четвъртък, 23 юли 2009 г.

The Money Bazaar : Inside the Trillion-Dollar World of Currency Trading (Hardcover) by Andrew Krieger

The Money Bazaar : Inside the Trillion-Dollar World of Currency Trading (Hardcover)
by Andrew Krieger 

From Kirkus Reviews

An authoritative, if pedantic, introduction to the mercurial foreign-exchange market, where daily trading volume ranges up to $700 billion--and millions can be gained or lost on the judgments of youthful MBAs like the author. Having made a name for himself at Salomon Brothers and Bankers Trust before striking out on his own, Krieger has an insider's knowledge of a demanding profession. Unfortunately, he conveys only hints of the high-stakes game's risks and rewards, opting instead for a matter-of-fact recitation of its fundamentals. The author nonetheless provides an accessible rundown on the globe-girdling network in which nervy traders buy or sell American dollars, French francs, German marks, Japanese yen, and other hard currencies for the accounts of money-center banks, multinational corporations, securities firms, and a handful of private investors. He also makes a good job of clarifying the supply/demand forces that move the unregulated, round-the-clock market--and why it matters. But apart from self-congratulatory accounts of a few fondly remembered coups (including a killing in New Zealand kiwi), Krieger offers precious little material that's not available elsewhere in more detailed form. Indeed, he devotes the bulk of his text to a sketchy monetary history of the industrial world from Bretton Woods to the present. While the author hits such high points as 1971, the year the US went off the gold standard (creating a need for the foreign- exchange market now in existence), his narrative loses considerable momentum when he stops for explanatory background. Appreciably more interesting are Krieger's unhedged views on the greenback's prospects as a reserve currency and allied subjects. Worth noting, though, is that he borrows (without credit) from Michael M. Lewis (of Liar's Poker fame) a what-if scenario of the potentially dire consequences of an earthquake in Tokyo. An essentially academic exercise lacking in the personal perspectives that could have made it much more than a primer.


From Library Journal
The foreign currency market, says currency trader Krieger, affects "every aspect of economic and social order in the U.S. and the other nations of the world." Its volume exceeds the combined trading of the New York, London, Frankfurt, and Tokyo stock exchanges, and it trades 24 hours a day around the world. It arose after the United States went off the gold standard in 1971 and has been affected by various agreements among the G-5 or G-7 nations. Nevertheless, it still plays by a quintessentially free market--supply and demand rule, government intervention being hopeless at this volume, as history has proved. Two hundred thousand traders all trying to maximize their own profits act like Adam Smith's invisible hand to produce world trade stability. Krieger's description of his own trades as case studies and his use of trading jargon makes this work somewhat more technical than the average popular business book. Business collections will probably want this, though public libraries can pass.

In 1986, [Bankers Trust] hired a young currency options trader from Salomon Brothers called Andy Krieger who had graduated from the Wharton School after studying Sanskrit and philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania. He quickly became one of the most aggressive dealers in the world, with the full sanction of Bankers. While most of the bank's currency traders had an upper dealing limit of $50 million, Krieger's was in the region of $700 million—around a quarter of the bank's capital at the time. By using options, Krieger could leverage this exposure to many times that size ($100,000 of currency options would buy control of $30 million to $40 million in actual currency). In 1987 he did this to launch a speculative attack on the New Zealand dollar. If his own claims can be believed, he sold short the entire money supply of the country. In a matter of hours, the NZ dollar plunged 5 percent against the U.S. dollar. It was enough, at any rate, to draw an angry complaint from the New Zealand central bank. But with typical arrogance, Sanford later turned this on its head. "We didn't take too big a position for Bankers Trust,” he grumbled, "but we may have taken too big a position for that market.” It was New Zealand's fault, in other words, for being too small to cope with Bankers. 

Krieger resigned the following year in disgust at the ingratitude of his employers who had paid him a mere $3 million for his efforts which had netted the bank a profit of more than $300 million. But after his departure an odd thing happened. Regulators discovered discrepancies in the way Bankers valued its currency options portfolio. The bank was forced to admit that $80 million of foreign exchange trading income had disappeared and that it had deliberately overstated its 1986 earnings. It seemed, on the face of it, that the bank had been simply unable to understand Krieger's complex options positions. Dealers in other banks, however, wondered how it was that Krieger's options portfolio only maintained its value as long as Krieger himself was in charge of it. Whatever the reason for the readjusted profit, the whole episode was a serious embarrassment. An even bigger embarrassment, though, should have been that Bankers had been willing deliberately to publish figures that were inaccurate by $80 million as if it didn't matter. But the bank showed no sign of blushing. 

This was yet another warning of its attitude: anything goes as long as the suckers don't find out. Bankers was lean and very, very mean and there were no bigger suckers in sight than in the derivatives markets. 

Excerpted from Apocalypse Roulette: The Lethal World of Derivatives, by Richard Thomson. Reprinted with permission by the publisher, MacMillan U.K.
Profitable Forex Trading – Myth or Reality?

Let me start with a true story.

The year is 1984.

Young Andrew Krieger completed his MBA from Wharton Business School, and took up a job with Solomon Brothers.

After the training program, he began trading in the foreign-exchange, or forex markets.

He moved to Bankers Trust in 1986, where he remained through the end of 1987.

He left in February 1988, after a year in which Bankers’ foreign-currency trading profits amounted to $512.8 million, up from $57.4 million the previous year.


In March a front-page article appeared in The Wall Street Journal under the headline “Change of Heart: Andrew Krieger Made $3 million Last Year – Why Isn’t He Happy?”

Subsequently, Andy had set up his own hedge fund, and served as a consultant to some of the richest people in the world, including George Soros. What is the moral of the story?

There is enormous amount of money to be made in the forex market. Profitable forex trading is indeed possible.

You might be wondering if it requires an MBA form Wharton to become a successful at forex trading.

The answer is a definite no.


The good news for you is I am putting together is this website the resources that will make you a much better trader than you have been till now.

Take your time to read these pages carefully, and you will soon discover what weakness in your current trading style has prevented you from becoming the truly successful forex trader that you always wanted to be.

But let us go quickly to what interests you most, “how to become profitable in forex trading?”


The journey to becoming a profitable forex trader is a never ending one.

You may think that making $1,000 in a month is successful, whilst Andy Krieger may think that a $3 million bonus is too small.

Ultimately, it is all in the mind.

Isn’t this true of most things in life?

Yet, we all seek to achieve more, which is why we keep trying harder. 


 Whether you want to learn more about forex strategies, or just want advice about who are the best brokers or which training program is suitable for you, you will find that information in Super Forex Trading.

If you take the time to read the various categories on the left, I am sure you will soon become a better trader than you were ever before.

Francis Bacon once said that Knowledge is power. He could have just as easily said knowledge is money.

Money not lost is money gained as well! After reading these pages, you will at least start making fewer mistakes, which translates into more money in your pocket.

Profitable forex trading involves both avoiding losses as well as making more profits.


You will find in Super Forex Trading all the essential information you need to begin a new profitable hobby even if you have never traded before.

The advent of online forex trading has seen a surge of interest among common people.

Finding he right advice has always been difficult because a lot of people are just too keen to sell their services without highlighting the risks involved.

You are lucky to have stumbled upon this page, because I am not selling anything and I truly want you to become a profitable forex trader.

