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[交易商] 瑞富门事件(REFCO)4亿3000万美圆财务丑闻

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61Floor
發表於 2005-10-16 17:32:00 | 只看該作者
Refco advisers to decide fate of company By Michael Flaherty
Sun Oct 16,12:33 AM ET



NEW YORK (Reuters) - Advisers for brokerage Refco Inc. (NYSE:RFX - news) met on Saturday in an emergency meeting to decide how to save the embattled company that is teetering on the edge of collapse.

The advisers met to discuss what Refco units are salvageable and what units may have to file for bankruptcy, or be dissolved altogether, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

Saving Refco's main futures and commodities trading operation is the major focus, sources said. The company also has a broker-dealer and a prime brokerage unit, which were shut down this week.

The meeting comes less than a week after Refco said it had put CEO Phillip Bennett on leave after discovering that a firm he controlled owed the company $430 million. Refco shares fell 45 percent on Monday, when the news was first announced. Bennett was charged with securities fraud on Wednesday.

Refco shares plummeted on the     New York Stock Exchange, where they are currently halted. Pre-market trades on Friday indicated Refco's stock at $7.90, representing a 72 percent plunge from where its shares opened on Monday.

Refco's rapid unraveling reveals how important reputation is is for a securities firm, which depends on client confidence and borrowed money.

Saturday's gathering, sources said, included bankers at Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS - news), Refco's financial adviser; Board Chairman Scott Schoen of buyout firm Thomas H. Lee Partners, which owns 38 percent of Refco shares; members of the team formed by special adviser Arthur Levitt, the former U.S.     Securities and Exchange Commission chairman; Grant Thornton, Refco's auditors; and the various teams of attorneys hired to help the rapidly fading firm.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which regulates Refco's futures operations, said late on Friday it had not asked other brokerage firms to step in and purchase any of Refco's business units.

"The CFTC has not asked any firm, Goldman Sachs or anyone else, to intervene in the situation regarding Refco," said CFTC spokesman David Gary.

"Our agency is closely monitoring developments involving Refco," he said. "We continue to concentrate on our primary obligation of protecting the integrity of the market and the customer funds in Refco."

BANKRUPTCY FILING BEFORE MONDAY?

The Saturday meeting followed a separate meeting on Friday held by Refco lenders to determine repayment. Bonds from Refco plummeted 17 cents on the dollar to 23 cents on the dollar on Friday, indicating that bond investors see a bankruptcy filing as highly likely. Friday's lender meeting ended without a firm decision.

Should Refco seek bankruptcy protection for any or all of its units, the company and its advisers are likely to mull whether to file before Monday, when stricter bankruptcy laws go into effect.

An outside buyer scooping up parts of Refco is another possibility. Man Group's (EMG.L) brokerage unit, Man Financial, has expressed interest in buying Refco's futures business, according to a source close to the matter, who added that various private equity firms are also showing interest.

Determining the worth of Refco's units is, at this point, nearly impossible, since most of Refco's market value has been wiped out in the last five days. The company has also been losing clients and their money. In addition, the extent of the alleged accounting fraud remains unclear.

Refco also faces mounting class-action lawsuits, which are likely to lead to high litigation costs.

Refco's commodities unit is the largest U.S. independent commodities brokerage. Refco Securities, LLC, which announced it was no longer taking new clients this week, is a broker-dealer that accounts for nearly half of the company's gross revenues.

Refco Capital Markets, a prime broker serving the hedge fund community, halted activities and froze all its accounts on Thursday.

(Additional reporting by Tom Doggett in Washington)



BANKRUPTCY FILING BEFORE MONDAY?!!!  周末也可以破产,哈哈
62Floor
發表於 2005-10-17 14:59:32 | 只看該作者
2005年10月15日星期六新加坡商业时报《BT Weekend》记者Oh Boon Ping 报导

瑞富新加坡私人有限公司向客户保证资金安全。

期货经纪公司瑞富新加坡私人有限公司再度向客户保证,他们的资金没有被冻结

,而且公司的运作也未受到与美国瑞富总公司相关的丑闻影响。

瑞富新加坡私人有限公司董事经理陈合泰(Tan Hup Thye) 说:“我们有四千五百

万美元的资本储备,相当于我们应对目前的风险所需资金的三倍还多。”

他是对本周报导的瑞富公司首席执行官Phillip Bennett利用一对冲资金来掩盖其

欠该美国期货经纪集团的四亿三千万美元的债务的新闻后作上述发言的。两天后

,由于现金不足,瑞富子公司瑞富资金有限公司(Refco Capital Ltd.)对其资

本市场业务进行了为期十五(15)天的暂停提款。

陈先生说:“在过去的四天里,我们已经通过电子邮件给所有关心的客户发了函

件,同时也向他们致电话提供我们的保证。”

瑞富新加坡私人有限公司拥有超过二千个本地客户。截至星期四时公司客户资金

总额为七亿六千万美元。公司表示极少有客户关闭交易帐户,但有客户已经提取

他们账户上的多余资金。

除了表示提取的资金“数额不是很大外”,瑞富新加坡私人有限公司没有透露提

取资金的数额。

另外,新加坡交易所及相关监管机构已做出声明,REFCO新加坡资产质量完好,客

户保证金存放及公司风险准备金提取均符合相关监管要求。此信息不在此新闻稿内。
63Floor
發表於 2005-10-17 15:05:51 | 只看該作者
瑞富新加坡私人有限公司拥有超过二千个本地客户。
但是所有的外汇交易帐户都是在美国REFCO或者小岛REFCO开的。 这个基本逻辑谁不懂呢?
所以发这个新闻能说明什么? 不是更说明REFCO外汇的风险 ? :mrgreen:
64Floor
發表於 2005-10-17 15:11:46 | 只看該作者
马甲?!! :  :twisted:
65Floor
發表於 2005-10-17 16:14:48 | 只看該作者
发新闻只是传播更多的事情发展的进展给大家知道,我想在这个论坛上的朋友们都很关注refco最新的进展。这个事情和很多人的利益都有相关,所以才会转贴新闻过来,不希望有人在那边传播不确定的消息造成信息的混乱。

