Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Bank Losses Sharpen Focus on Proprietary Trading*


On 10 May 2012, JP Morgan, the largest US bank by assets, announced that poorly designed and executed hedging strategies had caused more than $2 billion in derivatives trading losses from transactions in London. Even more worrying is the fact that some regulators, including the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the US Securities Exchange Commission (SEC), have argued that since they do not yet monitor JP Morgan as a swap dealer, they became aware of the trading losses after JP Morgan’s announcement despite earlier media reports at the beginning of April that raised red flags over the London Whale’s $100 billion notional exposure in one credit index. Even the regulators, the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and Federal Reserve Bank, failed to detect the risk posed by the massive hedging strategy, despite having more than 100 of their own staff embedded at JP Morgan, up until April, around the same time that Bloomberg and Wall Street news reports suggested that the UK-based trader at the bank was playing a dominant role in certain markets and distorting prices.