This is the Jew who would be Prime Minister! Made his fortune by working hand-in-glove with a fellow Jew who was mounting brutal attacks on the NZ$. Can't stop a Jew being a Jew I guess.



John Key
A special profile on the man who would be PM
By GILLIAN TETT and RUTH LAUGESEN - Sunday Star Times | Friday, 08 February 2008

BRENDON O'HAGAN/Sunday Star-Times

http://www.stuff.co.nz/images/699415.jpg
FIRST LIFE: As a money trader in London it's speculated John Key was earning $5 million a year - that's $96,000 a week.


He used to work hand in glove with the foreign bankers who led raids on the New Zealand dollar. Now John Key a man who has spent most of his career out of the public gaze wants to run the economy. In a special report, London's Financial Times and the Sunday Star-Times shed new light on Key's former life as a London currency trader.

John Key wants to be running New Zealand by the end of the year because, like all other politicians, "I believe the future of our country can be really great."

But 20 years ago, he worked closely with a famed currency trader who mounted a brutal speculative attack on the Kiwi dollar [the Jew 'Andy Kreigar'] The attack, which has entered forex (foreign exchange) trading legend for its scale, audacity and profitability, prompted Reserve Bank alarm that the currency would collapse.

It was a world in which Key moved easily, swimming with the financial sharks.

...

[Key] formed what was to be a lucrative relationship with 32-year-old currency trader Andy Krieger, based at Bankers Trust in New York, who began putting hundreds of millions of dollars of business through Key's dealing room.

Krieger was the man who a few months earlier had entered forex legend with a massive speculative raid on the kiwi. As Krieger later explained in his book The Money Bazaar, he believed the kiwi was overvalued, and began betting on a fall, selling the New Zealand dollar heavily. Once the currency had found what he believed to be a floor, he bought again at a much lower price, making a profit on the transaction.

...

[Key claims] "I can't remember whether Andy Krieger was buying or selling, it might have been selling with me, but at the time it would have reflected the economic fundamentals at play in New Zealand.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/sundaystartimes/4392717a24815.html
Gneisenau
02-07-2009, 12:11 AM
From a UK TimesOnLine article, which, while helpfully disclosing the Jewish ethnicity of Krieger's parents, neglects to point out the broader Jewish connection between Salomon Brothers, George Soros and his Sanskrit scholar protogé :Krieger is the chief executive of North Bridge Capital, a currency trading firm. But the money markets are no longer his passion. His heart and mind are in India. He was ten years old when he began to nurture a love of the subcontinent, its people, culture and religions.

“I picked up a book on yoga and Western philosophy and was fascinated. I was way too iconoclastic for things like the Beatles.” His parents, a conventional Jewish couple from Wilmington, Delaware, thought he was a bit “whacked out”.

Krieger left university with a degree in Western philosophy and a PhD in Sanskrit, but chose not to continue as a translator of ancient Hindu texts. His professor suggested that he study for an MBA. “It’s like a credit card for people who don’t know what to do,” Krieger says.

After taking the advice of a friend, who told him to shave, Krieger was hired as a foreign exchange trader by Salomon Brothers in the summer of 1984. In 1986 he became global head of currency options trading at Bankers Trust, where he increased profits from $56 million to $512 million in a year.

However, he had a disagreement with the firm over his bonus and left. He joined George Soros and was being groomed to be the great man’s successor, but instead, in 1988, he set up his own firm.

Krieger had an unorthodox approach to trading currency options. “When I was trading, most of my insights came to me in dreams,” he says. “There is a way of training the mind to visualise that is based in ancient yogic teaching.” Trader brings life after the flood, by James Doran (Feb. 16, 2005) (http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/columnists/article514795.ece)
Andrew Krieger, Managing Director

Mr. Krieger, Managing Director, is founder of Access Capital Management LLC., Le Marais Investments Ltd. and Elk River Trading LLC., a group of companies that specializes in structured products, asset management, foreign exchange trading and general financial advisory services. He has over 25 years of experience in portfolio management and trading in capital markets. Mr. Krieger is also Chairman of Gateway Asset Management a Korean based large-scale real estate development company and Chairman of Agile Financial Technologies, a financial software services company. Mr. Krieger began his career in foreign exchange in the 80s working as Vice President of Foreign Exchange at Salomon Brothers. Subsequently, he was Vice President and Global Head of Currency Options for Bankers Trust. He then worked for Soros Fund Management as a senior Portfolio manager. He holds an M.A. from the University of Pennsylvania and is a graduate of the Wharton School where he earned an MBA.
Killing The Kiwi 

 

Soros sure had a knack for finding smart traders.

In 1987, following the Black Monday stock market plunge, investors were fleeing assets denominated in US dollars and scurrying into anything that wasn't priced in greenbacks.  


 

Believe it or not, this included New Zealand dollars and the kiwi soared as a result of the buying surge. 

 

Soros trader Andy Kreiger took note of the kiwi's rapid ascent and believed it was unsustainable. He sold short 200 million New Zealand dollars.  

 

That may not sound like a noteworthy figure, but consider this: At the time, that was more than New Zealand's entire monetary supply.  

 

The kiwi collapsed under the weight of Kreiger's trade and its fair to say he probably didn't win man of the year in New Zealand in 1987. 

 

$1 Billion...In A Day 

 

Of course Soros knows a thing or two about forex trading himself.

He is one of the richest men in the world and a good chunk of his fortune has come from the forex market.

His most famous trade may have been a short call on the British Pound in 1992.  


 

That year, the U.K. was attempting to enter the European Monetary Union, but speculation was abound that the U.K. would be rejected and that would certainly send the pound falling.  

 

Soros and the Quantum Fund sold short 10 billion British pounds, which led the Bank of England to try to prop up the pound by liquidating its reserves.  

 

This wasn't the most keen of ideas and the U.K. was then rejected by the European Monetary Union, which sent the pound tumbling. Soros made $1 billion on the trade...in a single day.  

Would you have voted for John Key if You had known...

1. That John Key had been involved with the biggest attack on the New Zealand dollar in history and lied about it twenty years later?

2. That John Key had been involved in the Asian Crisis, The Russian Crisis and the LTCM hedgefund collapse?

3. That John Key is one of the architects of the Subprime crisis and lied about his involvement? -----------------------------------------------------------------------

1. John Key and Andrew Krieger and the attack on the New Zealand dollar. In late 1987 Andrew Krieger attacked the New Zealand dollar.

He earned for the Bankers Trust bank the sum of $ 338 million in just a few days.

This attack was so threatning to the dollar and the economy that the then Governor of the Reserve bank had to call the Bankers Trust bank in New York to stop the attack. John Key claims that he only started to work with Andrew Krieger in September 1988 well after the attacks when he claims he started to work for the Bankers Trust.

The problem with John Key's version of the story is that Andrew Krieger did not work in the Foreign Exchange business at the time.

Three different New York Times articles written in Feb 1988, June 1988 and September 1990 state that Andrew Krieger left the Bankers Trust bank no later than February 1988.

He only worked from April until June 1988 for George Soros and after he left this position he left the Foreign Exchange business altogethere until he returned in 1990 during which period he did not much trading The only period in which John Key worked with Andrew Krieger must have been before December 1987-February 1988. Why is this important?

Andrew Kriegers attack was the first ever attack of this magnitude on a currency jeopardising an entire economy.