不知道有些朋友是不是可以理解?
66Floor
發表於 2005-10-17 17:21:23 | 只看該作者
[quote:660cd080cc="seeline"]发新闻只是传播更多的事情发展的进展给大家知道,我想在这个论坛上的朋友们都很关注refco最新的进展。这个事情和很多人的利益都有相关,所以才会转贴新闻过来,不希望有人在那边传播不确定的消息造成信息的混乱。

不知道有些朋友是不是可以理解?[/quote]

很理解, 更说明REFCO外汇的风险

而且现在REFCO是各自都拼命否定同美国REFCO的关系。而不是以前成天哭着喊着说自己是全球一体,利益共享了。


横批 -   风险各自担待

备注 -  REFCO新加坡为什么大力发展REFCO108 这个此次被停业的REFCO CAPITAL MARKET 的无监管业务, 路人皆应该理解
67Floor
 樓主| 發表於 2005-10-18 12:00:19 | 只看該作者
Refco files for bankruptcy 36 minutes ago



NEW YORK (Reuters) - Commodities brokerage Refco Inc. (NYSE:RFX - news) said on Monday it filed for bankruptcy protection in connection with a memorandum of understanding it made with a group of investors led by J.C. Flowers & Co. LLC for the sale of its futures brokerage business for $768 million.

  
Refco, which will also have has an option to keep up to 20 percent of the equity value of the entities being sold, said it expects to reach definitive agreements shortly but noted that there is no assurance a sale would happen, according to a statement issued late on Monday.



REFCO申请破产!!!
68Floor
發表於 2005-10-18 13:20:07 | 只看該作者
一个REFCO倒下,不知还有多少REFCO?! :evil:  :twisted:
69Floor
發表於 2005-10-18 13:47:15 | 只看該作者
The Refco Group has instructed us (RefcoFX Associates, LLC) to delay payments out of ALL Refco accounts UNTIL they sort out banking and internal matters.


refcofx 延迟提款,没有期限!!! :!:  :!:  :!:  :!:  :!:  :!:
70Floor
 樓主| 發表於 2005-10-18 14:48:12 | 只看該作者
Refco files for bankruptcy, agrees to sell unit

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Troubled commodities brokerage Refco Inc. (NYSE:RFX - news) said on Monday it had filed for bankruptcy protection as it struck a deal to sell its core futures brokerage business to a group of private equity investors for $768 million.

New York-based Refco said it and certain subsidiaries filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday as part of the memorandum of understanding with investors.

None of Refco's regulated subsidiaries -- its futures brokerage business, which is conducted through Refco LLC, Refco Overseas Ltd. and Refco Singapore Ltd, and its broker-dealer, Refco Securities LLC -- filed for bankruptcy protection, it said.

The investor group is led by private equity fund J.C. Flowers & Co. LLC and includes entities associated with Enstar Group Inc., Silver Point Capital, MatlinPatterson Global Advisers LLC and Texas Pacific Group.

Refco, which will have an option to keep up to 20 percent of the equity value of the entities being sold, said it expected to reach definitive agreements shortly but that there was no assurance a sale would happen.

The proposed purchase price equals 103 percent of the net capital of the business being acquired, Refco said in a statement issued late on Monday.

The company said Greenhill & Co. (NYSE:GHL - news) would continue as its financial adviser. The advisory services of Goldman Sachs Group (NYSE:GS - news) were terminated on Monday upon the bankruptcy filing.


所有有牌照的REFCO都没有宣布破产,看来还是有牌照好呀。
71Floor
發表於 2005-10-18 15:08:50 | 只看該作者
[quote:5a377cb682="tom"][quote:5a377cb682="seeline"]发新闻只是传播更多的事情发展的进展给大家知道,我想在这个论坛上的朋友们都很关注refco最新的进展。这个事情和很多人的利益都有相关,所以才会转贴新闻过来,不希望有人在那边传播不确定的消息造成信息的混乱。

不知道有些朋友是不是可以理解?[/quote]

很理解, 更说明REFCO外汇的风险

而且现在REFCO是各自都拼命否定同美国REFCO的关系。而不是以前成天哭着喊着说自己是全球一体,利益共享了。


横批 -   风险各自担待

备注 -  REFCO新加坡为什么大力发展REFCO108 这个此次被停业的REFCO CAPITAL MARKET 的无监管业务, 路人皆应该理解[/quote]

不知道REFCO的马甲现在还有什么气放,主子终于把它卖了。呵呵。
72Floor
發表於 2005-10-18 20:01:28 | 只看該作者
不知道这个破产了的公司怎么卖。要是便宜的话干脆我们几个把它买了得了! :mrgreen:
73Floor
發表於 2005-10-18 20:39:00 | 只看該作者
[quote:83fa4feda3="zehua"]不知道这个破产了的公司怎么卖。要是便宜的话干脆我们几个把它买了得了! :mrgreen:[/quote]

哈哈,天真呀
74Floor
發表於 2005-10-20 08:08:28 | 只看該作者
华尔街见闻


弗劳尔斯出手拯救瑞富公司  

投资者J. 克里斯托弗·弗劳尔斯(J. CHRISTOPHER Flowers)说,他真希望能有一根魔杖,完全重现瑞富公司(Refco Inc.)辉煌的日子。

弗劳尔斯在接受采访时表示,该公司目前运行良好。当时瑞富公司几乎受到毁灭性打击。

弗劳尔斯有幸首先从灾难中逃脱了出来。周一晚间,J.C. Flowers & Co.和一组投资者初步同意以7.68亿美元收购这家濒临绝境的商品经纪商的核心业务──其受监管的期货交易部门。鉴于瑞富公司目前已经申请了破产保护,而客户和员工也在大量流失,该公司未来前景如何还难下定论。

