The Build Up To 1995 The week before Nick Leeson disappeared he had kept throwing up
at work.
Colleagues did not know why but were soon to find out.
The ego of a 28-year-old trader on the Singapore Monetary Exchange
and the greed and stupidity of a 233-year-old bank had combined to
destroy an investment empire and in the process stunned the world…
A Young
Nick Leeson
Nick Leeson's life started as a classic rags-to-riches tale. Born
on 25th February 1967, he was the working class son of a plasterer
from a Watford council estate, who failed his final maths exam and
left school with a mere handful of qualifications. Nonetheless, in
the early 1980s, he landed a job as a clerk with royal bank Coutts,
followed by a string of jobs with other banks, ending up with Barings,
where he quickly made an impression and was promoted to the trading
floor.
Before long, he was appointed manager of a new operation in futures
markets on the Singapore Monetary Exchange (SIMEX) and was soon making
millions for Barings by betting on the future direction of the Nikkei
Index. His bosses back in London, who viewed with glee his large profits,
trusted the whizzkid. Leeson and his wife Lisa seemed to have everything:
a salary of £50,000 with bonuses of up to £150,000, weekends
in exotic places, a smart apartment and frequent parties and to top
it all they even seemed to be very much in love.
The
job of a derivatives trader is akin to a bookie once removed, taking
bets on people making bets and Leeson started by buying and selling
the simplest kind of derivatives futures pegged to the Nikkei 225,
the Japanese equivalent to the UK's FTSE 100. At the time the trader
only had to put down a small percentage of the amount that was being
traded, it was therefore easily possible for the money on the table
to be exceeded many times by losses. However Leeson seemed to be
infallible
to Barings Chief Executives, by the end of 1993, he had made more
than £10m - about 10% of total profit that year.
Barings believed that it wasn't exposed to any losses because Leeson
claimed that he was executing purchase orders on behalf of a client.
What the company did not realise was that is was responsible for error
account 88888 where Leeson hid his losses. This account had been set
up to cover up a mistake made by an inexperienced team member, which
led to a loss of £20,000. Leeson now used this account to cover
his own mounting losses. In a fatal mistake, the bank allowed Leeson
to remain Chief Trader while being responsible for settling his trades,
a job that is usually split.
By December 1994 the red ink hidden in account 88888 totalled $512
million. Getting increasingly desperate Leeson bet that the Nikkei
index would not drop below 19,000 points. At the time this seemed
reasonable as the Japanese economy was rebounding after a 30-month
recession. Then on the 17th January 1995, a devastating earthquake
measuring 7.2 hit the Japanese city of Kobe. The previously stable
Nikkei index plummeted by 7% in a week. As the losses grew, Leeson
requested extra funds to continue trading, hoping to extricate himself
from the mess by more deals. Leeson was counting that there would
be a post quake rebound and the Nikki would stabilise at 19,000.
There
was no hedges, no bets the other way to protect Barings' huge exposures.
There was no rebound. Over three months he bought more than 20,000
futures contracts worth about $180,000 each in a vain attempt to
move
the market. Some three quarters of the $1.3 billion he lost Barrings
resulted from these trades. When Barings executives discovered what
had happened, they informed the Bank of England that Barings was
effectively
bust.