| Who the $*ck is Jerome Kerviel? |
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| Written by Eben Esterhuizen | |
| Thursday, 24 January 2008 | |
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That's probably what the Fed chairman said this morning when he woke up and saw the headlines. As it turns out, Jerome Kerviel is a 31 year old Frenchman who enjoys judo and sailing. He worked as a trader at Societe Generale, and somehow managed to lose almost €5 billion in a series of complex, concealed deals on European stock derivatives. Kerviel's colleagues described him as a "computer genius" who was allegedly able to hack into the bank's computers to hide his reckless trading. ![]() Photo:dejanmilo, Creative Commons, Flickr The Fed didn't know about Kerviel's shenanigans when they cut interest rates by 0.75% on Monday, and it now looks like the Fed’s biggest emergency rate cut ever may have been sparked by a lie. Events unfolded like this: Kerviel screwed up on Friday last week when he failed to disable the bank's automatic alert system and his irregular trading suddenly showed up. Societe Generale's bosses grilled him on Saturday night and the bank's management decided to unwind all the out-of-money trades on Monday. The unwinding of such a massive position put immense pressure on the futures market, and it started looking like a manic Monday. Other traders saw the plunge in futures amid massive and mysterious selling and, even though the U.S. markets were closed for Martin Luther King Day, they start selling everything else. The current crisis is not only the bust that follows the housing boom [symptom], it's basically the end of a 60-year period of continuing credit expansion based on the dollar as the reserve currency [underlying cause]. Now the rest of the world is increasingly unwilling to accumulate dollars.
If you give the market total freedom, you create myriad opportunities for Jerome Kerviel v2.0. I assure you that he is not the only "computer genius" conducting fictitious futures trades to lift bonuses or cover up embarrassment. How much of the world’s derivatives market is fiction? Comments
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written by Adam Waitt , January 28, 2008
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written by Adam Waitt , February 07, 2008
Agreed on the whole fighting the cause rather then the symptoms (I wish drug companies would make this their modis operandi as well).
It is my firm belief that a dramatic reduction in monetary regulation which includes: abolishing the unconstitutional federal income tax, dismantling the federal reserve (and its das verboten stance on competing currencies), ending fractional reserve lending, etc, would not only treat the symptoms and eliminate the cause but also vaccinate us from future infections. Soros : Esterhuizen :: von Mises : Waitt
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The housing boom and credit expansion wasn't caused by the dollar being used as a reserve currency. It was the result of the Fed keeping interest rates artificially low. People bought houses and borrowed money that they never would be able to pay back. It also disincentives saving which artificially boosts the potentially higher yield stock market.
Artificially low interest rates also force the Fed to print more money in order to cover its loans. That, along with fractional reserve lending, is why our dollar is collapsing.
This 'crisis' is the direct result of the manipulation by the fed. If there had been true market freedom when the Jerome Kerviel scandal broke then this correction could have been avoided or at least greatly reduced.
If you are arguing against market freedom, what do you propose the Fed does?