If John Key was aiding and abbetting a man who for greed alone was prepared to take huge chances with the lifelyhoods of New Zelanders than so was John Key.

In an interview John Key spoke admiringly about Andrew Kriegers attack and he saw his position as only following orders and no morality whatsoever in almost destroying his own country. -----------------------------------------------------------------------

2. John Key and the Long Term Credit Management hedgefund scandal. that from happening.

Merrill Lynch only once faced that loss in the late nineties and that was when it stood to loose that money with the demise of the LTCM fund.

In the wake of the LTCM collapse John Key had to fire hundreds of people.

It earned him the nickname “The Smiling assassin.

It is save to conclude that John Key knew about the fund and was inolved at a minimum with the cleanup after the debacle.

It is also save to conclude that John Key knew full well that his bank was involved in irresponsible and reckless speculative behaviour well before the “subprime” crisis errupted. -----------------------------------------------------------------------

3. John Key and the Subprime crisis In an interview with Journalist Eugene Bingham in the New Zealand Herald John Key stated that the products causing the subprime crisis were not developed until 2004-2005. This is not the truth!

The products causing the subprime crisis were developed as early as 1987 up until 2001.

In the graph shown below the trend shows clearly that the subprime crisis (lending to people with a bad credit rating) John Key in his speech to the APEC conference attacked the investment banking world for being reckless in their practices and that this was causing the current financial crisis.

He also denied responsibility for any of the current crisis and stated that in his time no excesses happended and that the current level of risk investment bankers were taking would have been incomprehensible and unacceptable in his days as a banker.

This is not true.

Both Bankers Trust and Merrill Lynch collapsed as a result of dishonest and specualtive trading.

One such example of irresponsible and reckless trading by Merrill Lynch was their involvement with the Long Term Credit Management hedgefund.

The hedgefund was formed in 1993 and served as a tool to speculate heavily in the Foreign exchange trading world.

While in the initial years the fund performed above average and as such gained a lot of respect it collapsed spectaculary in 1998 due to irresponsible and reckless betting.

When in 1997 the Thai bath collapsed and with it all the Asian currencies and in the chaos that ensued the Russian currency and it's entire economy, the LTCM fund collapsed so spectacularly that the Federal Reserve had to bail it out before the fund could take the global financial system with it.

Was John Key involved in the LTCM find disaster?

In several interviews John Key mentiones the loss of $1 to 1.5 billion dollar US and how he had to prevent was well on it's way in as early as 1998.

Between late 1997 to 1988 the percentage of subrime mortgages roese toe whopping 14% coming from near zero the year before. What happened aroung that time?

Around that time an act was repealed (axed).

The act was called the Glass Steagall act.

This act was put in place in 1933 after the excesses of the banking world caused the first “Great” depression.

It was put in place to prevent investment banks and Comercial banks from merging.

After the banks spend anywhere between $100 to $200 million to lobby the Government to repeal the act from 1987 until 1998 the act was finally repealed in 1998 and officially signed away in 1999. removing all barrieres for the merging of the two types of banks and to allow the speculative investment banks to once again gain full control over the financial world and the following pattern developed as shown in the following In it's place came what is truly “a beautiful model for fraud.”

Everybody now had reasons to lie and behave irresponsible because the Investment bankers had a nice little trick to “Spread the risk” while allowing all the others in the foodchain and themselves to make an absolute bundle.

What did the investment bankers do?

They bought the mortages of their newly aquired commercial banks thus eliminating risk for their commercial banking departments.

This meant that C. banks were in the black straight away again and therefore had not reason to be prudent anymore.

Valuers who took a percentage of the houses they valued had every reason to hype the prices of the houses and since banks had not more incentive to be prudent began to loan to people without properly assessing the capability of borrowers to pay back the loan.

In fact mortgage brokers went as far as encouraging people to lie about their income so he could get a higher percentage in pay. What happened with those mortgages?

They were bundled and sold on to pension funds and other investment companies as Asset Backed Securities.

Promoted as save, low risk investments and they were bought by the millions by unsuspecting naïve and ignorant investors looking to buy save and long term yielding investments to protect pensions and other mom and pop investments.

What did John Key have to do with the Subprime crisis? John Key was the Global head of Foreign Excange and European head for Bonds and Derivatives for Merrill Lynch at the time the Glass Steagall act was repealed.

He had an office and a flat in New York and was a Wall street investment banker.

He is introduced as the Managing Director of debt (bonds and Derivaties) in an online interview in November 1999.

This means that he was at the right time and the right place to be running the subprime scam for Merrill Lynch, a bank who was one of the most aggressive banks dealing in the products now devastating the Financial world. According to himself he headed the department responsible for all these exotic new products.

John Key was a master in the Derivatives trade, a trade he learned in 1987 from another master Andrew Krieger.

It is impossible for John Key not to have known that eventually the subprime crisis would happen because it was under his leadership that in 1998-1999 Merrill Lynch started to produce and sell the Derivatives now causing the collapse of our entire financial system. Links to check:

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html? res=9C0CE2DD123EF930A2575AC0A966958260&sc p=5&sq=andrew %20krieger&st=cse&scp=5&sq=andrew %20krieger&st=cse

http://www.derivativesstrategy.com/magazine/archive/1 998/0598book.asp

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/politics/news/article.cfm? c_id=280&objectid=10522310

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3715/is_/ai_n88 69409

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subprime_crisis_impact_ti meline http://aotearoaawiderperspective.wordpress.com/

http://www.businessweek.com/1995/42/b34461.htm graph.

Before the repeal of the act the commercial banks who lend money to housebuyers had a huge incentive to keep on the straight an narrow because it was their money on the line.

House valuers had an equal interest in making correct valuations and the people who wanted to buy a house were equally carefull not to lie on their applications and had to finance at least 10 to 20% of the property they wanted to buy. All this disapeared when with the Glass Seagall act.

Why is there a crisis?

In 2007 Deutche bank tried to foreclose on some of the mortgages they thought they owned only to find the Judge filing for the defendants.

They were not the principal lenders and holders of the mortgages and therefore they were not entitled to foreclose.

This caused a wave of panic and loss of confidence in the product that had been sold all over the world and the result was the subprime crisis.

John Key and the things he does not want you to know: Part 1, the attack on the NZ dollar in 1987
By travellerev 

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It seems more and more people find their way to this post. If you think this post merits attention please give the link to anyone you know with a computer or alternatively print it out and share it with family, friends and colleagues. if you care to rpint it out please make sure you print out the sources too to make sure people will take it seriously. Sources are the NZ Federal Reserve, the Authorised Unauthorised biography of John Key in the NZ Herald, the Sunday Star Times, and the online New York Times Archives. the links in this article and the update will guide you to the relevant web pages. Thank you.

Oh what a tangled web we weave, When first we practice to deceive.
Sir Walter Scott 

(More proof of the 1988 Andrew Krieger timeline and the discrepancies with John Key’s timeline)

I took me a while but I finally had the time to read through the 15 page unauthorised Biography of John Key published in the New Zealand Herald of 19 July. It made for very interesting reading indeed.