前面的风险还有很多:弗劳尔斯对这个最大的独立期货交易业务的投标可能会被竞争对手超过。他的建议也可能不足以令瑞富公司的客户满意,这些客户通过该公司进行活牛、美国国债等众多期货品种的交易。

不少华尔街人士认为,弗劳尔斯面临的风险很小,因为收购报价同瑞富公司近期的市值相比格外便宜。弗劳尔斯以前是高盛公司(Goldman Sachs Group Inc.)的合伙人,负责该公司的金融机构银行业务。他的出价仅比瑞富旗下这家子公司的“净监管资本”(即该公司帐面价值的保守估计值)高出3%。这一价值包括该子公司的现有资本及其硬资产,如技术基础设施和办公家具等。在上周的丑闻前,瑞富公司的全部市值约为36亿美元,其中期货子公司是主要部分。

这使弗劳尔斯的报价更类似于一种期权,认为将有足够的员工和客户仍保持忠诚,可以让瑞富公司的业务正常运转。但这一报价为弗劳尔斯提供了许多退出机会,只要他想这样做。比如,它能使弗劳尔斯为首的集团在需要承担债务等情况下脱身而出;或在客户资产跌破37.5亿美元(5月份时为41亿美元)时退出。

还有一个风险是,由于预计将有众多的股东诉讼,这家幸存下来的公司可能无法摆脱未来的全部债务。如果出现这种情况,根据初步协议的条款,此项交易将被取消。弗劳尔斯脱颖而出作为牵头人突出显示了高盛在瑞富公司危机中发挥的多重作用。高盛公司承销了瑞富公司近期的首次公开募股,并在此次危机中为该公司出谋划策。上周,高盛为其作用进行了辩解,称是为了公共利益而免费提供帮助,原因之一在于瑞富公司影响了市场稳定。

弗劳尔斯周二尽其所能在形势恶化前稳住瑞富公司。他向瑞富的员工发出了安抚信。瑞富的员工中有2,000人在期货交易部门工作。作为一个不愿与媒体打交道的人,他同意接受采访,表示瑞富是“不断增长的优质业务,我们将按同样的模式正常运作。”

弗劳尔斯承认,瑞富公司的命运可能在以小时衡量。但他理智地表示,此项投资风险不大,很有可能会成功。

华尔街上几乎无人怀疑弗劳尔斯的自信,原因之一是他在高盛效力期间获得的投行业务“神奇小子”的赞誉,以及谨慎的金融艺术大师的称号。他在2004年《福布斯》(Forbes)杂志的美国富人榜上排名第278位,估计资产净值为10亿美元。

弗劳尔斯是在日本赢得声誉的,当时他和投资者蒂姆·科林斯(Tim Collins)在2000年领导了对日本长期信用银行(Long-Term Credit Bank of Japan Ltd.)的收购。通过大力处理问题贷款──同时触动了日本企业文化──俩人最终从现在叫做新生银行(Shinsei Bank)的这家公司获得了超过10亿美元的利润。在华尔街,这项交易被戏称为历史上第二大私人资本运营交易,仅次于荷兰殖民者彼得·米努易特(Peter Minuit)以价值24美元的小饰品从印第安人手中买下了曼哈顿。

律师事务所Sullivan & Cromwell的总裁H. 罗德金·科恩(H. Rodgin Cohen)说,弗劳尔斯完全是一个价值型投资者,他能够从所有人不注意的资产中发现价值。科恩认识弗劳尔斯已有数十年之久。

J.C. Flowers管理著大约10亿美元的私人资本运营资金,主要来自机构投资者和富裕的个人。弗劳尔斯本人还持有Enstar Group Inc. 23%的股份,价值约为8,300万美元。该公司主要从事以再保险为主的金融服务业。

Enstar的首席执行长尼姆罗德·弗雷泽(Nimrod Frazer)预计,瑞富公司将同弗劳尔斯在另一个陷入困境的金融服务公司Conseco Inc.旗下抵押贷款子公司的获利投资类似。弗雷泽说:“我认为Conseco的交易将在瑞富公司上重演。”他还表示,Enstar将向瑞富公司投资2,500万美元。

弗雷泽称,弗劳尔斯是一个认真的人。他不会浪费任何人的时间。弗劳尔斯来自亚拉巴马州,而Enstar的总部位于蒙哥马利,他们已经认识了十几年。

除了Enstar之外,弗劳尔斯领导的集团还包括Silver Point Capital、MatlinPatterson Global Advisers LLC和Texas Pacific Group。看来弗劳尔斯对瑞富公司并没有很大的野心。他在周二表示,没有大幅重组业务的计划。他也没有说计划某一天从初步投资中退出。他重申,关键是恢复信心。

弗劳尔斯已经招集他以前在高盛集团的部分同事开展这项工作。他已经同高盛前固定收益子公司联席负责人马克·温克尔曼(Mark Winkelman)和前合伙人雅各布·戈德菲尔德(Jacob Goldfield)签约,分别在未来担任董事长和副董事长。

相关文章
瑞富的潜在买家浮出水面;公司正考虑宣告破产(2005年10月17日15:31)
美国监管当局要求高盛接手瑞富公司的期货交易业务(2005年10月15日07:20)

香港时间2005年10月19日17:14更新  
:twisted:
75Floor
發表於 2005-10-20 11:06:46 | 只看該作者
那么refo的外汇业务呢?
如果没有人接管,会不会彻底完蛋啊~
76Floor
發表於 2005-10-20 12:53:26 | 只看該作者
我也和楼上的一样担心呢

