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Strategies & Market Trends : John Pitera's Market Laboratory

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mary-ally-smith
To: CrashDavis who wrote (18342)7/20/2016 2:00:25 PM
From: John Pitera3 Recommendations   of 33421
 
Hi Crash and Bob.... Yes Deutsche Bank is the 800 pound gorilla in German banking.... they have been very active in the derivatives market as well as the FX and bond markets dating bank to their purchase of Bankers Trust in the late 1990's.

Banker's Trust an earlier 20th century creation by banker JP Morgan and his colleagues always was very agressive in novel derivative, trading and FX products. BT supplied the FED with it's first Head... Benjamin Strong.

BT

was one of the big 5 or 6 big NY city institutional owners of the FED.

History[ edit]



Bankers Trust logo c. 1919

In 1903 a group of New York national banks formed trust company Bankers Trust to provide trust services to customers of state and national banks throughout the country on the premise that it would not lure commercial bank customers away. In addition to offering the usual trust and commercial banking functions, it also acted as a "bankers' bank" by holding the reserves of other banks and trust companies and loaning them money when they needed additional reserves due to unexpected withdrawals. Bankers Trust Company was incorporated on March 24, 1903, with an initial capital of $1.5 million. Despite technically having numerous stockholders, the voting power was held by three associates of J.P. Morgan. Thus, it was widely viewed as a Morgan company. J. P. Morgan himself held a controlling interest, and Edmund C. Converse, a steel manufacturer turned financier and then president of Liberty National Bank, was chosen to serve as Bankers Trust's first president.

Bankers Trust quickly grew to be the second largest U.S. trust company and a dominant Wall Street institution. During the Panic of 1907, Bankers Trust worked closely with J.P. Morgan to help avoid a general financial collapse by lending money to sound banks. In 1911 it acquired the Mercantile Trust Company and a year later the Manhattan Trust Company. In 1914 Converse resigned to become president of Astor Trust Company, another Morgan company. He was succeeded by his son-in-law Benjamin Strong Jr.. Strong served as president for less than a year, leaving Bankers Trust to become the first governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York after helping to establish the Federal Reserve System. In October 1917 the company became a member of the Federal Reserve system.

In 1980, Bankers Trust exited retail banking under the direction of its CEO, Alfred Brittain III. The bank attempted to sell its credit portfolio and branches to Bank of Montreal; however, the deal was not completed due to a disagreement over BankAmercard (Visa). Bank of Montreal wanted to include BankAmercard in the terms of sale, but Bankers Trust did not want to sell the new credit card program licensed from Bank of America due to its profitable future. Eventually, Bankers Trust sold 89 branches to five banks including Republic National Bank of New York. Republic National Bank of New York expanded its branch network to 32 with the opening of a new branch in Manhattan's World Trade Center and the acquisition of a dozen Bankers Trust Company branches—ten in Manhattan, one in the Bronx, and one in Brooklyn. [1]

Bankers Trust became a leader in the nascent derivatives business under the management of Charlie Sanford, who succeeded Alfred Brittain III, in the early 1990s. Having de-emphasized traditional loans in favor of trading, the bank became an acknowledged leader in risk management. Lacking the boardroom contacts of its larger rivals, notably J. P. Morgan, BT attempted to make a virtue of necessity by specializing in trading and in product innovation.

The company shied away from using market data distribution products from companies such as Reuters, instead choosing to develop its own systems in-house. A small development team based in London created BIDDS (Broadgate Information Data Distribution System) which included the Montage front-end package that traders used to obtain data from data feeds and broker screens.

In early 1994, despite all its prowess in managing the risks in the trading room, the bank suffered irreparable reputational damage when some complex derivative transactions caused large losses for major corporate clients. Two of these - Gibson Greetings and Procter & Gamble (P&G) - successfully sued BT, asserting that they had not been informed of, or (in the latter case), had been unable to understand the risks involved.



BT Alex. Brown logo in use between 1997 and 1999 following its acquisition of Alex. Brown & Sons

In 1997, Bankers Trust acquired Alex. Brown & Sons, founded in 1800 and a public corporation since 1986, in an attempt to grow its investment banking business.

The bank suffered major losses in the summer of 1998.

Shortly before the Deutsche Bank acquisition in November 1998, BT pleaded guilty to institutional fraud due to the failure of certain members of senior management to escheat abandoned property to the State of New York and other states. Rather than turn over to the states funds from dormant customer accounts and uncashed dividend and interest checks as required by law, certain of the bank's senior executives credited this money as income and moved it to its operating account.

Bruce J. Kingdon, the head of the bank's Corporate Trust and Agency group spearheaded the fraud and (in 2001) entered into a guilty plea in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York and was sentenced to community service. Certain of his subordinates were thereafter barred forever by the SEC from working in the securities markets.

