Thursday, February 14, 2008

Kerviel's Fimat Broker Denies Knowledge of Unauthorized Bets

(Bloomberg) -- Fimat broker Moussa Bakir said he had no knowledge of any wrongdoing by Jerome Kerviel, distancing himself from the trader blamed by Societe Generale SA for a loss of 4.9 billion euros ($7.2 billion).

``I gave two or three pieces of advice to Jerome,'' he told police during a 48-hour interrogation between Feb. 7 and Feb. 9, according to Isabelle Montagne, the spokeswoman for the Paris prosecutors' office.

Bakir, 32, named a material witness in the Kerviel probe, was questioned after Societe Generale provided financial police with e-mail exchanges between the two men. Kerviel passed his trades through Fimat, which merged last month with Credit Agricole SA's futures brokerage to form a new entity, Newedge.

Societe Generale, France's second-largest bank, said Kerviel amassed 50 billion euros in authorized bets backed by fake hedges. It liquidated the positions in a three-day sell-off that resulted in the biggest trading loss in banking history. Kerviel, 31, has been charged with hacking into the bank's computers, falsifying documents and breach of trust. He is in police custody.

Bakir and Kerviel exchanged 164 text messages between Nov. 13 and Dec. 13, following queries from Eurex, Europe's biggest futures exchange, about the size of Kerviel's transactions, Montagne said. Kerviel had earlier told prosecutors he had been able to explain away Eurex's concerns.

More Questioning

Bakir's remarks to the financial police were reported today by Le Parisien. Bakir's lawyer, Jean-David Scemama, didn't return calls for comment.

``Between us, there was a kind of complicity you normally find in a professional context,'' Bakir told police, according to the prosecutors' spokeswoman. ``I knew he had a problem with his bosses without knowing why.''

Over the weekend, Le Nouvel Observateur reported on its Web site a series of e-mail exchanges between the two men, confirmed by a lawyer on the case, where Kerviel refers to ``our trades.''

In an Oct. 11 message, Kerviel asks Bakir, ``Did you speak to him about what we're doing?'' After Bakir says that the unidentified person ``returns tonight,'' Kerviel says: ``You didn't tell him about our trades, did you? Or else I'll knock your head off.''

Bakir, who was released on Feb. 9, may be called in for another round of interrogation, although a date has yet to be set, Montagne said.

Second Friend

Bakir's classification as a material witness shows that ``although the judge feels that there might be something there, there might be something against him, he has not made up his mind,'' said Stephane Bonifassi, a Paris-based lawyer and member of FraudNet, the International Chamber of Commerce's commercial crime unit.

The prosecutors' office also confirmed the Parisien report that a second friend of Kerviel's had received 1,218 calls from him in recent months and would be questioned soon.

Societe Generale said on Jan. 24 that it discovered Kerviel's bets on Jan. 18 and liquidated the positions between Jan. 21 and Jan. 23. The trading loss forced the bank to raise 5.5 billion euros by selling stock to replenish its capital.

Separately, a computer expert aiding Kerviel's lawyers said in an interview in Paris Match magazine today that the bank must have known about Kerviel's transactions.

``The bank could not have not known,'' Jean-Raymond Lemaire told the magazine, after spending a day with Kerviel to review his trades. Christophe Reille, a spokesman for Kerviel's legal team, confirmed his comments.