3rd UPDATE: Corzine Denies Knowledge Of Improper Shifting Of Customer Funds
December 15 2011 - 4:25PM
Dow Jones News
Former MF Global Holdings Ltd. chief Jon Corzine denied Thursday
having any knowledge of improper shifting of customer funds prior
to the hours before the firm's collapse.
His remarks come in response to CME Group Inc. (CME) Executive
Chairman Terrence Duffy, who testified at a separate hearing
Tuesday that Corzine might have known MF Global improperly shifted
customer funds to a European affiliate before its Oct. 31
bankruptcy.
Duffy said Tuesday that a CME auditor learned of the shift of
funds, and Corzine's knowledge of the move, from a senior MF Global
executive during a telephone call before the firm's collapse. Duffy
is scheduled to testify again today along with other
regulators.
On Thursday, Corzine said he was unaware of the conversation
Duffy referred to, and stressed he was unaware of any improper
transfer.
"I did not in any way know about the use of customer funds on
any loan or transfer," he said in testimony before a House
Financial Services panel.
Corzine was making his third appearance on Capitol Hill in the
past week as lawmakers inquire about the causes for the collapse of
the brokerage firm. He said Thursday he didn't learn of the
shortfalls until the evening of Oct. 30.
Regulators are investigating whether the brokerage improperly
tapped into customer-segregated accounts for its proprietary
trading. No one at the firm has been charged.
Corzine suggested a connection between the transfer mentioned by
Duffy and MF Global's attempts to resolve an overdraft with an
account it held with JP Morgan Chase in London. On the morning of
Oct. 28, Corzine said he was trying to sell "billions" of bonds to
JP Morgan to reduce MF Global's balance sheet and generate
liquidity, but JP Morgan wouldn't engage in the transactions until
Corzine's firm fixed the overdrafts.
Though Corzine instructed staff to resolve the issue, JP Morgan
called him again on Oct. 28 seeking assurances that the transfer of
funds didn't violate Commodity Futures Trading Commission
rules.
"The back office in Chicago explicitly confirmed to me that the
funds were properly transferred and I understood that JP Morgan
Chase was satisfied," Corzine said, adding that he spoke about the
transfer with Edith O'Brien, who is identified as MF Global's
assistant treasurer on LinkedIn.
Shortly after the question-and-answer period began, the panel
took a break so that its members could vote on the House floor.
Corzine was served with a lawsuit shortly after leaving the hearing
room, filed by a customer with two MF Global accounts totaling
about $220 million.
-By Andrew Ackerman, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-569-8390;
andrew.ackerman@dowjones.com
CME (NASDAQ:CME)
Historical Stock Chart
From May 2024 to Jun 2024
CME (NASDAQ:CME)
Historical Stock Chart
From Jun 2023 to Jun 2024