The ease with which the Libor scandal has brought down the towering figure of Bob Diamond, master of the universe and investment banker extraordinaire, is truly momentous. It reveals how small cracks in corporate structures can turn into gaping chasms that engulf whole management teams. For those that haven’t been following the scandal, the gist of it is that traders have been caught submitting inaccurate figures to manipulate the Libor rate – an index which tries to reflect the average rate that banks can borrow on the 'interbank market' (aka. from each other) – for various dubious schemes.
Libor relies on banks submitting honest figures to the British Bankers Association (BBA), the organisation that calculates the index. Interestingly enough, I was at a
debate a few weeks ago on the topic of financial sector corruption, which pitted investigative journalists Ian Fraser
and Nick Kochan against a representative of the British Bankers
Association. Kochan and Fraser argued that London was a hotbed for corruption
and dirty money. The BBA representative didn't agree, arguing that greed and corruption
ends in the City, rather than starting in it. Needless to say, the conversation
probably would have been somewhat awkward for him if it had been scheduled for
this week instead.
Time for a true activist hedge fund
In the wake of the Libor scandal
it appears the government might indeed hold some type of enquiry, but I’m
skeptical of how deep it will go. If regulators, auditors and even journalists
have limited will to uncover fraud, perhaps we need some new approaches. I
noticed the other day that Barclay’s share price plummeted over 15% on the news
of the Libor scandal. That’s a pretty big drop. If someone had shorted (bet
against) Barclays shares, they would have done well. It’s naturally occurred to me
then, that perhaps one solution is to set up a hedge fund, trained to sniff out
financial fraud, expose it, profit from the resultant scandal, and then steer the money back into
further financial activism.
The Investment thesis Part 1: The public scandals are
just the tip of the iceberg
The Libor scandal offers fresh
insights into financial skulduggery, but it’s always hard to tell whether
these instances of financial crime, market manipulation and corruption are
once-off anomalies or endemic, widespread problems. For one thing, financial
crime is often incredibly difficult to detect, and very hard to prove. The occasional
scandals tend to be the most sensational cases, but most corruption probably
isn’t overt and outrageous. It could be subtle and even subconscious. Earlier
this week The Telegraph published the statement of an insider who claims to
have known about the Libor rigging. It echoes some of the points I made in a
previous post about the problems whistleblowers face: In an environment where
dubious behaviour gets normalised by an overall culture of acquiescence, it’s
easy to go along with it. Collective inaction can be as strong a form of
corruption as the individual actions they quietly ignore.
The first part of my argument is that there are criminogenic
structures within financial organisations. I’m not in the camp that says that
rampant greed is the only underlying value in finance, and I strongly believe that
people within the sector are motivated by a wide range of factors (as will be
discussed in a later post). I would argue though, that financial professionals are
often working within structures which can amplify those parts of human
behaviour we call ‘greed’. Bonuses are often cited for the damaging incentive
effects they can have, promoting ‘get-rich-quick’ expectations, but there are
many structures within finance that have criminogenic potential. For example,
take job promotion systems in which
upward mobility is based on the ability to hit short-term targets. This, over
time at least, could (statistically) favour those who are prepared to be
'morally flexible', those who are most prepared (and skilled enough) to bend
the rules to meet targets, and those who are prepared to cover up misdemeanors
of juniors under them. If middle and higher management gets populated by individuals
who view such ‘flexible’ and ‘creative’ behaviour as comparatively normal, the
implications for corporate culture lower down the ranks are severe.
The second part of the argument though, is that there is a lack of
policing mechanisms to counteract or de-emphasise the short-term greed-enhancing
factors in the system. Many systems in the world have crimogenic potential, but
that is often dampened and contained through formal policing (e.g. official regulation and legal systems), and informal policing via systems of social
disapproval and shunning
for bad behaviour. Both of these appear to be somewhat deficient in the financial
sector though. Regulators appear muzzled by a serious lack of political will to
prosecute financial crime, which means fear of prosecution is limited. As for
informal policing, many argue that the culture of finance actively encourages
dubious ‘Gordon Gekko’
style behavior. Even if you (like myself) disagree with that stereotype, it’s
hard to argue that the internal culture of banks would excel at preventing bad
behaviour.
Investment thesis 2: The rest of the iceberg can be successfully uncovered,
and exploited
It wouldn’t be easy though. We’d need a unique combination of skills, a motley crack team of radical crime-fighters. For example, we’d have to hire:
- Ex-FSA & SEC employees, skilled at the ins and outs of regulation and the loopholes
- Ex-traders (and especially rogue traders), skilled at understanding the operations of various financial professionals
- Criminologists, with deep understanding of criminal structures and how they work
- Ex-bank IT staff and back office staff, who know the nuances of bank IT systems
- Activists/Campaigners, passionate about mobilising networks of people and raising awareness
- Hackers, for occasional… um… unorthodox information retrieval.
- Ex-FBI agents and Mi6 operatives with advanced analysis and infiltration skills
- Forensic audit experts, and big data experts, to spot anomalies among numbers
- DJs: To provide atmospheric background tracks in the office
Now that I come to think of it,
such a fund would have obvious crossover with my Financial Wikileaks concept – perhaps the professionals at the fund
could be the ones processing leaks that get steered to the site…
Watchdog Capital: Bloodhound Fund No.1
FEED ME BABY |
Yes, good idea. I see some similarities to Ronnie Horesh's Social Policy Bonds http://socialgoals.com/, financial instruments that actually serve social goals. There are possible 'perverse' effects in all this, such as institutions turning on each other [to some extent, the Barclays first mover fess-up on Libor, for example] like a [beneficial!] auto-immune disease.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link to the Social Policy Bonds - I agree that there are many ways these concepts can backfire. The obvious one with my idea is how on earth to prevent the fund from being perceived as engaging in market manipulation etc. I think it would take some detailed thought before my idea is watertight.
ReplyDeleteFinance is littered with examples of speculators who took the right position, but the profit only materialised after their margin calls had bankrupted them.
ReplyDeleteThe strategy would rely on shorting (shorting the appropriate future) and waiting for the price to fall. This is fine if you know when the price will fall, but if you do it without fore-knowledge of the timing you are exposed to significant risk. If you do know when the price will fall, I would worry that there would be pressure to investigate you for insider trading (manipulation as you put it).
But maybe I'm being negative because you rate DJs more highly than mathematicians - after all it was the mathematicians who were most sceptical about Basle II before 2007.
Excellent points Tim. This has certainly occurred to me, and yes, running a rolling short position if the overall market doesn't agree with your assessment is bound to be pretty costly. Many hedge funds are too clever for their own good, and being too clever is basically the same as being stupid if you're against the market.
ReplyDeleteOf course I actually I wrote this piece somewhat tongue-in-cheek. I don't actually think the Bloodhound Fund in it's current form would be allowed to operate, but it would be interesting to explore how to make this idea viable.
Mathematicians are welcome, but only if they are also DJs. Preferably dub reggae (http://bit.ly/yywxxf).