刚才打电话问了一下,得到的答复是这样的,瑞富现在正在和多家有名的大企业,包括银行在内洽谈并购除了期货业务之外的其他业务的商业计划。

我特地问了一下,除期货之外的其他业务是否包括外汇,回答说包括rcm外汇业务的

我们现在还是只能等着看结果了。希望并购的计划可以谈成,这样的话对于瑞富来讲是个好消息,对我们就更是好消息了。

对自己说“要有耐心……”
sigh
77Floor
發表於 2005-10-20 14:03:15 | 只看該作者
[quote:c0de45a277="sunzhee"]那么refo的外汇业务呢?
如果没有人接管,会不会彻底完蛋啊~[/quote]
就是卖了那些值钱的有牌照公司,然后去还包括REFCOFX,REFCO CAPITAL MARKET在内这些没有牌照公司的窟窿
78Floor
發表於 2005-10-20 16:36:03 | 只看該作者
Insiders Collected $1 Billion Before Refco Collapse

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By GRETCHEN MORGENSON and JENNY ANDERSON
Published: October 20, 2005
In the year before Refco sold shares to the public and then promptly made the fourth-largest bankruptcy filing in United States history, insiders at the firm received more than $1 billion in cash, according to the firm's financial statements.

And one insider, Robert Trosten, received $45 million when he left his post as chief financial officer a year ago, according to testimony at an arbitration hearing earlier this year.

A great deal of mystery still surrounds the collapse of Refco, a decades-old firm that conducted billions of dollars in trades in foreign currencies, United States Treasury securities and commodities for more than 200,000 clients last year. But investors and customers who are facing losses in Refco's bankruptcy will certainly want to understand how insiders could drain $1.124 billion from the firm's coffers in the year or so leading up to its demise.

To some degree, the money that insiders took out of the firm is not surprising, given that Refco's executives sold a big stake in the company to Thomas H. Lee Partners, a private equity firm in Boston, in August 2004. Indeed, most of the money insiders received - $1.057 billion - was paid upon the completion of that deal.

Two Refco insiders were on the receiving end of those payouts: Phillip R. Bennett, the former chief executive who has been charged with defrauding investors by concealing a $435 million loan he arranged with the firm, and Tone Grant, Refco's longtime chief executive before Mr. Bennett.

Mr. Bennett has denied the charges of securities fraud but has declined to comment further. Mr. Grant could not be reached.

Creditors of Refco will almost certainly try to recover what they can from payments made by the company to its top executives in the months leading up to its demise. While compensation - like salaries - is typically not recoverable, payments made in the sale of a company or dividends paid to its owners are fair game if the company is insolvent, said Denis Cronin, a bankruptcy lawyer at Cronin & Vris in New York.

"Dividends or payments with respect to their stock ownership, that is vulnerable to what is known in bankruptcy as a fraudulent conveyance or distribution," Mr. Cronin said. "Fraudulent conveyance is a payment or distribution made while the company was insolvent or rendered insolvent. When you make those payments in that time frame, then creditors have a right to recover them."

The $1.057 billion came in two chunks, according to the Refco prospectus. First, Mr. Bennett and Mr. Grant appear to have shared in a $550 million cash payment in the transaction with Thomas H. Lee Partners; then, Mr. Bennett appears to have received another $507 million in the deal as well.

Mr. Bennett did not cash out of Refco completely. At the time of the deal with the Lee firm, he agreed to roll over an equity stake in Refco worth $383 million, the prospectus said. At a meeting of Thomas H. Lee Partners last year, just after its $2.2 billion purchase of Refco, Mr. Lee introduced Mr. Bennett to discuss the firm. According to someone who was at the meeting, Mr. Lee boasted that Mr. Bennett's $383 million stake in Refco was among the largest investments he had ever seen in a company by its chief executive and was an indication of his confidence in the firm.

Before the transaction with Thomas H. Lee Partners, Refco had three owners: Mr. Bennett and Mr. Grant each owned 45 percent, and Bawag Overseas owned 10 percent. Bawag stands for Bank für Arbeit und Wirtschaft, an Austrian banking company that invested in Refco in May 1999. It is Refco's largest creditor, stating that it is owed $451 million.

The $45 million exit payment made to Mr. Trosten, the former chief financial officer, was not mentioned in the Refco prospectus. Instead it noted that when he left the firm in October 2004, he forfeited the shares in the company that he had received as part of its top management. His departure seemed abrupt because it left Refco without a chief financial officer for two months.

The payment to Mr. Trosten came out this year in an arbitration case that was brought against Refco by a consultant it had employed.

"Trosten testified that he received a $45 million separation payment when he left the company," said Sean O'Shea, a lawyer who represented the consultant, Edward McElwreath, who won $3.5 million from the company. The arbitration panel overseeing the case awarded the money to Mr. McElwreath, who contended that he had introduced Refco officials to Thomas H. Lee Partners and was owed a fee for the introduction. The separation payment to Mr. Trosten by Refco was first reported by The New York Post.

Robert G. Morvillo, a lawyer who is in the process of being retained by Mr. Trosten, said he had advised the former Refco executive not to discuss the matter publicly. A spokesman for the Lee firm declined to comment about Mr. Trosten's separation payment.

Four other Refco executives shared in cash payments made just before the deal with the Lee firm, according to Refco filings. These payments, which totaled $22 million, related to the executives' interests in a profit-sharing pact at the firm.

The recipients were Joseph J. Murphy, chief executive of Refco Global Futures; William M. Sexton, then Refco's chief operating officer and now its chief executive; Santo C. Maggio, the chief executive of Refco Securities; and Dennis A. Klejna, the firm's general counsel.

According to the prospectus, these four executives had invested a total of $1.95 million in Refco at the time of the Lee transaction.


