Washington, Dec 12 : Morgan Stanley hired former Goldman Sachs trader Edward Glenn Hadden
to run its Treasury bond desk last year, even though his former employer had
placed the trader on paid leave for about a year following an internal inquiry,
said three people familiar with the situation.
The inquiry by Goldman
involved a matter separate from an ongoing investigation by exchange operator
CME Group into a December 2008 trade that involved U.S. Treasury
futures.
Neither Hadden nor Goldman has been accused of wrongdoing in the
2008 trading incident. But the decision by Morgan Stanley to hire Hadden even
though some of his activities had raised questions within Goldman could put the
firm in an uncomfortable position in light of the revelations of the CME Group
investigation.
Hadden was a partner at Goldman Sachs when the 2008 trade
drawing scrutiny occurred. The incident that led to the Goldman internal inquiry
took place the end of 2009 and involved profits Hadden is said to have made
ahead of the launch of a new Treasury futures contract introduced by the CME
Group in early 2010.
Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs both recently
learned of the CME investigation into the 2008 incident. But sources said Morgan
Stanley was aware Goldman had put Hadden on paid leave when it hired him in
March 2011.
Hadden's lawyer said his client did nothing wrong with the
2008 trade and expects the CME to reach a similar conclusion when it completes
its investigation.
"There is no legal or factual basis for any suggestion
of market manipulation," said James Benjamin, who defended his client in
response to a recent regulatory disclosure by the firm that Hadden is being
investigated by CME over a 4-year-old trade.
Benjamin had no comment
about the incident that led to Goldman putting Hadden on paid leave that
effectively barred him from trading at the firm for about a year.
Hadden,
who goes by his middle name "Glenn," officially left Goldman (GS) in late 2010.
A few months later, Hadden, who had been a partner at Goldman, joined Morgan
Stanley with much fanfare to run the Wall Street firm's Treasury bond and
interest rate derivatives trading desk.
Hadden is one of the most
successful traders in the market for Treasury bonds and interest rate
derivatives, whose value stands at $531.6 trillion, according to the Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association. He had worked for Goldman Sachs for
about 11 years before voluntarily leaving the firm at the end of
2010.
Trading in Treasuries and interest rate derivatives is an important
part of Morgan Stanley's bond trading business, as it focuses on high-volume
trading that can be easily automated and cleared under new regulations, rather
than riskier and more complex over-the-counter trades.
Benjamin, a
defense attorney with Akin Gump, said the CME investigation involves a
"technical risk management activity" that occurred "in a one-minute period four
years ago." While Benjamin declined to discuss the specifics of the allegation
against Hadden in his statement, the lawyer said his client had "acted properly
and followed established market practice."
Morgan Stanley spokesman Mark
Lake said Hadden is still employed by the firm, and in good
standing.
News of the investigation broke when The New York Times posted
a story on its website about Hadden with the headline "Morgan Stanley Trader
Faces Inquiry on Possible Manipulation."
The paper, citing a regulatory
filing and sources familiar with the matter, said the CME was investigating
Hadden over whether his Treasury futures trading had manipulated
prices.
Hadden's file with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
cites a pending CME investigation of his Treasury futures orders placed on the
expiration date in December 2008.
The trades being probed by the CME
pertained to programs set up by the Federal Reserve during the height of the
financial crisis to help support Wall Street and the banking system, a person
familiar with the matter said.
The New York Times reported that some at
the Fed had suspected that Goldman was trying to improperly profit from one of
the government's bond-buying programs, and complained to Goldman about
Hadden.
The 2009 incident that led to the Goldman internal inquiry also
involved Treasury futures but had nothing to do with the U.S. government's
efforts to prop up the financial system.
Instead, the 2009 matter
involved a new Treasury futures trading product the CME was developing and one
which Hadden had advised on, said those people, who were not authorized to speak
publicly on the matter.
Hadden had found a way to structure a Treasury
trade ahead of the CME's official announcement in September 2009 that it was
going to launch in early 2010.
That incident moved his superiors at
Goldman to put him on leave, keeping him on the payroll but preventing him from
actively trading for about a year.
Indeed, even as the CME investigates
Hadden over the 2008 incident, its product development team has continued to
turn to him for help in devising new Treasury futures products. CME Group quoted
Hadden in a September 18 press release highlighting a new interest rate swap
futures product.
Ends
SA/EN
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Morgan Stanley trader was probed at Goldman
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