As was to be predicted the editorial painted a picture of John Key as a squeaky clean, hard-working and driven man with a big heart. We are told that he is a good family man and was a good son to his mother whom he called everyday while working abroad. He miraculously avoided to be involved in the NZ dollar attack in 1987 by Andrew Krieger although he worked with him. He did not muck up during the Asian crisis whatever that may mean and was appalled at the level of risk Merrill Lynch, his former boss had taken on with Financial products now causing the subprime crisis. Lucky for him he again escaped involvement because those financial product were only developed in 2004-2005. He has worked in London, Australia and Singapore and again he has avoided another not so nice association; the sewer that is Wall street, New York from whence all the bad news about the subprime crisis seems to originate.

We, so we are told, have nothing to fear from this honest hard working man who, after becoming financially independent through his own hard slog, came home to fulfil his childhood dream: To lead this country to the greatness he feels it deserves.

That’s nice, I feel a whole lot better now… but wait I have this strange nagging feeling that just won’t go away. Something isn’t quit right. It sits uncomfortable in the back of my head as I try to get my thoughts straight. I decide to go back to earlier interviews and reread them to see if I can get a handle on that uncomfortable nagging.
This is a 3 part response to the NZ Herald editorial:
Part 1, John Key and the 1987 attack on the NZ dollar.

In the autumn of 1987 Andrew Krieger, the Global head of the Foreign Exchange of the Bankers Trust New York launched a brutal and spectacular attack on the New Zealand dollar. He thought that the dollar was overvalued and bet that the dollar would fall. In order to force the dollar down he started to sell NZ dollars in such huge amounts that de dollar indeed fell in the order of 5% to 10% depending on whose version you believe. He bet such a huge amount of money on the fall of the NZ $ (again depending on who you believe anywhere between $ 600 million to $ 1 billion) and as such he became a legend in the financing world.

The attack was so spectacular that the Federal Reserve had to contact the Bankers Trust to inquire why the bank seemed so hell-bent on creating instability in the currency. The risks were huge to the NZ economy and could easily have caused a massive economic setback and distress for the NZ population.

So it is not hard to understand that John Key who after all has come back to do “good” for New Zealanders is more than eager to distance himself from this episode of Foreign exchange history. It would not come across as very nice if it turned out he was involved in the predatorial attack on the NZ dollar that could have cost a lot of his prospective voters their livelihoods.


In the NZH editorial for the first time we learn the year in which John Key went to work for the Bankers trust. In fact it is mentioned two times. The NZH article states that John Key went to work for the Bankers Trust in 1988 and Andrew Krieger made his attack in the autumn of 1987. In fact the article goes as far as saying that:
As the record book shows, when Krieger made his most famous speculative raid on the kiwi in 1987, Key had yet to start at Bankers Trust. Krieger believed the kiwi was over-valued and bet on a fall, selling hundreds of millions of dollars at a time, and once pushing the price of the kiwi down 5 per cent in a day, and eventually, he claims in his book, The Money Bazaar, helped begin a fall in the value of the New Zealand dollar. The strategy was to rebuy when the kiwi bottomed out at 59c.
The Reserve Bank was alarmed but the crisis passed. Key was not at BT during Krieger’s spectacular raid, but when he began running the dealing room at BT in 1988 he dealt with the New York-based American, a relationship he was comfortable with. He told the Sunday Star-Times earlier this year, that Krieger “was a very intelligent guy.”
Key’s then-boss, Gavin Walker, points out that working with Krieger was part of the job. “Managing that relationship on behalf of the dealing room was part of John’s responsibilities. He knew everything Krieger was executing on our desk.”

So that’s settled then, John Key did not work for the Bankers Trust when Andrew Krieger attacked the currency.

See, this is where the nagging started again and I went back through my notes on John Key’s career. This is what I found:

Andrew Krieger left the Bankers trust of New York in february of 1988.

I remembered Googling Andrew Krieger when I started my research on John Key (I have done research on Labour as well, I like to know who makes the big desicions in the country I’m living in) and up turned an interesting article in the New York Times about Andrew Krieger and his currency manipulations. It turns out that Andrew Krieger left the Bankers trust to work for George Soros after he only got paid a paltry $ 3 mill. as a reward for the fact that he made some $ 300 mill. in profits as a result of his attack on the NZ $.

The NZH goes on to say:

In 1988, Key was on the verge of leaving Elders, unshackling himself from a three-year contract after agreeing to three months’ “gardening leave” before taking up his new job at Bankers Trust, newly established in New Zealand.

This means that in order for him to be able to start working for the Bankers trust John Key had to wait three months before starting in order for Elders to keep their customers and prevent customer poaching. If this is so then there is a problem.

If Andrew Krieger left the Bankers Trust in February 1988 and John Key had to wait three months before starting to work for the Bankers trust then, even if those three months started on the 1 of January 1988, he would not have been able to work with Andrew Krieger as a customer because Andrew Krieger was no longer working for the Bankers Trust. In fact he would have missed Andrew Krieger by four to seven weeks. 

In fact Andrew Krieger went to work for George Soros in a senior management position from April until June 1988 and left the currency trading altogether until he made a return in the year 1990.

In an interview with John Key in the Sunday star

He formed what was to be a lucrative relationship with 32-year-old currency trader Andy Krieger, based at Bankers Trust in New York, who began putting hundreds of millions of dollars of business through Key’s dealing room.

The same article states that Andrew Krieger was working for the Bankerst Trust while doing business with John Key

While Key can’t remember whether he actually executed some of the sells for Krieger’s 1987 speculative play on the kiwi, the timing suggests he did not. But Krieger continued his high-rolling punts on the Kiwi dollar after his big win, often placing $50m buy or sell orders with Key and his dealing room. The huge flow of business from Krieger and others at Bankers Trust in New York soon turned the local branch into the number one dealing room in New Zealand, cementing Key’s success and fattening his bonus packets.

While this could be a once off mistake made by the journalists who wrote the article, the quotes leaves no doubt that John Key was taking big orders from Andrew Krieger:

Key remembers getting a call from Krieger soon after he started at Bankers Trust. The New York trader’s first question was about New Zealand’s GDP and money supply.

“It was really the management of that relationship on behalf of the dealing room that John had responsibility for,” says Gavin Walker, former chief executive of Bankers Trust in New Zealand. “He knew everything that was going on in terms of the orders that Krieger was executing on our desk.”

this leaves me with several questions:

If Andrew Krieger had already done the dastardly raid on our currency then why does he call a total new comer in the bank about the state of the our currency?

If John Key arrives at the Bankers Trust sometime after Andrew Krieger has left than why does the article describe John Key as taking big orders from Andrew Krieger and others from the Bankers trust?

And if John Key arrived after Andrew Krieger left the Bankers trust than why is Gavin Walker the former chief executive of Bankers Trust NZ quoted as saying: “It was really the management of that relationship on behalf of the dealing room that John had responsibility for.” ? 

It can be debated that the journalists Gillian Tett and Ruth Laugesen were confused about a timeline but it becomes harder to believe that both John Key and Gavin Walker would be mistaken about telephone calls or John Key’s function in the dealing room. If John Key remembers receiving a telephone call from Krieger wanting information about the currency it is very likely this has happened and if Walker says that the management of the relation with Krieger was John Keys job than it most likely was.

Now this is where the NZH article can bring some form of verification. Surely the three experienced journalists, Eugene Bingham, Carroll du Chateau and Paula Oliver who were tasked with writing and researching the article would have checked, checked and double checked the timeline they so proudly presented on the website of the NZH.