$1 billion in cash  !!! 内部有人拿了10亿美圆:) 太爽了吧
79Floor
發表於 2005-10-20 20:34:14 | 只看該作者
[quote:764e5a1c9f="everok"]

所有有牌照的REFCO都没有宣布破产,看来还是有牌照好呀。[/quote]

那现在推荐的这些交易商,究竟哪些是有牌照的??
当初2FXall的网页上只说瑞富是NFA的注册公司,现在却发现瑞富外汇是野鸡;
其他公司是否也有这种情况呢?
80Floor
發表於 2005-10-20 21:27:05 | 只看該作者
是的,RefcoFX一直都是没有NFA资格的。
在2003年所有NFA成员要求上调保证金只有 Refcofx 和 forex.com两家不变。

REFCO里面只有REFCO LLC 是有牌照的。
http://www.nfa.futures.org/BasicNet/Details.aspx?entityid=0001975
81Floor
 樓主| 發表於 2005-10-20 21:41:32 | 只看該作者
cms,fxsol,spencerfx , fxcm 都是有FCM牌照的,不过鉴于FXCM的关联度 以及最近2年来FXCM在交易中的问题,我觉得还是要小心。

这里应该没有人在REFCOFX留款吧? 上周很多汇友都直接转款到FXCM, FXSOL等公司了。
82Floor
 樓主| 發表於 2005-10-20 21:42:18 | 只看該作者
You:: are you regulated ?
RefcoFX$2: RefcoFX is not
RefcoFX$2: Refco Group is regulated by the CFTC and the NFA
You:: do you have link of refco group's status at nfa ?
RefcoFX$2: Refco Groups NFA number is 0198028

REFCOFX的网上CHAT还在蒙人。
83Floor
發表於 2005-10-20 22:17:23 | 只看該作者
[quote:0e4abfe8df="everok"]cms,fxsol,spencerfx , fxcm 都是有FCM牌照的,不过鉴于FXCM的关联度 以及最近2年来FXCM在交易中的问题,我觉得还是要小心。

这里应该没有人在REFCOFX留款吧? 上周很多汇友都直接转款到FXCM, FXSOL等公司了。[/quote]

很不幸,我就是那个倒霉鬼。
周一才知道消息,是不是太懒了一点,也太晚了一点。
现在只能安慰自己“吃一堑长一智”
所以,有些问题我们一定要搞清楚。
84Floor
發表於 2005-10-20 22:34:51 | 只看該作者
More woes for Refco, execs: Reports
Newspapers say creditors eye over $1B insiders made from stock, while SEC probes "naked shorting."
October 20, 2005: 7:41 AM EDT


NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Problems may be mounting for bankrupt securities firm Refco and some of its current and former executives, according to published report.

The New York Times reports that some current and former executives cashed out more than $1 billion in company stock in the year before the collapse of the firm, and that creditors could try to recover some of those payments in bankruptcy proceedings.

And the Wall Street Journal reports that Refco faces millions in fines as well as civil and possible criminal charges related to it participation in the apparently illegal stock shorting practices by some of its clients, a practice known as "naked shorting."

Refco filed for bankruptcy court protection Monday after former CEO Phillip Bennett was charged with defrauding investors by concealing a $435 million loan he arranged with the firm.

The Times reports that Bennett received one of the biggest payouts through the company's sale of a $2.2 billion stake in the firm to Thomas H. Lee Partners, a private equity firm in Boston, in August 2004.

The paper reports that Bennett and Tone Grant, Refco's longtime CEO before Bennett, apparently shared in a $550 million cash payment under the investment from Thomas H. Lee Partners, and that Bennett appears to then have received another $507 million in the deal as well.

Those payments were disclosed in a Refco prospectus as part of the firm's August initial public offering. But the paper reports that there were tens of millions in payments to other Refco executives not disclosed in those filings.

The paper reports that Robert Trosten, received $45 million when he left his post as chief financial officer a year ago, according to an arbitration case involving the firm. In addition, the Times reports Joseph Murphy, CEO of Refco Global Futures; William Sexton, then Refco's chief operating officer and now its CEO; Santo Maggio, the CEO of Refco Securities; and Dennis Klejna, the firm's general counsel, split $22 million related to the executives' interests in a profit-sharing pact at the firm. Maggio has taken a leave from the firm, according to the Journal.

All those payments could be at risk in the upcoming bankruptcy proceeding, the Times reports. While compensation - like salaries - is typically not recoverable, payments made in the sale of a company or dividends paid to its owners are fair game if the company is insolvent, Denis Cronin, a bankruptcy lawyer at Cronin & Vris in New York, told the Times.

"Dividends or payments with respect to their stock ownership, that is vulnerable to what is known in bankruptcy as a fraudulent conveyance or distribution," Cronin told the paper. "Fraudulent conveyance is a payment or distribution made while the company was insolvent or rendered insolvent. When you make those payments in that time frame, then creditors have a right to recover them."

Naked shorting
Meanwhile the Journal reports the firm faces problems as part of various probes into the practice of known as "naked shorting." Generally someone who shorts stocks borrows shares, then sells them, in the hopes that the stock will decline in price and they'll be able to buy shares to replace the borrowed stock, pocketing the difference as a profit.

The Journal says that in the case of so-called naked shorting, investors sells shares they don't own or haven't borrowed, knowing they have several days to deliver the shares. The practice is generally illegal.

The Journal reports that Refco earlier this year disclosed that the SEC had notified it of plans to file an enforcement action against the company's Refco Securities unit for securities-law violations in connection with the shorting of Sedona stock. The notice received little attention at that time, though.

The firm's disclosure said that the SEC officials have sought information related to, among other things, two former Refco brokers who handled the account of stock-trading client, a Panamanian corporation called Amro International, which engaged in short sales of Sedona stock.

