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·¨¹úÐËÒµÒøÐÐ(Soci¨¦t¨¦ G¨¦n¨¦rale)×òÈÕÅû¶£¬¸ÃÐÐÔâÓöÁËÒøÐÐÒµÀúÊ·ÉÏ×î´óµÄÒ»×ÚÆÛÕ©°¸£¬³ÉΪһλÁ÷Ã¥½»Ò×Ô±µÄÊܺ¦Õߣ¬ÆÈʹ¸ÃÐнô¼±·¢Æð55ÒÚÅ·Ôª£¨ºÏ80ÒÚÃÀÔª£©µÄÈÚ×ÊÐж¯¡£·¨¹úÐËÒµÒøÐÐÊÇ·¨¹ú½ðÈÚÒµµÄÒ»¸öÖ§Öù£¬Ò²ÊÇÅ·ÖÞÓ¯Àû×î·áºñµÄÒøÐÐÖ®Ò»¡£

Soci¨¦t¨¦ G¨¦n¨¦rale, a pillar of French finance and one Europe¡¯s most profitable banks, yesterday revealed it had fallen victim to a rogue trader in the biggest fraud in banking history, forcing it to launch an emergency €5.5bn ($8bn) cash call.

ÕâÊÇÒ»×Ú¼òµ¥¶ø½Æ»«µÄÆÛÕ©°¸£¬31ËêµÄ°ÍÀè½»Ò×Ô±½ÜÂåÃ×?¿ÆÎ¬¶û(J¨¦r?me Kerviel)±»Ö¸ÎªÊ¼×÷Ù¸Õß¡£Ëû×òÌ첻֪ȥÏò¡£

The simple yet sophisticated fraud was being blamed on a Paris-based 31-year-old trader, J¨¦r?me Kerviel. His whereabouts yesterday were unknown.

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In effect, Mr Kerviel bet billions of euros on future movements in European stock markets and created fictitious hedging positions to cover his tracks in a fraud that has cost the bank €4.9bn. SocGen quickly unwound the equity derivative positions he had amassed, estimated to have totalled between €50bn and €70bn.

ÓйØÖÜÒ»½â³ýÍ·´çµÄϸ½ÚÒý·¢ÈËÃDz²⣬·¨¹úÐËÒµÒøÐеͼۼúÂôÕâЩͷ´çÊǵ¼ÖÂÈ«Çò¹ÉÊÐÖÜÒ»´ó·ùϵøµÄÔ­Òò¡£´Ë´Îϵø´ÙʹÃÀÁª´¢(Fed)Öܶþ´ó·ù½µÏ¢¡£Ö±ÖÁÖÜÈý£¬ÃÀÁª´¢²Å´Ó·¨¹úÑëÐÐ(Banque de France)ºÍ·¨¹ú½ðÈÚÊг¡¹ÜÀí¾Ö(AMF)»ñϤÐËÒµÒøÐеÄÎÊÌâ¡£

Details of their trades on Monday prompted speculation that reaction to SocGen¡¯s firesale contributed to the heavy stock market falls on Monday which provoked the US Federal Reserve¡¯s dramatic interest rate cut on Tuesday. The Fed was not told of the SocGen problem until Wednesday, when it was informed by the Banque de France and the French regulator, the AMF.

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But SocGen denied that its covering operations precipitated the market fall because it kept them to about 10 per cent of trading volumes. Analysts also pointed out that markets were falling ¨C not least because of fears over US bond insurers ¨C before it could have begun selling.

Õâ×ÚÆÛÕ©°¸Ê¹ÁíÒ»ÌõÏûÏ¢ÏàÐμûç©£ºÐËÒµÒøÐÐ×òÈÕÐû²¼£¬ÃÀ¹úµÖѺ´û¿îΣ»úµ¼ÖÂÆäËðʧ20ÒÚÅ·Ôª£¬±È¼¸ÖÜ֮ǰԤÆÚµÄËðʧ¸ß³öÊý±¶¡£¸ÃÐÐÖ´Ðж­Ê³¤äß¶Ø(Daniel Bouton)ºÍͶ×ÊÒøÐÐÖ÷¹ÜÈÃ-Ƥ°£¶û?Âí˹µÙ¶û(Jean-Pierre Mustier)ÒѾ­Ìá½»Á˴dzʣ¬µ«¾ù±»¶­Ê»á·ñ¾ö¡£

The fraud also overshadowed SocGen¡¯s announcement yesterday of a €2bn hit from the US mortgage crisis, several times higher than the impact it estimated only a few weeks ago. Both Daniel Bouton, the executive chairman, and Jean-Pierre Mustier, head of the investment bank, tendered their resignation but had their offer rejected by the board.

ËäÈ»¸ÃÐÐÔÚÉÏÖÜÄ©¾Í·¢ÏÖÁËÎÊÌ⣬µ«ËüÒ»Ö±µÈµ½×Ô¼ºÄܹ»½â³ýÍ·´ç£¬²Å¶ÔÍ⹫²¼Ïà¹ØÎÊÌâµÄÑÏÖØÐÔ¡£ÕâÒ»³óÎÅÕð¾ªÁË·¨¹ú¸÷½ç¸ß²ã£¬µ«Æä³ÉԱѸËÙÍŽáÆðÀ´Ö§³Ö¸ÃÒøÐС£

Although it discovered the problem at the weekend, SocGen waited until it could unwind the trades before revealing their extent. The scandal has shocked the French establishment which quickly closed ranks to support the bank.


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