Sudden
sobriety in the City of London could have the same effect
- Max Keiser
'Blackout'
trading binge: Drunken broker pushed oil price to 8 month high
overnight
A
drunken broker apparently shook the global oil market much like a
major international incident. A report claimed a senior broker at PVM
Oil Futures pushed oil prices $1.50 higher in a night of blacked-out
trading.
28
September, 2012
Steve
Perkins spent $520 million of his client’s cash on oil futures
contracts throughout the night during a “drunken blackout".
The US Financial Services Authority made this discovery while
investigating a mysterious oil price spike on June 30, 2009.
For
two hours in the middle of the night, Perkins purchased 7 million
barrels of crude, or 69%of the global market, bidding prices higher
and higher and bringing them up to $73.05 from $71.40, CNBC reported.
The
next morning, an admin clerk called Perkins to ask why he had bought
so much crude during the night, but Perkins couldn’t recollect
making the trades. Later, after he apparently sobered up and became
terrified with what he had done, the broker sent a message to his
boss claiming he had to stay at home to care for a sick relative.
By
the time PVM realized the transactions had not been authorized by a
client investment company, they had suffered losses of $9,763,252,
prompting an official investigation. Perkins confessed to having a
drinking problem, and had his trading license revoked with a fine of
$116,878.
Regulators
said that Perkins may have his license re-approved in five years if
he stays sober, although they warned that, “Mr Perkins poses an
extreme risk to the market when drunk.”
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