The firm's filing said Refco was negotiating a settlement with the SEC that would likely include an injunction against future violations and "payment of a substantial civil penalty." It set aside $5 million for the potential settlement, the paper reports.

The company said that its Refco Securities CEO Maggio was also negotiating a settlement with the SEC regarding "certain supervisory matters raised in the investigation." The paper reported that Refco and an attorney for Maggio declined to comment. It reported Maggio took a leave from Refco at the same time Bennett did.
85Floor
發表於 2005-10-21 17:14:23 | 只看該作者
:twisted: 头晕 :mrgreen:
86Floor
發表於 2005-10-24 14:56:48 | 只看該作者
A Glossy Image for Refco, at Least in the Ads
LIA MILLER
Published: October 24, 2005
Refco, the trading company, may be in financial trouble, but its good name lives on in Trader Monthly, a magazine that glamorizes the life of financial traders.

The October-November issue has four full pages of ads for Refco, whose bankruptcy filing (the fourth-largest in United States history), coupled with the arrest of its former chief executive on securities fraud charges, has been making headlines in other publications over the past month.

In a salt-on-the-wound coincidence, the magazine's cover headline blares: "The Greatest Trading Blowups of All Time (and What You Can Learn From Them)." (Although not strictly a trading blowup, Refco's bankruptcy filing could fit on the magazine's list somewhere between the 1998 meltdown of the hedge fund Long Term Capital Management and the billion-dollar losses of the Japanese trader Sumitomo in the mid-1990's.)

Magnus Greaves, the founder of Doubledown Media, which publishes Trader Monthly, does not expect to be paid for the ads, of course. "The issue went to print well in advance of the unfortunate series of events over at Refco. There was not any discussion of pulling the ads. They have been a tremendous company to work with and no one could see this coming."

Mr. Greaves knows Refco well. He sold his last company, MacFutures, a futures trading group, to Refco in 2003.

"I suppose losing a couple of ad pages versus what other people have lost in this deal, I feel funny even bringing it up," said Mr. Greaves.

Samir Husni, chairman of the journalism department at the University of Mississippi and a magazine industry expert, says that when advertisers buy space in a magazine, they usually pay 30 days after publication. "Nobody pays ahead of time," he said. "You can have a contract; if you file for bankruptcy, it all becomes meaningless." He estimated that lost revenue for the Refco ads would amount to about $74,000.

Mr. Husni said that it had been estimated in the magazine industry that 25 percent of all ads are "dead debt," meaning they are never paid for.

The timing is not great for Trader Monthly, which introduces a European edition this month. At least it has a new blowup for next year's list. LIA MILLER
87Floor
發表於 2005-10-24 14:59:01 | 只看該作者
Mystery at Refco: How Could Such a Huge Debt Stay Hidden?


By RIVA D. ATLAS and JONATHAN D. GLATER
Published: October 24, 2005
Peter F. James had been working at Refco less than two months when he noticed something this summer that teams of accountants had apparently missed for years.

Mr. James, a recently hired employee in the controller's office, wondered why a larger-than-normal interest payment had been made to Refco on an outstanding loan made by the company. In August he started to ask questions, eventually taking his concerns to the chief financial officer, Gerald M. Sherer. The answers would lead to the departure of the chief executive and the rapid unraveling of the company that prompted its filing for bankruptcy protection last week.

Skip to next paragraph

Chester Higgins Jr./The New York Times
Thomas H. Lee, whose buyout firm acquired Refco, at home in 2003.
"He's the hero in discovering this," a person close to the investigation said of Mr. James. "He just kept pushing." Mr. James declined to comment for this article.

Mr. James had been hired by Mr. Sherer, who himself came to Refco only in January, to help bolster the firm's financial operations. Mr. Sherer had alerted the board to problems with Refco's internal controls - the practices or systems for keeping records and preventing abuse or fraud. That weakness was disclosed in Refco's regulatory filings before its initial public offering in August.

Now, questions are mounting over why others - among them, the company's auditor and the underwriters that took Refco public in August - never discovered what Mr. James did.

The collapse of Refco has been a black eye particularly for Thomas H. Lee Partners, the private equity firm that bought a majority stake in Refco in August 2004.

Before Oct. 10, when Refco disclosed that its chief executive had hidden $430 million in debt for years, the Refco investment seemed like another quick, bold and successful bet by the Lee firm, perhaps best known for buying Snapple for $135 million in 1992 and selling it two years later to Quaker Oats for $1.7 billion. When Refco went public this summer, its shares surged 25 percent on the first day of trading.

Now Refco's collapse has come at an awkward time for Lee. The firm, based in Boston and one of the oldest in the buyout business, has been making a transition from the leadership of its founder, Thomas H. Lee, to three handpicked successors: Scott A. Schoen, Scott M. Sperling and Anthony J. DiNovi.

At the same time, it has begun trying to woo some of the nation's largest pension funds, among other investors, to take part in a new $7.5 billion buyout fund it plans to raise early next year. The fund would be the sixth such pool raised in Lee's 31-year history, and the first raised exclusively under the leadership of the three co-presidents.

Mr. Lee, 61, an amiable billionaire who has been gradually scaling back his role at the firm in recent years, will not be involved in raising the new pool and will have no role in investing the money, a person briefed on the firm's plans said. Even assuming that its Refco investment will be wiped out, Lee investors are still looking at hefty profits on the last investment fund, with returns of more than 30 percent before taking fees into account, a person briefed on the performance said.

Among the latest Lee fund successes have been deals involving Warner Music, TransWestern Publishing and National Waterworks, in which it earned three times its money or more.

That enviable track record should have made it easy for Lee to raise the new fund, at a time when competitors like the Blackstone Group and Warburg Pincus are raising even larger pools of capital. But the process may be delayed, investors and competitors said, as the partners struggle to explain how the Refco debacle happened on their watch.