With the Bank's guilty plea in the escheatment lawsuit, and thereafter its status as a convicted felon, it became ineligible to transact business with most municipalities and many companies which are prohibited from transacting business with felons. Consequently, the acquisition by Deutsche Bank was a godsend to the bank's shareholders, who avoided losing their entire investments.[ citation needed]

In November 1998, Deutsche Bank agreed to purchase Bankers Trust for $10.1 billion; [2] the purchase was finalized on June 4, 1999. CEO Frank N. Newman received $55 million in severance. [3]

Deutsche Bank sold the Bankers Trust Australian division to the Principal Financial Group in 1999 who, in turn, sold the Investment Banking Business to Macquarie Group in June 1999 and the asset management division to Westpac on October 31, 2002. [4] This organisation now uses the name BT Financial Group.

Deutsche Bank announced on November 5, 2002 that it would sell The Trust and Custody division of Bankers Trust to State Street Corporation. The sale finalized in February 2003. [5]

Controversies[ edit]In 1995, litigation by two major corporate clients against Bankers Trust shed light on the market for over-the-counter derivatives. Bankers Trust employees were found to have repeatedly provided customers with incorrect valuations of their derivative exposures. [6]The head of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) during this time was later interviewed by Frontline in October 2009: "The only way the CFTC found out about the Bankers Trust fraud was because Procter & Gamble, and others, filed suit. There was no record keeping requirement imposed on participants in the market. There was no reporting. We had no information." - Brooksley Born, US CFTC Chair, 1996-'99. [7]

Several Bankers Trust brokers were caught on tape remarking that their client [Gibson Greetings and P&G, respectively] would not be able to understand what they were doing in reference to derivatives contracts sold in 1993. As part of their legal case against Bankers Trust, Procter & Gamble (P&G) "discovered secret telephone recordings between brokers at Bankers Trust, where 'one employee described the business as 'a wet dream,' ... another Bankers Trust employee said, '...we set 'em up.'" [7] The bank's row with P&G made the front page of major US magazines during 1995. On October 16, 1995, the US magazine BusinessWeek published a cover story that P&G was pursuing racketeering charges against Bankers Trust: "The key evidence: some 6,500 tape recordings." [8]

Both the magnitude of losses and the litigation by well-known companies caused market regulators to intervene. Concerns motivated by the particular Bankers Trust case eventually extended to the OTC derivatives market in general. The US CFTC embarked on a failed attempt to take over part of the bank regulators' role in regulating the OTC derivatives market in the late 1990s. The thesis of an October 20, 2009, broadcast of the PBS television magazine Frontline, Early Warnings of the Economic Meltdown, was that the failure of Congress to allow CFTC a role in regulating derivatives was a key element eventually leading to the financial crisis of 2007–2010.

Notable former employees[ edit]Business[ edit] Joaquin Avila - managing director of the Carlyle Group Jeff Bezos - chief executive officer of Amazon.com Greg Coffey - hedge fund manager Chris Corrigan - private investor and former CEO of Patrick Corporation Henry P. Davison - banker Brady Dougan - chief executive officer of Credit Suisse Richard Farleigh - private investor John Key - Current New Zealand Prime Minister and investment banker Herbert L. Pratt - director of BT from 1917–38, and head of Standard Oil Company of New York Sally Shelton-Colby - banker and diplomat Benjamin Strong, Jr. - Secretary (1904-1909), Vice-President (1909-1913), President (1913-1914), then first head of New York Federal Reserve (1914-1928) Nassim Taleb - author and financial mathematician Albert H. Wiggin - president of Chase National Bank Robert G. Wilmers - Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of M&T BankOther[ edit] Maxim Dlugy - Chess International Grandmaster Jack H. Jacobs - Medal of Honor recipient Charlie Rose - Television reporter


DB was founded as an FX specialist bank and has been involved in numerous dubious activities such as the LIBOR setting scandal, the CDO market implosion and several earlier bumps in it's ROAD.

1870–1919[ edit]Deutsche Bank was founded in Berlin in 1870 as a specialist bank for foreign trade. [13] The bank's statute was adopted on 22 January 1870, and on 10 March 1870 the Prussian government granted it a banking licence. The statute laid great stress on foreign business:

The object of the company is to transact banking business of all kinds, in particular to promote and facilitate trade relations between Germany, other European countries and overseas markets. [14]

Three of the founders were Georg Siemens whose father's cousin had founded Siemens and Halske, Adelbert Delbrück and L. Bamberger. [15] Previous to the founding of Deutsche Bank, German importers and exporters were dependent upon English and French banking institutions in the world markets—a serious handicap in that German bills were almost unknown in international commerce, generally disliked and subject to a higher rate of discount than English or French bills. [16]



They are absolutely in the too big 2 fail category.... and also will be at ground zero when we see ECB interest rates rise and/ or a generalized collapse or run on the Eur.

JP
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