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- <text id=89TT2085>
- <title>
- Aug. 14, 1989: Snakes In The Pits
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Aug. 14, 1989 The Hostage Agony
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 52
- Snakes in the Pits
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The FBI busts 46 commodities traders in Chicago
- </p>
- <p> For six months Chicago's commodities traders had been
- nervously waiting for the big shoe to drop. The FBI announced
- last January that its agents had quietly penetrated the trading
- pits at the Chicago Board of Trade and the Mercantile Exchange
- and found them to be full of snakes. Since then the bureau's
- investigation -- the most extensive ever conducted into any
- financial market -- has been proceeding, not so quietly, as more
- than a dozen traders have been pressed into cooperating with the
- Government. Last week, with FBI director William Sessions and
- U.S. Attorney General Dick Thornburgh in Chicago for the
- occasion, the results were finally announced: 46 traders (out
- of some 6,000) at the two institutions were indicted on charges
- ranging from defrauding customers to tax evasion to
- racketeering.
- </p>
- <p> And there's more to come, warned Thornburgh, saying, "This
- probe is part of an expanding Department of Justice crackdown
- on white-collar crime in all its various guises, from Wall
- Street to LaSalle Street to Main Street. The activities
- uncovered at these exchanges, the largest of their type in the
- world, cannot be tolerated."
- </p>
- <p> Significantly, 18 of the traders were charged under the
- often criticized Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations
- Act. Originally passed by Congress in 1970 to combat organized
- crime, RICO is increasingly being used as a battering ram
- against the clubby defenses of financial institutions. Because
- it allows prosecutors to seize all assets -- including homes,
- salaries and pensions -- of those indicted, many people facing
- a RICO count offer to inform on their former colleagues in
- exchange for leniency. Last week Anton Valukas, the U.S.
- Attorney who supervised the 2 1/2-year probe, advised both
- Chicago exchanges that if the RICO-charged traders are
- convicted, the prosecution intends to lay claim to their
- membership seats, a $7.5 million prize.
- </p>
- <p> Although FBI agents masquerading as brokers spotted some
- wrongdoing in the pits where U.S. Treasury bonds and Swiss
- francs are traded, the bulk of the charges are directed at the
- Board of Trade's soybean pit and the Merc's Japanese yen pit.
- The yen traders have long been viewed with suspicion by other
- brokers, while the old clique of soybean traders had a
- reputation for playing by their own, traditional rules and
- resisting interference, even from their exchange officials. The
- Government has accused no fewer than 19 of the 50 soybean
- brokers and 21 of the 70 yen traders of running their
- commodities pits like special clubs that illegally fixed their
- prices and profits, to the detriment of hundreds of customers.
- </p>
- <p> One type of shady deal was "front-running," in which a
- broker profits from advance information by trading ahead of a
- customer's order. A crooked broker might receive an order, for
- example, to buy 250,000 bu. of soybeans at $5.85 a bu. He could
- easily execute his own order to buy 50,000 bu. first. Later,
- when the market reacted to the larger order by pushing prices
- up to $5.95, the trader could sell his contracts, pocketing
- $5,000 in profits. A second illicit practice uncovered by the
- feds was "curb trading," in which brokers conspired to
- consummate deals outside legal market hours "on the curb." Many
- brokers even "busted" losing trades by simply destroying
- evidence of the transaction. Such practices represent "more
- stupidity than conspiracy," says a Board of Trade official.
- "It's scratch my back and I'll scratch yours, but it's done
- with the customer's money. You might as well have a gun and a
- mask."
- </p>
- <p> Since the federal sting was disclosed in January, the
- exchanges have scrambled to put their houses in order.
- Disciplinary actions at the Board of Trade have jumped to 119
- so far this year, from 55 in the same period last year. During
- that time, member fines at the Merc have increased eightfold --
- to $1.9 million. The day after the indictments were published,
- the Board of Trade announced it would initiate a $1 million
- upgrade in its computerized surveillance program as well as
- triple its minimum fines to $250,000. The Merc's chief, Leo
- Melamed, pledged "to put the fear of God" into traders.
- </p>
- <p> But eleventh-hour amends are unlikely to save the exchanges
- from increased regulatory scrutiny. Last week the House
- Agriculture Committee voted to boost the budget of the Commodity
- Futures Trading Commission, which oversees the Chicago markets,
- from $34.7 million to $44.5 million by 1991. And in a step
- designed to prevent front-running, the committee moved to partly
- restrict brokers from trading for their own and their clients'
- accounts at the same time.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the exchanges' critics want to go further. They
- recommend that Chicago's quaint system of making deals with
- shouts and hand signals be replaced with automated computerized
- trading, as has been done in Tokyo and London. "It is time to
- jettison this Rube Goldberg . . . system and replace it with a
- sophisticated electronic system that records trades as they
- happen," said Massachusetts Democrat Edward J. Markey, chairman
- of the House subcommittee on telecommunications and finance.
- </p>
- <p> What will the future of the futures market be? Valukas says
- the Government's investigation has just begun. At least one
- guilty plea is expected this week, and new cases may be opened.
- "We have made a substantial and long-term commitment to ensure
- the integrity of the markets," says Valukas. "I'll let the
- convictions do the talking."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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