Nicholas Leeson sinks Barings singlehandedly - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Nicholas Leeson sinks Barings singlehandedly

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Nicholas Leeson: The general manager of Barings Futures Singapore (BFS) starting in 1993 ... When you speculate in long futures and prices drop = you lose ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nicholas Leeson sinks Barings singlehandedly


1
Nicholas Leeson sinks Barings single-handedly

2
Outline
  • How Leeson traded
  • The damage
  • Whos to blame The anatomy of a murder
  • Managements responsibility red flags
  • Conclusion

3
Whos who
  • Baring Brothers in London Britains oldest
    merchant bank
  • Nicholas Leeson The general manager of Barings
    Futures Singapore (BFS) starting in 1993
  • Leeson started his career as a derivative trader

4
Leesons Trading
  • Arbitrage futures between SIMEX and OSE
  • Sell straddles

5
Arbitrage between SIMEX and OSE
  • Involves going long in one market and short in
    the other one.
  • Leesons went long in Osaka.
  • (His position was public knowledge since the OSE
    publishes weekly data)
  • Leeson should have gone short in Singapore he
    went long instead (unauthorized trades).

6
Selling straddles
  • Straddle Sell one put and one call with same
    strike and maturity
  • Benefits the seller if prices dont change much
    (i.e., the options expire worthless)
  • Leeson sold straddles on the Nikkei 225
  • Note Leeson did not have the authority to sell
    options

7
Tough luck
  • On January 17, 1995, the Kobe earthquake hit
    Japan, causing the Nikkei to fall below 18,000.
  • Put options moved deep in-the-money.

8
It aint no brain surgery
  • When you speculate in long futures and prices
    drop you lose
  • When you sell straddles and prices drop you
    lose
  • Keep in mind Losses from selling call options
    are potentially unlimited!

9
Bottom line
  • Barings collapsed because it could not meet its
    obligations
  • (Courtesy of Nicholas Leeson)
  • Over US7 billion on the Nikkei 225 equity
    contracts
  • Over US20 billion on Japanese bonds and Euroyen
    contracts

10
How was it possible?
  • Leeson was very astute, but reckless
  • Senior management was utterly incompetent
  • Lack of adequate organizational structure to
    allow for proper checks balances and effective
    monitoring

11
Leesons part
  • Leeson set up an error account - the infamous
    account 88888 (not known to senior management in
    UK).
  • He then engaged into a significant volume of
    cross trading between account 88888 and other
    accounts
  • Cross trading matching the positions of two
    accounts belonging to the same client
  • Ex If Barings owed US500m to Daiwa Bank from
    one type of transaction but also expected to
    receive US300 from Daiwa from another type of
    transaction, it could net the two amounts through
    a cross trade.
  • After executing these cross-trades, Leeson would
    instruct the settlements staff to break down the
    total number of contracts into several different
    trades, and to change the trade prices to cause
    profits to be credited to account 92000, while
    charging losses to account 88888 account
  • What appeared to be an arbitrage was in fact a
    speculation disguised with the help of account
    88888.

12
Faulty organizational structure and delegation of
powers
  • Leeson was in charge of the front and back office
  • From the front office he was conducting trades
  • From the back office (records office) he
    confirmed and settled trades undertaken by the
    front office
  • Leeson was in charge of his own supervision!
  • An internal audit in August 1994 concluded that
    Leesons dual responsibility was an excessive
    concentration of powers

13
Other red flags
  • BFS was asked by SIMEX to explain some margin
    inconsistencies related to account 88888
  • Leeson was put in charge of responding to SIMEX
  • No one in London knew how Barings acquired a
    US83m receivable from Spear, Leeds Kellogg.
  • Leesons cash requests for the first two months
    of 1995 amounted to US1.2 billion
  • No one asked for justifications
  • Staff in London could not reconcile funds
    remitted to BFS to both proprietary in-house and
    individual client positions.

14
Senior Managements part
  • Mgmt. failed to follow up on the internal audit
  • Mgmt. had a poor understanding of derivatives
  • Mgmt. failed to understand the risks of the
    business
  • Mgmt. failed to supervise properly

15
Wishful thinking
  • Senior mgmt. believed that Leesons positions
    were hedged because the alternative was
    inconceivable
  • Senior mgmt. should have made sure it was hedged
  • Probably they also believed in market efficiency
    and natural selection
  • They were right, but headed for extinction

16
Conclusions
  • An unlikely series of events in the market
  • One rogue trader
  • Incompetent management
  • _________________________________
  • The demise of one of worlds oldest and most
    respectable bank
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