But again they reiterate the same confused timeline: John Key arrived sometime in 1988 and began a trading relationship with Andrew Krieger the New York based trader. Again Gavin Walker is quoted as saying that it was John Key’s job to deal with Krieger, who by then was long gone from the Bankers trust.

Key was not at BT during Krieger’s spectacular raid, but when he began running the dealing room at BT in 1988 he dealt with the New York-based American, a relationship he was comfortable with. He told the Sunday Star-Times earlier this year, that Krieger “was a very intelligent guy.”

Key’s then-boss, Gavin Walker, points out that working with Krieger was part of the job. “Managing that relationship on behalf of the dealing room was part of John’s responsibilities. He knew everything Krieger was executing on our desk.”

Andrew Krieger started his own consultancy business for several years and according to the man himself he left Soros very quick because he felt he was in a rut doing the same crazy hours and he felt like spending more time with his family so the old fire wasn’t burning any more and yet we are told in two seperate interviews that managing the huge amounts of money Krieger, at the Bankers Trust was selling and buying was John Key’s main job at the Bankers Trust NZ.

My conclusion has to be as follows: John Key and Krieger have clearly worked together as money traders, this is confirmed in two interviews. The NZH would have the least reason to maintain these ties since it still puts Andrew Krieger and John Key together as currency traders, while the focus of this part of the article was to allow John Key to distance himself from the biggest attack on the NZ dollar in the history of New Zealand. It is confirmed by John Key himself and by his then boss Gavin Walker. Since Andrew Krieger according to the New York Times left in February of 1988 and according to Andrew Krieger he even left earlier then that it is impossible for John Key and Andrew Krieger to have done the alleged dealing in 1988. John Key according to himself left Elders in 1988 and he had to wait three months before he could begin at the Bankers Trust making trading with Andrew Krieger as a Bankers trust banker impossible. Andrew Krieger left the currency trading market in June 1988 after a three month stint as a senior portfolio manager for Soros, in all probablity not dealing himself but mamaging his junior portfolio managers. 

We don’t know when excactly John Key started to work for the Bankers Trust but even if the three month period started on the 1th of January 1988 he would still have missed Andrew Krieger at the Bankers Trust and the relationship as both John Key and Gavin Walker describe it would not have been possible. Since both men adamantly describe such a relationship in two different articles, one written by two journalists and the other by three journalist who should have been able between the lot of them spot the error in the timeline, I can only draw one conclusion: John Key worked with Andrew Krieger and indeed managed his account but he did not do so in 1988. Whether by design, ommission or a faulty memory John Key and Gavin Walker gave correct information when talking about John Key and Andrew Krieger’s relationship but since 1988 was impossible they must have given incorrect information about the period in which this took place. John Key and Andrew Krieger can only have worked toegether in 1987 thus putting John Key firmly in the traders chair on the other side of the telephone line to the Bankers Trust New York were Andrew Krieger was giving orders in what was to be the biggest attack on the New Zealand currency putting tens of thousands of New Zealand jobs and incomes at risk. 

Tags: 1987, Andrew Krieger, Attack on NZ $, Bankers trust, John Key

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One Response to “John Key and the things he does not want you to know: Part 1, the attack on the NZ dollar in 1987”
Trader brings life after the flood
A money dealer has a mission to help tsunami victims
By James Doran 
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ANDREW KRIEGER picked his way among the flattened houses and splintered trees that used to line the streets of Pudupattinam and felt overcome by nausea. Before the Asian tsunami struck, this village in Tamil Nadu had been a thriving fishing community. 

“The destruction was terrible enough,” he says. “But then I realised I was in fact walking on top of many — perhaps hundreds — of bodies. That realisation, and the awful stench, was one of the worst things I have ever experienced.” 

However, Krieger, a tall, quietly spoken 48-year-old, is not another aid worker or journalist filing a report on the disaster. He is one of Wall Street’s foremost currency traders, who was once groomed as a successor to George Soros. 

“I was at my home in the Catskills with my family when the tsunami struck,” Krieger says from his corner office overlooking New York’s George Washington Bridge. “I had to go. There was no question.” 

In the weeks since then, he has established his own private relief effort, spending millions of dollars from his own fortune, and raising much more, to rebuild lives and villages in a corner of the world that he loves more than his New York home. 

Krieger is the chief executive of North Bridge Capital, a currency trading firm. But the money markets are no longer his passion. His heart and mind are in India. He was ten years old when he began to nurture a love of the subcontinent, its people, culture and religions. 

“I picked up a book on yoga and Western philosophy and was fascinated. I was way too iconoclastic for things like the Beatles.” His parents, a conventional Jewish couple from Wilmington, Delaware, thought he was a bit “whacked out”. 

Krieger left university with a degree in Western philosophy and a PhD in Sanskrit, but chose not to continue as a translator of ancient Hindu texts. His professor suggested that he study for an MBA. “It’s like a credit card for people who don’t know what to do,” Krieger says. 

After taking the advice of a friend, who told him to shave, Krieger was hired as a foreign exchange trader by Salomon Brothers in the summer of 1984. In 1986 he became global head of currency options trading at Bankers Trust, where he increased profits from $56 million to $512 million in a year. 

However, he had a disagreement with the firm over his bonus and left. He joined George Soros and was being groomed to be the great man’s successor, but instead, in 1988, he set up his own firm. 

Krieger had an unorthodox approach to trading currency options. “When I was trading, most of my insights came to me in dreams,” he says. “There is a way of training the mind to visualise that is based in ancient yogic teaching.” 

Those dreams changed after his second visit to India. “I first visited India in 1988 and was very overwhelmed by the experience. I felt I needed a guide. So I offered out a prayer to the Universe to find my guru.” In 1989 he met Indira Devri, a guru whom he calls Ma, who invited him to her ashram. 

“When I met Ma my dreams about the markets stopped. So,” he says, as if describing a perfectly ordinary switch of strategy, “we use computer models now.” 

Krieger’s dreams today revolve around rebuilding coastal India. After the tsunami struck he hired a cargo aircraft, loaded it with $3.6 million (£1.9 million) of medicine and tried to fly it to India. But the Indian Government wanted to charge him $750,000 import duty. So instead he flew it to Sri Lanka. 

Fresh drinking water was running out in India because supplies were contaminated. Krieger had the answer. “My home in the Catskills sits on millions of gallons of natural springs and I have my own bottled water company,” he says. “So I thought I would get a container ship and fill it up.” 

A week later he was in Tamil Nadu, overwhelmed by the destruction and despair. “On our second day there was a false alarm that another wave was coming,” he says. “Many people walked slowly to the shore and sat down, simply waiting to be taken away by the sea. They were so depressed.” 

He felt compelled to help to rebuild not just their homes, but their spirits. With the help of Hope Worldwide, an American charity, he devised what he calls a “life kit”, consisting of a fishing boat with nets and motor; a prefabricated house, food, equipment, medicines and clothes to last the average family three to five months. Each kit costs $5,500 and is wholly sourced in India, making delivery quick and duty-free. 

“NGOs (non-governmental organisations) mean well, but what happens is somebody shows up with some sacks of grain and gives them out, they take a few pictures and then they leave. It is costly and inefficient and ineffective.” 

Krieger’s relief effort is now an official charity, IMGE Emergency Relief Fund. The “life kits” are part of a programme called Save The Family. 