"Either Tom Lee and partners are victims of fraud or they dropped the ball in terms of due diligence," said William Atwood, executive director of the Illinois State Board of Investment, which has put $35 million into the latest Lee fund. "Today, we don't know which it is. This is not a good time to come to market with a new fund."

Officials at the firm declined to comment, citing regulatory restrictions on speaking about fund-raising.

The oversize interest payment that Mr. James noticed had its roots in a bad receivable - money due to Refco - from clients adversely affected by the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990's, according to a person briefed on the investigation.

Perhaps out of concern about the effect of the uncollectible obligations on Refco's profitability, at some point the debtors' obligation was transferred to Refco Group Holdings Inc., a company that was partly and later wholly controlled by Refco's chief executive at the time, Phillip R. Bennett.

At the start of every quarter, Refco Capital Markets would extend loans to several hedge funds, including Liberty Corner Capital Strategies. The hedge funds would pay interest on those loans, which was recorded in Refco's financial documents and whose existence was confirmed, every quarter that it was checked, by Refco's auditor.

The next two steps were not apparent to the auditor a few days into the quarter: a loan from the hedge funds to RGHI, Mr. Bennett's company, and effectively a second loan, from Refco to RGHI. Mr. Bennett's company used the loan to repay the hedge funds, plus interest. Before the end of the quarter, the hedge funds would repay the obligation to Refco. The effect of the transaction was to convert, for bookkeeping purposes, an obligation by RGHI to Refco into an obligation by the hedge funds to Refco every time an auditor might look. But during the quarter, RGHI held the obligation to Refco.

The complexity of the transaction, the fact that it was carefully timed and that legitimate-seeming aspects of it could be verified made it hard to spot, a person briefed on the investigation said. "This isn't a needle in a haystack," this person said. "It's a needle in a pile of needles."

And Kevin Marino, a lawyer for Liberty Corner, said: "When you believe these are both subsidiaries of Refco, your only concern is the risk. The risk that Refco Group Holdings Inc. goes bankrupt is why you indemnify. The risk that the parent goes out of business is why there is risk."

For now, there is little that Mr. Lee and his partners can tell investors about Refco, which is the subject of federal investigations and numerous shareholder lawsuits. The partners are in the difficult position of having to say nothing even as they try to pitch the new fund.

Lee's investors include some of the nation's largest pension funds, including the California Public Employees' Retirement System, which committed $200 million. (A spokesman for Calpers declined to comment.)

A day after Refco disclosed the hidden $430 million, senior Lee executives met with Hamilton Lane Advisors, whose clients have had money with Lee since the early 1990's. At the meeting were two of Lee's three co-presidents, Mr. Sperling and Mr. DiNovi.

"They seemed very much in control," said Erik R. Hirsch, chief investment officer at Hamilton Lane. "They said they had a game plan in place."

At the time of the meeting on Oct. 11, Lee's investors were still showing a profit on their remaining Refco stake. But within days, Mr. Bennett was indicted on a securities fraud charge, and Refco soon filed for bankruptcy protection.

"We are still waiting to hear what happened," said Mario L. Giannini, chief executive of Hamilton Lane. Yet he noted, "This is a group with a history of strong performance."

The Lee partners are likely to face tough questions at their annual meeting with investors in Boston next month. One question the investors may have is Lee's ability to invest in complex financial companies, given its losses in Refco and the $440 million it lost on Conseco, an insurance holding company that filed for bankruptcy protection.

Mr. Giannini said he thought there was no pattern in the Conseco and Refco blowups, but that the coincidence did raise "an interesting question" about what sort of risks are involved in the buyouts of financial services companies.

Lee did have several earlier successes with financial companies like HomeSide Lending, a mortgage company, and Experian. It has also made tens of millions of dollars on Axis Capital and Endurance Specialty Holdings, two insurance companies formed after the terrorist attacks of September 2001.

But Lee's pursuit of Refco came after many on Wall Street had already chosen to pass up making a bid for the firm.

In 2003, Pershing, a unit of Credit Suisse First Boston that offered clearing services for equities, was sold to Bank of New York for $2.5 billion, an indication that greater value was being placed on such services. Lee had taken a preliminary look at Pershing. That year same year, Mr. Bennett approached investment bankers about selling Refco. The bankers canvassed Wall Street, trying unsuccessfully to find an industry buyer.

A senior Wall Street executive who attended a meeting where Refco was pitched said that the biggest concern was that it cleared transactions for many small customers in the United States and overseas whose practices might pose a risk to Wall Street firms.

Other buyout firms, including Blackstone and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company, also looked at Refco. But Lee saw an opportunity. In December 2003, bankers, Refco executives and executives from Lee spent a day getting to know the company, a person who attended the meetings said.

Negotiations continued through the first half of 2004. Lee brought in advisers, including the accounting firm KPMG, to examine Refco's financial data, among other due diligence efforts. In August 2004, Lee invested $453 million in equity and raised $1.4 billion in bank debt and bonds to finance a buyout of the company.

A spokesman for Lee said the firm stood by its due diligence efforts, which took place over a seven-month period. "The firm has conducted in-depth due diligence before making each of its over 90 investments since 1974," the spokesman said, "and Refco was no exception."

Lee spent $10 million hiring an army of advisers including KPMG and others, who "conducted an exhaustive due diligence investigation, including speaking with numerous third parties who had done business with Refco and Bennett."


新鲜出炉,瑞富之迷
88Floor
發表於 2005-10-24 22:22:39 | 只看該作者
http://bankrupt.com/refco.txt

关于refco破产的详细资料,很全
89Floor
發表於 2005-10-25 07:35:45 | 只看該作者
瑞富破产案凸现衍生品交易风险
不到一个月以前,监管机构、某某委员会还一直在对私下谈判的衍生品交易发出警告。

如果听过他们的演讲或是读过他们的报告,你会发现在这些快速成长的市场中存在一个小问题:在正规交易所以外进行的衍生品交易中,一方的交易员根本不清楚交易的另一方到底是什么人。

商品和证券公司瑞富公司(Refco)上周申请破产保护让我们又有了一个审视这些问题的理由。到目前为止,多数投资者还是以一个局外人的态度来看待瑞富的破产,市场并没有因此遭遇大幅的下挫。幸运的是,瑞富在监管的主要领域:信贷衍生品市场似乎并没有太多的经纪业务。市场对瑞富的破产保持平静的时间越长,风险就越小。投资者利用信贷衍生品市场对冲债券拖欠清偿的风险。

然而不幸的是,投资者并没有从中吸取任何教训。

衍生产品主要的功能就是让市场发挥更大的效用以及分散风险,多数衍生产品的确也起到了这样的功用。以衍生品最常见的形式分析,它可以让投资者对冲买入股票的风险,比如在你以每股55美元的价格买进某只股票后,你可以通过购买以45美元卖出该股的权利来对冲买进的风险。这样的权利就叫做卖出期权。问题倒没有出现在它们身上。不过,随著衍生品变得越来越复杂,这个市场的发展开始让监管机构感到担忧。

其中一个主要的问题就是交易记录不完备。有时买方根本不知道谁是最终的卖家,所以他只能无条件地相信卖方会规规矩矩完成交易,这也就是像瑞富这样的经纪公司变得如此重要的原因所在。这些经纪公司充当著中间人的角色,并提供资金来保证交易的顺利进行。如果市场丧失了对经纪公司的信任,那就要小心了。短期投资者对风险的大胃口可能会使这个问题恶化,这些投资者、特别是对冲基金为了提高收益率而四处借贷。

今年2月份,英国金融服务管理局(Financial Services Authority, 简称:FSA)(地位相当于美国的证券交易委员会(Securities and Exchange Commission))对这些问题发出了警告。9月份,FSA要求各家银行通报完善信贷衍生品交易的最新进展,然而得到的答复是进展不大。这些措施本意是让各银行能够了解衍生品交易另一方的真实身份,(比如记录在几轮风险转移后,谁最终在交易中被套牢。)

而在美国方面,交易对手风险管理政策组织(Counterparty Risk Management Policy Group)在7月份发布的一份报告中也再次表达了同样的担忧。纽约联邦储备银行(New York Federal Reserv)行长盖特勒(Tim Geithner)一直警告称,投资者对此类风险的胃口太大,没有进行风险控制,周二他再次就这个问题发表了讲话。不过市场似乎认为他过于谨慎小心了。

现在看来,作为期货和更加复杂的衍生品市场上的主要经纪商,不幸的是,瑞富对“后勤”的投资不够,而后勤部门本应当记录所有的买卖交易。这对于一家通过迅速收购十几家规模较小的公司而组成的企业来说并不令人满意。而显然,瑞富的问题并不是个别现象。

值得庆幸的是,瑞富的问题并没有蔓延开来,不过,该公司陷入困境才刚刚一周的时间。受监管的期货经纪部门已经与私人资本运营基金J.C. Flowers达成收购协议。可能引发更多问题的领域是瑞富未受监管的机构经纪业务。这个部门的利润来源于安排包括衍生金融产品在内的私人“场外”交易,此类交易没有芝加哥商品交易所(Chicago Mercantile Exchange)等交易所所具备的透明度。瑞富已经无限期地冻结了这家子公司的客户帐户。

“一切都处于休眠状态,”Bianco Research的总裁比安科(Jim Bianco)说。“瑞富是一家拥有诸多客户的大公司。这些客户当中肯定已经有人被要求追加保证金,或濒临营运困境。”

这意味著,市场不得不等待延缓偿付期被取消,才能了解是否存在无法履行交易的买方,以及是否会产生多米诺骨牌效应。

即便不受监管,机构经纪业务的风险也应当是相当低的。不过,自从前首席执行长本内特(Phillip Bennett)价值4.3亿美元的隐性应收帐款被发现以来,机构经纪业务就一直处于执法调查之下。大多数时候,此类业务是帮助对冲基金等客户进行美国国债或外汇市场的交易。

详细描述瑞富应收帐款(客户所欠款)的财务报表栏目本应当包括在首次公开募股文件中。(一定有人提前做了手脚,是吧?)这份现在已经不再可靠的文件称,截至2月28日,与“外汇和其他场外衍生品交易”有关的应收帐款大幅飙升至8.11亿美元,而上年同期仅为 3,800万美元。这就是瑞富的衍生品风险--瑞富投入的、促使这些交易成交的资金--同时增加了这些交易的对手方实体所面临的潜在风险。

一个悬而未决的风险领域是,瑞富用自有资金安排的交易的真正性质和数量。根据其业务模式,瑞富并不直接在市场上下注。但在协助客户进行外汇和国债交易的时候,瑞富有时候会持有可以通过回报率之差获利的头寸。

截至2月份的7个月,瑞富通过此类头寸发生的收入为1.61亿美元。不管其既有模式如何,这主要是自营交易风险,而这也正是瑞富为何被要求对此作出说明的原因。

我们不知道的是这些头寸当中有多少是尚未结清的,以及瑞富是否能够予以结清。
90Floor
發表於 2005-10-25 11:15:55 | 只看該作者
与“外汇和其他场外衍生品交易”有关的应收帐款大幅飙升至8.11亿美元,而上年同期仅为 3,800万美元。


这个本身不能说明 外汇和其他场外衍生品交易 有问题,只能说明 外汇和其他场外衍生品交易 被利用作为把一些亏损隐藏成了应收款项。
基于此,无法证明REFCO的外汇业务是赢利的。
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