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View Full Version : Thats an expensive night of drinking...



Ike
7/1/2010, 01:22 PM
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/energy/oilandgas/7862246/How-a-broker-spent-520m-in-a-drunken-stupor-and-moved-the-global-oil-price.html


It was 7.45am on June 30 last year when the senior, longstanding broker for PVM Oil Futures was contacted by an admin clerk querying why he'd bought 7m barrels of crude in the middle of the night.

The 34-year old broker at first claimed he had spent the night trading alongside a client. But the story began to fall apart when he refused to put the customer in touch with his desk for official approval of the trades.

By 10am it emerged that Mr Perkins had single-handedly moved the global price of oil to an eight-month high during a "drunken blackout". Prices leapt by more than $1.50 a barrel in under half an hour at around 2am – the kind of sharp swing caused by events of geo-political significance. Ten times the usual volume of futures contracts changed hands in just one hour.

By the time PVM realised the trades were not authorised and swiftly began to unwind the positions, losses of exactly $9,763,252 had stacked up.

...

According to the regulator, Mr Perkins first started trading irregularly the day before the enormous price spike. He had been drinking heavily over the weekend at a PVM golf event and was returning to a day off work.

As a broker, Mr Perkins was only allowed to place trades on behalf of his clients – not using any of PVM's own money. And records show that he placed a legitimate order for a client at 1.34pm through his broking desk by telephone. This was quickly followed by seven more orders with a value of $8m using PVM's cash.

Mr Perkins' trading stopped for a few hours, but in the early hours of the morning, he returned to the oil market via his laptop. He placed an incredible $520m in orders through ICE Futures Europe, where traders can buy or sell crude oil for future delivery and bet on whether prices will go up or down. The first trade was at 1.22am was at $71.40 per barrel and the last trade at 3.41am was at $73.05. During this period, Mr Perkins gradually edged up the price by bidding higher each time, until he was responsible for 69pc of the global market volume.

By 6.30am, the broker appeared to have realised what he'd done. He sent a text message to the managing director claiming an unwell relative meant he would not be coming in to work and started disposing of the oil futures. When PVM challenged his story, the broker confessed and later co-operated fully with the FSA inquiry.

Mr Perkins told investigators that he has "limited recollection" of the entire episode, claiming he had placed the trades during a drink-induced stupor.

yermom
7/1/2010, 01:36 PM
nope, Wall Street doesn't need any regulation :D

Pricetag
7/1/2010, 02:24 PM
Now how you goin' get fired on your day off?

Chuck Bao
7/1/2010, 02:46 PM
I really think that our markets are driven by a bunch of drunken cowboys on computers. They are out there yelling yippee kai-yoo until they lose millions and it makes the news. Then, the next one gets a trading terminal.

The traders are a different breed. All you have to do is look at the perverse logic used by stock market journalists in trying to explain the markets' erratic movements. The big market players herd, rope and cut the balls off. It is not a fair game until one of the cowboys on a terminal gets too confident.

tator
7/1/2010, 03:00 PM
Jager does that to me too, except I end up pushing the price of QVC jewelry to all-time highs.

Leroy Lizard
7/1/2010, 03:10 PM
The traders are a different breed. All you have to do is look at the perverse logic used by stock market journalists in trying to explain the markets' erratic movements. The big market players herd, rope and cut the balls off. It is not a fair game until one of the cowboys on a terminal gets too confident.

Then it becomes a fair game?