What do we think of when we hear the term ‘rogue trading’? Footage of a youngish bank trader making massive losses with a few reckless, fraudulently entered trades being dragged before the courts on the evening news? That’s a simple and familiar image, but comfortably far removed from anything to do with our business, surely.
Unfortunately, it’s not quite that neat and straightforward. We hear about rogue trading when it’s big and goes spectacularly wrong, such as in the most famous cases (see the table, below). That is when it’s too late to do anything and the ensuring events become a spectacle. The more interesting questions for treasury professionals are around the cases we haven’t heard about yet.
So, what is a rogue trade? It’s not an unprofitable trade, or an undeclared one, or even an unwise one. It is simply an unauthorised trade.
These are not trades carried out by people who shouldn’t be trading, but those with access to trading mechanisms who are breaking the rules around scale, risk or the instruments they are allowed to use. A rogue trader is someone in a position of trust misusing it, then concealing their actions – rather like a spy does.
The rogue trades that are most often reported occur in banks, because the scale and impact is often dramatic and newsworthy. But these abuses can happen anywhere there is trading in play – commodity and FX markets would be the most likely contexts for corporates.
More complex and leveraged instruments can magnify the scale and help conceal the true underlying risks. But a simple spot deal could actually be rogue, depending on the reasons it was placed. Even refraining from making a trade that policy would indicate the need for might, strictly speaking, put an individual outside the rules.
To continue the spy analogy, espionage recruiters look for one or more of four classic behavioural drivers to induce insiders to act against their own organisations. Collectively, these attributes go by the acronym MICE:
And what sort of setting might unwittingly encourage rogue trading? If official policy is zero-risk tolerance, but active trading can result in rewards like recognition, promotion or bonuses… then rogue trading is more likely to occur.
Perhaps the worst thing that can happen is when a first-time rogue trader meets with early success – the trading behaviour pays off and they manage to cover their tracks, so the behaviour is reinforced and encouraged.
As for those alleged cases where managers were aware of and tolerated off-the-books trading because of the results, it stops being clear who is the rules-breaking rogue and who is merely inputting the trades.
A culture that does not address the possible motives behind rogue trading allows them to build up. If a junior trader can’t question the reasoning for a policy and expect a reasoned answer, sooner or later somebody will try their own experiment.
While rogue trades are hidden from others within the organisation, they’re not out of sight from counterparties – settlement will eventually become necessary
If only those with unconventional results get recognition or reward, then everyone will be seeking to emulate them. Similarly, a culture that doesn’t tolerate admissions of failure will tend to have problems.
Rogue trading often draws in others. The rogue trader has to put time and effort into concealing their actions and that may involve others – other traders or accountancy staff to amend the records. In the case of Toshihide Iguchi, it was the stress of concealment that eventually led to him coming forwards, after 12 years of clandestine trading activity.
While rogue trades are hidden from others within the organisation, they’re not out of sight from counterparties – settlement will eventually become necessary and, when this is a loss, an organisation’s liquidity risk is heightened. Nick Leeson might have continued for years if his authorised overnight position hadn’t suddenly been revalued by the Kobe earthquake.
What to do if you’re a rogue trader? If you’re ahead, walk away now. Has it really been worth it? If you’re in trouble, is it really fair to your firm and colleagues to take even greater risks to bail you out? Coming forward takes courage, but may allow for a more controlled solution for your employer. On a more self-interested note, it might conceivably improve your legal position.
If a rogue trader comes to light in your organisation, remember they know the actual situation fully and will be best placed to shed light on it, help resolve it and perhaps even improve controls to avoid reoccurrence.
Whether the culprit is you or someone else, there are two key tasks:
Also, consider allowing a very short amnesty period for others to come forward.
If you’re tempted to place a trade outside your firm’s rules, examine your reasons. If the trade would be in the organisation’s best interests, but outside its current rules, make your case openly, propose some policy amendments or get the reasons you don’t yet know for why the policy makes sense.
If you’ve not got any good reasons for the trade, or are unwilling to voice them, then prepare to become a rogue trader. And remember, all you need to do is have the Great Humbler (also known as the market) react with the values and timings you want for every trade. But that should be easy… the rules don’t apply to you, do they?
Rogue traders whose activities brought them huge, unwanted spotlights...
[Image:roguetraderstable_bi.gif class=”left right20” alt=”Famous rogue traders table”]
Your checklist of red flags for rogue-trader behaviour...
Scott Raeburn is a treasury professional in the industrial manufacturing sector