“I can export this model all over the world, wherever it is needed,” Krieger says with zeal. “Give me $5 million and that’s 1,000 families back in business.” He is going back to Tamil Nadu in two weeks to deliver another 20 boats. “I can’t wait,” he says. “When the boats arrive we are just bathed in an ocean of love from the people. It is the greatest feeling.”

KRIEGER’S LIFE KIT

One thatched-roof hut 
Cooking utensils and stove 
Food and supplies for two months 
Furniture and bedding 
Children’s books 
School uniforms 
Clothes 
One glass-fibre boat 
One outboard motor 
One 1km fishing net 

Total cost: $5,500
This is the Jew who would be Prime Minister! Made his fortune by working hand-in-glove with a fellow Jew who was mounting brutal attacks on the NZ$. Can't stop a Jew being a Jew I guess.



John Key
A special profile on the man who would be PM
By GILLIAN TETT and RUTH LAUGESEN - Sunday Star Times | Friday, 08 February 2008

BRENDON O'HAGAN/Sunday Star-Times


FIRST LIFE: As a money trader in London it's speculated John Key was earning $5 million a year - that's $96,000 a week.


He used to work hand in glove with the foreign bankers who led raids on the New Zealand dollar. Now John Key a man who has spent most of his career out of the public gaze wants to run the economy. In a special report, London's Financial Times and the Sunday Star-Times shed new light on Key's former life as a London currency trader.

John Key wants to be running New Zealand by the end of the year because, like all other politicians, "I believe the future of our country can be really great."

But 20 years ago, he worked closely with a famed currency trader who mounted a brutal speculative attack on the Kiwi dollar [the Jew 'Andy Kreigar'] The attack, which has entered forex (foreign exchange) trading legend for its scale, audacity and profitability, prompted Reserve Bank alarm that the currency would collapse.

It was a world in which Key moved easily, swimming with the financial sharks.

...

[Key] formed what was to be a lucrative relationship with 32-year-old currency trader Andy Krieger, based at Bankers Trust in New York, who began putting hundreds of millions of dollars of business through Key's dealing room.

Krieger was the man who a few months earlier had entered forex legend with a massive speculative raid on the kiwi. As Krieger later explained in his book The Money Bazaar, he believed the kiwi was overvalued, and began betting on a fall, selling the New Zealand dollar heavily. Once the currency had found what he believed to be a floor, he bought again at a much lower price, making a profit on the transaction.

...

[Key claims] "I can't remember whether Andy Krieger was buying or selling, it might have been selling with me, but at the time it would have reflected the economic fundamentals at play in New Zealand.
From a UK TimesOnLine article, which, while helpfully disclosing the Jewish ethnicity of Krieger's parents, neglects to point out the broader Jewish connection between Salomon Brothers, George Soros and his Sanskrit scholar protogé :
Krieger is the chief executive of North Bridge Capital, a currency trading firm. But the money markets are no longer his passion. His heart and mind are in India. He was ten years old when he began to nurture a love of the subcontinent, its people, culture and religions.

“I picked up a book on yoga and Western philosophy and was fascinated. I was way too iconoclastic for things like the Beatles.” His parents, a conventional Jewish couple from Wilmington, Delaware, thought he was a bit “whacked out”.

Krieger left university with a degree in Western philosophy and a PhD in Sanskrit, but chose not to continue as a translator of ancient Hindu texts. His professor suggested that he study for an MBA. “It’s like a credit card for people who don’t know what to do,” Krieger says.

After taking the advice of a friend, who told him to shave, Krieger was hired as a foreign exchange trader by Salomon Brothers in the summer of 1984. In 1986 he became global head of currency options trading at Bankers Trust, where he increased profits from $56 million to $512 million in a year.

However, he had a disagreement with the firm over his bonus and left. He joined George Soros and was being groomed to be the great man’s successor, but instead, in 1988, he set up his own firm.

Krieger had an unorthodox approach to trading currency options. “When I was trading, most of my insights came to me in dreams,” he says. “There is a way of training the mind to visualise that is based in ancient yogic teaching.”
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The foreign exchange industry exists whenever one currency is traded for another. It is by far the largest market in the world in terms of cash value traded, and includes trading between large banks, central banks, currency speculators, multinational corporations, governments, and other financial markets and institutions. The market is unique due to several factors including trading volume, the extreme liquidity of the market, geographical dispersion, the 24 hour trade day, the large number and variety of traders in the market and the variety of factors that affect exchange rates. 

Among these factors that affect exchange rates is the news. This is one of the greatest advantages that the forex market has over all of the other markets; there is no such thing as insider trading. All a trader needs to do in the forex market is to stay abreast of the news, develop an opinion and apply that opinion to the markets. Some of the best currency trades in the world have been placed by investors following the news and taking advantage of the information given to them. 

During the summer of 1992 there was wide spread speculation that England was going to be rejected from the European Monetary Union, which would severely hurt the English pound. George Soros, founder and head of one of the largest hedge funds in the world, The Quantum Fund, took advantage of England's poor fortune, by placing a ten billion short position in the market. The Bank of England attempted to stabilize the pound's value by intervening and depleting all of their foreign currency reserves. Despite their efforts, on September 16, 1992, known around the world as Black Wednesday, the fight was over and the pound plummeted. England was forced to withdraw from the European Monetary Union and in one day, Soros earned $1 billion. He is now known as the man who broke the Bank of England. 

Stanley Druckenmiller, former money manager for George Soros, now runs Duquesne Capital which he founded in 1981. In 1989, he developed one of his greatest ideas. While working at George Soros's Quantum Fund, Druckenmiller bought two billion German marks. He believed that due to the falling of the Berlin wall and the reunification of Germany, the deutschemark was set for a huge rally. That one idea made him a very rich man, with the deutschemark climbing enormously in value over the next few years. Druckenmiller's exact profits on this investment remain unknown, but the Quantum Fund posted returns of over 60%. 

Andy Krieger, once a star at Banker's Trust before resigning to work for no other than Mr. George Soros, is best remembered in New Zealand. During the U.S. stock market crash of 1987, traders were buying up any currency that was appreciating against the dollar, the most popular being the New Zealand dollar or the "kiwi" as it is known in the currency market. Mr. Krieger, knowing that this rally could never last and believing that the kiwi was one of the most overvalued currencies in the market, shorted 200 million kiwi which is more than the entire money supply of New Zealand. The currency not surprisingly buckled under this pressure, allowing Kreiger to cover his positions and walk away with a huge profit. .

All of these trades have one common underlying factor. Each of these traders had an opinion that was based on pure economic, fundamental data. Due to markets being more efficient and traders being more regulated, it would be nearly impossible to replicate any of these trades, however it would be rather easy to replicate the foundation on which each and every one of these trades were based.
The Greatest Currency Trades Ever Made


The foreign exchange (forex) market is the largest market in the world because currency is changing hands whenever goods and services are traded between nations. The sheer size of the transactions going on between nations provides arbitrage opportunities for speculators, because the currency values fluctuate by the minute. Usually these speculators make many trades for small profits, but sometimes a big position is taken up for a huge profit or, when things go wrong, a huge loss. In this article, we’ll look at the greatest currency trades ever made. 

