Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login
How a broker spent $520m in a drunken stupor and moved the global oil price (telegraph.co.uk)
7 points by Davertron on June 30, 2010 | hide | past | favorite | 1 comment



Having admitted to an alcohol problem and received treatment, Mr Perkins was banned from trading for five years and hit with a £72,000 fine, reduced from £150,000 because of potential financial hardship. Mr Perkins was not available for comment last night at his £340,000 home in Brentwood, Essex, and it is not known whether he has found alternative employment. The FSA will consider re-approving him as a broker after the ban, if he has recovered from his alcohol problem, but noted "Mr Perkins poses an extreme risk to the market when drunk". It added that there appeared to have been "no motive" for buying up the oil.

Homelessness is a major social problem, especially during periods of economic austerity. The first step in mitigating it is to understand how people respond to such sudden reversals of fortune: Mr Perkins is uniquely well qualified to study the subject, and should be allowed to begin his investigations immediately, if not sooner.

On a more serious note, I did a pile of research into global oil markets and exchanges for a documentary proposal a couple of years back. My intention was to trace the contours of the 'invisible hand' and demonstrate the importance of price signals as an input to policymaking as a counterpoint to the rampant conspiracy mongering. Instead I discovered the markets in question were being run like a large-scale shell game. The majority of oil futures gradually moved onto the ICE exchange mentioned in this story, largely because regulators in the UK and US each believed the other country's agency was supervising trades, when in fact nobody was.

This guy's irresponsibility is much easier to explain in a newspaper story than a pattern of regulatory shopping in high-volume commodity trades, but the real scandal is the way regulators kept citing economic fundamentals while assuming somebody else was maintaining an audit trail and would have mentioned if there were anything amiss. Perkins blew about $15 million of capital in an alcoholic stupor; how much evaporated during frenzied trading in 2008 is hard to say. Much depends on whether one sees the price spike as a trigger of the wider economic crisis, or a frantic attempt to stave it off by traders in search of a fast return.




Join us for AI Startup School this June 16-17 in San Francisco!

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: