New York, Feb 9 :
There is a new twist in the London Whale trading scandal that cost JPMorgan
Chase $6.2 billion in trading losses last year. Some of the firm's own traders
bet against the very derivatives positions placed by its chief investment
office, said three people familiar with the matter.
The U.S. Senate
Permanent Committee on Investigations, which launched an inquiry into the
trading loss last fall, is looking into the how different divisions of the bank
wound up on opposite sides of the same trade, said one of the people familiar
with the matter.
The committee is expected to release a report on its
investigation in the next few weeks.
The people familiar with the
situation did not comment on the dollar value of the opposing trades placed by
JPMorgan Chase & Co's (JPM) investment bank traders, which was much smaller
than the total positions put on by the CIO.
The intra-bank trading was
not mentioned in a 129-page report JPMorgan released on January 16, which
chronicled some of the bank's risk management failures. The scandal has led to a
number of management changes at JPMorgan and has sullied CEO Jamie Dimon's image
as a hands-on risk manager.
Kristin Lemkau, a spokeswoman for JPMorgan,
declined to comment on the investment bank's trading positions.
A
spokeswoman for the Senate committee, led by Michigan Sen. Carl Levin, a
Democrat, declined to comment on its investigation.
It was widely known
that a group of about eight credit-focused hedge funds, such as BlueMountain
Capital Management and Saba Capital Management, were on the other side of the
trades that JPMorgan's London-based Whale team made on an index tied to
corporate default rates. But the role JPMorgan's own investment bank may have
played in the messy unwinding of the derivatives trade has not come out until
now.
One of the three people familiar with the matter claimed that
JPMorgan managers discussed merging the two sets of trades in an attempt to
offset some of the CIO's losses. Those talks ended about a month before
Bloomberg News first reported the CIO trades on April 5 last year, the source
said.
JPMorgan's Lemkau said that this "never came up in our exhaustive
internal investigation."
Last July, the bank fired the three London-based
traders in the CIO most closely tied to the trading, including Bruno Iksil,
dubbed the London Whale by hedge fund traders because of the size of the trades
he placed for the CIO.
Two people familiar with Iksil and his boss,
Javier Martin-Artajo, said the two CIO employees complained about the investment
bank's actions in the spring of 2012, accusing its traders of deliberately
trying to move the market against the CIO by leaking information on its position
to hedge funds. Iksil made his complaint to a member of JPMorgan's compliance
department, one of the people said.
But those same sources said they had
not seen any evidence to support that claim and JPMorgan's Lemkau declined to
comment on the allegation.
Martin-Artajo's lawyer did not respond to a
request for comment. A lawyer for Bruno Iksil declined to comment.
It is
not clear when the investment bank traders and the London Whale team became
aware they were taking opposing sides on a trade that involved index linked to
credit default swaps sold on corporate debt.
JPMorgan's internal report
did note that, in deciding how to handle the CIO trades, JPMorgan eventually
applied a valuation methodology from the investment bank and not the one the
chief investment officer had been using.
Federal authorities are
currently investigating whether some employees in the CIO deliberately used
misleading valuations to try to conceal some of the losses.
It is not
uncommon for large banks to hold opposing positions in the same market. That is
sometimes done as a way of hedging a position or because different trading desks
formulate opposing views about a trade.
Still, the revelation that the
bank was taking two sides on the same trade also is likely to rekindle the
debate about whether banks such as JPMorgan Chase are too big to manage and
should be scaled back.
"The big banks have always had a habit of pitting
people in the bank against each other," said Charles Geisst, a finance professor
at Manhattan College and a former banker. "When it's discovered it's not taken
well."
A group of JPMorgan shareholders led by the AFL-CIO labor
federation is pushing for a vote at JPMorgan's annual shareholders meeting this
spring on reducing it's overall size by spinning off one or more of its
businesses. They cite the big trading losses in the London Whale scandal as
evidence the bank is too big to manage.
Ends
SA/EN
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» JPMorgan bet against itself in "Whale" trade
JPMorgan bet against itself in "Whale" trade
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