How the Trades Are Made
First, it is essential to understand how money is made in the forex market. Although some of the techniques are familiar to stock investors, currency trading is a realm of investing in and of itself. A currency trader can make one of four bets on the future value of a currency: 
Shorting a currency means that the trader believes that the currency will go down compared to another currency.
Going long means that the trader thinks the currency will increase in value compared to another currency. 
The other two bets have to do with the amount of change in either direction - whether the trader thinks it will move a lot or not much at all - and are known by the provocative names of strangle and straddle. 

Once you’re decided on which bet you want to place, there are many ways to take up the position. For example, if you wanted to short the Canadian dollar (CAD), the simplest way would be to take out a loan in Canadian dollars that you will be able to pay back at a discount as the currency devalues (assuming you’re correct). 

This is much too small and slow for true forex traders, so they use puts, calls, other options and forwards to build up and leverage their positions. It’s the leveraging in particular that makes some trades worth millions, and even billions, of dollars. 

No. 3: Andy Krieger Vs. The Kiwi
In 1987, Andy Krieger, a 32-year-old currency trader at Bankers Trust, was carefully watching the currencies that were rallying against the dollar following the Black Monday crash. As investors and companies rushed out of the American dollar and into other currencies that had suffered less damage in the market crash, there were bound to be some currencies that would become fundamentally overvalued, creating a good opportunity for arbitrage. The currency Krieger targeted was the New Zealand dollar, also known as the kiwi. 

Using the relatively new techniques afforded by options, Krieger took up a short position against the kiwi worth hundreds of millions. In fact, his sell orders were said to exceed the money supply of New Zealand. The kiwi dropped sharply as the selling pressure combined with the lack of currency in circulation. It yo-yoed between a 3% and 5% loss while Krieger made millions for his employers. 

One part of the legend recounts a worried New Zealand government official calling up Krieger’s bosses and threatening Bankers Trust to try to get Krieger out of the kiwi. Krieger later left Bankers Trust to go work for George Soros. 

No. 2: Stanley Druckenmiller Bets on the Mark – Twice
Stanley Druckenmiller made millions by making two long bets in the same currency while working as a trader for George Soros’ Quantum Fund. 

Druckenmiller’s first bet came when the Berlin Wall fell. The perceived difficulties of reunification between East and West Germany had depressed the German mark to a level that Druckenmiller thought extreme. He initially put a multimillion-dollar bet on a future rally until Soros told him to increase his purchase to 2 billion German marks. Things played out according to plan and the long position came to be worth millions of dollars, helping push the returns of the Quantum Fund over 60%.

Possibly due to the success of his first bet, Druckenmiller also made the German mark an integral part of the greatest currency trade in history. A few years later, while Soros was busy breaking the Bank of England, Druckenmiller was going long in the mark on the assumption that the fallout from his boss’s bet would drop the British pound against the mark. Druckenmiller was confident that he and Soros were right and showed this by buying British stocks. He believed that Britain would have to slash lending rates, thus stimulating business, and that the cheaper pound would actually mean more exports compared to European rivals. Following this same thinking, Druckenmiller bought German bonds on the expectation that investors would move to bonds as German stocks showed less growth than the British. It was a very complete trade that added considerably to the profits of Soros’ main bet against the pound. 

No. 1: George Soros Vs. The British Pound
The British pound shadowed the German mark leading up to the 1990s even though the two countries were very different economically. Germany was the stronger country despite lingering difficulties from reunification, but Britain wanted to keep the value of the pound above 2.7 marks. Attempts to keep to this standard left Britain with high interest rates and equally high inflation, but it demanded a fixed rate of 2.7 marks to a pound as a condition of entering the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM).

Many speculators, George Soros chief among them, wondered how long fixed exchange rates could fight market forces, and they began to take up short positions against the pound. Soros borrowed heavily to bet more on a drop in the pound. Britain raised its interest rates to double digits to try to attract investors. The government was hoping to alleviate the selling pressure by creating more buying pressure. 

Paying out interest costs money, however, and the British government realized that it would lose billions trying to artificially prop up the pound. It withdrew from the ERM and the value of the pound plummeted against the mark. Soros made at least $1 billion off this one trade. For the British government’s part, the devaluation of the pound actually helped, as it forced the excess interest and inflation out of the economy, making it an ideal environment for businesses. 

A Thankless Job
Any discussion around the top currency trades always revolves around George Soros, because many of these traders have a connection to him and his Quantum Fund. After retiring from active management of his funds to focus on philanthropy, Soros made comments about currency trading that were seen as expressing regret that he made his fortune attacking currencies. It was an odd change for Soros who, like many traders, made money by removing pricing inefficiencies from the market. Britain did lose money because of Soros and he did force the country to swallow the bitter pill of withdrawing from the ERM, but many people also see these drawbacks to the trade as necessary steps that helped Britain emerge stronger. If there hadn’t been a drop in the pound, Britain’s economic problems may have dragged on as politicians kept trying to tweak the ERM.

Conclusion
A country can benefit from a weak currency as much as from a strong one. With a weak currency, the domestic products and assets become cheaper to international buyers and exports increase. In the same way, domestic sales increase as foreign products go up in price due to the higher cost of importing. There were very likely many people in Britain and New Zealand who were pleased when speculators brought down the overvalued currencies. Of course, there were also importers and others who were understandably upset. A currency speculator makes money by forcing a country to face realities it would rather not face. Although it’s a dirty job, someone has to do it.
Top Trader Quits to Start Own Firm
By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH
Published: Tuesday, June 7, 1988
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Andrew J. Krieger, the successful young currency trader whose departure from the Bankers Trust Company in February set the Wall Street rumor mill buzzing, is quitting his second job this year. Mr. Krieger, who joined Soros Fund Management Inc. in April as senior portfolio manager, announced yesterday that he would form his own trading company, Krieger & Associates Ltd.

Mr. Krieger said he had already been offered half a billion dollars from investors interested in having him trade for them.

''I've wanted to form my own firm for some time, so the timing seemed natural,'' he said.

Mr. Krieger and his wife, Suri, are starting the Karma Foundation, to provide funds for educational purposes and to help the impaired. Mr. Krieger said 10 percent of his yearly profits would go to the foundation, and that 10 percent of his personal assets would go into it immediately.

Mr. Krieger, 32 years old, would not talk numbers, but he is clearly discussing hefty sums. Mr. Krieger's currency trading earned about $300 million for Bankers Trust last year -and a $3 million bonus for him.

Mr. Krieger said he was leaving Soros on good terms. He will continue to trade for that company until June 30, a rather unusual arrangement after a trader has served notice.

When Mr. Krieger left Bankers Trust, rumors abounded that he had had a personality conflict at the bank or that something untoward had been going on. No one could believe that he would just walk away from so much money. No scandal materialized.

Mr. Krieger expects his new firm to be operating by August. The office will be in Englewood Cliffs, N.J., a short ride from the Kriegers' Bergen County home. ''I left Bankers because my hours were so extraordinarily long that they interfered with my family life,'' said Mr. Krieger, who has four children.
Най-големите валутни спекулации в историята

09 Юли 2009 | 11:12 
 

Валутният пазар е най-големият пазар в света, като валути се обменят винаги, когато услуги и стоки се търгуват между нациите. Големият размер на транзакциите предлага възможности за арбитраж за спекулантите, защото курсовете се движат всяка секунда. Обикновено тези спекуланти правят много сделки за малки печалби, но понякога големи позиции се заемат за голяма печалба или, ако нещата тръгна на зле-голяма загуба. Тук ще се спрем на най-големите валутни сделки, правени някога, подредени от investopedia.com.

