Baring Failure FINAL-1
Baring Failure FINAL-1
Baring Failure FINAL-1
BA849 Seminar in Finance National Institute of Development Administration Semester 3 / 2011 Ms. Supattra Maklum Ms. Linda Thipvoratrum Ms. Nodtaporn Chaichoochai Mr. Nopadol Kitsrinopadol ID# 5310212001 ID# 5310212004 ID# 5320212001 ID# 5320212003
Introduction
Barings Bank was Britain's oldest merchant bank established in 1762. Collapsed in February 26, 1995 due to secretly derivatives trading on both the Nikkei225 and on JGBs (Japanese Government Bonds) by Nick Leeson. The damage: $1.4 Billion lost, reducing Barings Bank value from $500 million to $1.60.
Brief Storyline
Leeson joined Barings Bank as a back office employee with 100 million pound share in certification. Successful in back office position and then was promoted to a trader. Leeson was transferred to Barings Singapore branch as derivatives trader between Singapore Monetary Exchange (SIMEX) & Osaka Securities Exchange (OSE). Leeson set up Error Account 88888 to cover up a mistake made by an inexperienced team member, which led to a loss of 20,000 pounds. Leeson then used that account to cover his own mounting losses.
Brief Storyline
By December 1994, the red ink hidden in account 88888 totaled $512 million. Getting increase Leeson bet that the Nikkei index would not drop below 19.000 points. Leeson lost $1.4 billion due to his unauthorized speculative trading. Barings Bank was bankrupted. Leeson was arrested in Frankfurt, Germany. In December 1995, a court in Singapore sentenced him to six and a half years in prison. In 1999, Leeson was released.
It required Leeson to buy the cheaper contract and simultaneously sell the more expensive one.
If it did rebound, he would make profit on both the increasing stock value and increasing in interest rates.
However, his luck ran out when the Kobe Earthquake sent the Asian financial markets into a tailspin.
Straddles
Leesons Positions
Nikkei 225 dropped further and the Nikkei 225 was around 17,950 At the end of February 1995, Leeson had leveraged his position to $7 Bn, holding about 61,000 contracts (55,000 March and 6,000 June)
Bought a substantial number of contracts, 11,000 after the earthquake. Believing that fall of the Nikkei 225 from 20,000 to 18,950 was only temporary.
Source: International Financial Risk Institute
Lessons Learned
Something that is too good to be true Investigate! Do not trade by gambling.
Thank you