been closed.

Avraham Infeld, the foundation's president, said: "The entire fund was invested through Mr Madoff, and as a result the fund has been completely obliterated."

The Robert Lappin Charitable Foundation, which paid to send young Jews to Israel, also revealed that it had invested with Madoff.

The Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles was badly hit, losing about $6.4m or about 11 per cent of its endowment.

'Pyramid scheme'
Who is Bernard Madoff?

Born into a New York Jewish family

Founded his investment firm, Bernard L Madoff Investments, at the age of 22 with money made working as a lifeguard and installing garden sprinklers

Rose through the ranks of Wall Street becoming chairman of the Nasdaq Stock Exchange in 1990.

A member of the Nasdaq stock market's board of governors and executive committee, he later served as chairman of Nasdaq's trading committee

Madoff was arrested on Thursday and allegedly confessed to defrauding investors of $50bn in a scam that collapsed after clients asked for their money back due to the global financial crisis.

US authorities allege that Madoff delivered consistently strong returns to clients by secretly using the principal investment from new investors for payments to other investors in what is known as a "pyramid fraud".

The scheme apparently worked as long as Madoff could attract new investors, but seems to have unravelled when some of his clients asked to withdraw their investment - only to discover that his seemingly brimming coffers were empty.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the IMF chief, said he was shocked that US regulators had failed to identify and prevent the alleged fraud.

"The surprise is not that there are some thieves in the system, the question is where were the police? It's very surprising to find you're living in a system where a failure of the regulatory system was so big," he said.

Calls for regulation

Cyrus Daruwala, the Asia pacific managing director of the research firm Financial Insights, told Al Jazeera that regulators had been "absolutely unaware" in part due to Madoff's status in the financial world.

"Would you doubt the person who actually is the founder and started Nasdaq? The person who ran securities and futures commission? They all thought 'well, he knows best'," he said.

"Regulators are a bunch of people who take a few compliance issues ... try to implement them to the local jurisdiction and hope that they work. They're not people who are two steps ahead of the system, they're followers of the system."

The scandal has emerged as institutions grapple with the global financial crisis and politicians and the public call for greater regulation.

"It is not that big a sum relatively, but it clearly is at the wrong time,"
Banks and investors across Europe have been hit by the alleged fraud.

Among them, Santander, the eurozone's biggest bank, annocuned it had an exposure of more than $3m to Madoff Investment Securities in New York, while HSBC, Europe's biggest bank, reported it may have lost about $1bn.

Fortis Bank in the Netherlands said it stood to lose up to $1.37bn in the suspected scam, despite lacking direct exposure to the Madoff firm.

Royal Bank of Scotland said it could lose about $612m, while France's Natixis investment bank, already brought low by subprime losses, put its maximum exposure at $616m.

UK-based hedge fund manager Man Group said it had invested $360m in Madoff Securities. The fund said in a
statement that "it appears that a systematic and comprehensive fraud may have been committed".

Retail banking giant BNP Paribas revealed potential losses of $480m, Japanese financial giant Nomura said it could lose up to $303m and officials in South Korea said financial institutions there had a total exposure of some $95m.

In the US, the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), which helps investors whose money is in failed brokerage firms, said on Monday it was liquidating Bernard Madoff Investment Securities.

"It is clear that the customers of the Madoff firm need the protections available under federal law," said Stephen Harbeck, SIPC's president, in a statement.

But Harbeck warned that "it is unlikely that SIPC and the trustee will be able to transfer the customer accounts of the firm to a solvent brokerage firm," due to the state of the Madoff firm's records.
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies

http://english.aljazeera.net/business/2008/12/2008121695644225965.html

The plot thickens...