Първо е важно да се разбере как се правят пари на форекс пазара. Пред всеки трейдър има четири възможности за заемане на позиции: 

- Да скъси валутата-означава, че спекулантът очаква, че тя ще поевтинее спрямо друга валута.

- Да заеме дълга позиция-означава, че трейдърът предполага, че валутата ще поскъпва спрямо друга валута.

- Другите два залога са свързани с това колко ще се промени стойността в различните посоки- дали спекуланта мисли, че много или не.

Веднъж като е взел решение относно каква позиция да заеме, има много начини да го направи. Примерно, ако реши да скъси канадския долар, най-простият начин е да вземе кредит във валутата и после да го върне, след като той се е обезценил.

Това разбира се е твърде малък и бавен вариант за големите спекуланти, така че те използват различни опции и форуърди, за да изградят и ливъриджнат позицията си. Точно използването на ливъридж прави възможно сделките да достигнат милиарди долари.

№3: Анди Крийгер срещу Кивито

През 1987 Анди Крийгер, 32-годишен трейдър към Bankers Trust, внимателно следи валутите, които поскъпват срещу долара след борсовия крах известен като Черния понеделник. Докато инвеститорите и компаниите бягат от американския долар в други валути, неизбежно е някои от тях да станат фундаментално надценени, създавайки добра възможност за арбитраж. Валутата, към която Крийгер се насочва, е новозеландският долар, наричан Киви.

Използвайки сравнително нови техники чрез опции, Крийгер заема къса позицията на стойност стотици милиони. На практика, неговите продажби в определен момент са надхвърляли паричното предлагане на Нова Зеландия. Кивито пада рязко под натиска на продажбите и малкото валута в обръщение. Кивито губи между 3 и 5 на сто, докато Крийгер прави милиони.

Една част от легендата твърди, че разтревожените власти в Нова Зеландия са се обадили на шефовете на Крийгер в Bankers Trust със заплахи, за да го накарат да излезе от кивито. Той по- късно напуска Bankers Trust и отива да работи за Джордж Сорос.

№2: Стенли Дракънмилър залага на марката два пъти

Стенли Дракънмилър прави милиони със два дълги залога в една валута, докато работи за Джордж Сорос в прословутия Quantum Fund.

Дракънмилър първо залага, когато Берлинската стена пада. Очакваните трудности в обединението на Източна и Западна Германия свалят немската марка до ниво, което Дракънмилър счита за крайно. Първоначално залага доста милиони за бъдещо рали, като в последствие Сорос му казва да увеличи покупките си до 2 млрд. марки. Нещата се развиват по план, което помага доходността на Quantum Fund да прескочи 60%.

Вероятно паради успеха на първата си сделка, Дракънмилър също прави германската марка част от най-голямата валутна спекулация в историята. Няколко години по-късно, докато Сорос пречупва Английската централна банка, Дракънмилър пак заема дълга позиция в марки, като предполага, че сривът на британския паунд под натиска на шефа му ще го свали и срещу марката. Дракънмилър е убеден, че той и Сорос са прави и показват това, като купуват британски акции. 

Той вярва, че Великобритания ще трябва да свали лихвите, за да стимулира бизнеса и по-евтиният паунд ще означава повече износ към европейските партньори. Следвайки тази линия, Дракънмилър купува германски облигации поради очакването, че инвеститорите ще се изместят към тях, докато немските акции ще показват по-малък ръст от британските. Било е добре изпипана сделка, допълваща печалби към основния залог на Сорос срещу паунда.

№ 1: Джордж Сорос срещу британския паунд

Британският паунд засенчва германската марка до 90-те години, въпреки че двете страни са доста различаващи се икономически. Германия е била по-силна, въпреки трудностите от обединението, но Великобритания е искала да запази паунда над 2.7 марки. Опитите да постигне това оставят страната с високи лихви и инфлация, но се е изисквало поддържането на тези нива, за да влезе в European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM).

Много спекуланти, и най-вече Джордж Сорос, са се чудели колко дълго този курс може да пребори пазарните сили и започват да заемат къси позиции срещу паунда. Сорос заема сериозни суми, за да заложи срещу валутата. Великобритания повишава лихвите до двуцифрени числа, за да се опита да спре инвеститорите.

Плащането на високи лихви струва пари и британското правителство осъзнава, че ще загуби милиарди, опитвайки се да спре спада на паунда. Великобритания се оттегля от ERM и паундът се срива срещу марката. Сорос прави най-малко 1 млрд. долара от тази сделка. От гледна точка на правителството на Великобритания, обезценката всъщност помага, като премахва напрежението върху лихвите и инфлацията.

Заключение

Всяка страна може да извлече ползи от слаба или силна валута. При слабата валута, местните стоки и активи стават по-евтини за инвеститорите и износът нараства. По същия начин местните стоки се купуват повече, защото вносните стават по-скъпи. Имало е много хора във Великобритания и Нова Зеландия, които са били доволни, когато спекулантите са свалили надценените валути. 

Разбира се, имало и такива като вносителите, които са били не особено радостни. Валутните спекуланти правят пари, като принуждават страните да се изправят пред реалностите и затова не са сред най-обичаните.
Three Trades That (Almost) Took Countries Down And Made Traders Richer Than Rich 
1. The Take On The Kiwi

Andy Krieger, on a first glance, was just another graduate from a business school to start at a bank. In 1986, Andy joined Bankers Trust as forex trader. Little did the world know that only one year later he would be one of the most aggressive (and successful) traders in the world. 


In 1987 Andy Krieger declared war on the New Zealand dollar. 


By using options and extended leverages, together with an unpredecented trading budget of $700 million from Bankers Trust, Andy Krieger sold short the entire monetary supply of New Zealand. In a matter of hours, the New Zealand dollar plunged 10 percent against the U.S. dollar. Immediately, the New Zealand central bank angrily complained to Bankers Trust. The CEO of Bankers Trust only admitted: “We didn’t take too big a position for Bankers Trust but we may have taken too big a position for New Zealnd.”
Andy Krieger resigned the following year, disappointed that Bankers Trust had paid him only $3 million for this trade that had netted the bank a profit of more than $300 million. 

2. Stanley Druckenmiller Bets On The Mark

Stanley Druckenmiller is known for working with George Soros, but he may well be the guy to give Soros the idea to trade big against the Pound. 

Druckenmiller's first bet came when East and West Germany reunited. The German mark was depressed to a level that Druckenmiller thought extreme. With Soros approving, he placed options to buy 2 billion German marks. Things played out according to plan and the long position came to be worth millions of dollars, helping push the returns of Soros' Quantum Fund over 60%.

1. George Soros Make A Billion

In 1992, George Soros was convinced that the Bank of England would not be able to avoid devaluating the pound. With that belief, Soros went full in - and accumulated a short position of $10 billion on the British pound to buy it back once it was devalued. When that happened, Soros made at least $1 billion on the entire trade.

This devaluation had huge political consequences on Great Britain, for example by forcing it to drop out of the European Exchange Rate Mechanism. After this event, Soros was the man who "broke the Bank of England."