
Rogue Trader
A rogue trader is a trader who acts recklessly and independently of others, usually to the detriment of the institution that employs the trader and perhaps clients. One has to wonder how many small-time rogue traders are quietly fired by a bank because the bank does not want the negative publicity that comes with news that internal trading controls were not properly developed or implemented. Among the most notorious rogue traders in recent years is Nick Leeson, a former derivatives trader at the Singapore office of Britain's Barings Bank. A rogue trader is an employee of a financial firm who engages in unauthorized, often high-risk activities that result in large losses for the firm. Rogue traders often try to hide losses after making risky bets since there is a moral hazard situation: if the bet pays off they can earn huge bonuses, if it fails they'll only get fired. In 1995, Leeson incurred heavy losses through the unauthorized trading of large amounts of Nikkei futures and options.

What Is a Rogue Trader?
A rogue trader is a trader who acts recklessly and independently of others, usually to the detriment of the institution that employs the trader and perhaps clients. Rogue traders typically play with high-risk investments that can produce huge losses or gains.
Rogue traders, though, are only labeled as such if they lose, which generates incentives that create moral hazard. If their trades are enormously profitable, no one calls them "rogue", and in fact they are more likely to receive a huge bonus - but if they're risky bets lose they are rogue and can cost the firm millions or even billions of dollars in losses.



Rogue Traders Explained
Banks over the years have developed sophisticated Value-at-Risk (VaR) models to control the trading of instruments — which desks can trade them, when they can trade them, and how much in a given period. In particular, the limit of a trade is carefully set and monitored, not only to protect the bank but also to satisfy regulators. Internal controls, however, are not 100% foolproof. A determined trader can find a way to circumvent the system to try to reap outsized gains.
Often they are caught in bad trades and then forced by regulators to be publicly exposed — to the embarrassment of the bank. One has to wonder how many small-time rogue traders are quietly fired by a bank because the bank does not want the negative publicity that comes with news that internal trading controls were not properly developed or implemented.
Examples of Rogue Traders
Among the most notorious rogue traders in recent years is Nick Leeson, a former derivatives trader at the Singapore office of Britain's Barings Bank. In 1995, Leeson incurred heavy losses through the unauthorized trading of large amounts of Nikkei futures and options. Leeson took large derivative positions on the Nikkei that leveraged the amount of money at stake in the trades.
At one point, Leeson had 20,000 futures contracts worth more than $3 billion on the Nikkei. A large chunk of the losses came from the downturn in the Nikkei after a major earthquake in Japan caused a broad-based sell-off in the Nikkei within a week. The total loss to the 233-year-old Barings Bank was well over $1 billion and eventually led to its bankruptcy. Leeson was charged with fraud and served several years in a Singapore prison.
More recent examples include Bruno Iksil, the "London Whale" who racked up $6.2 billion in losses in 2012 at JP Morgan, and Jerome Kerviel, who was partly or wholly responsible for more than $7 billion in losses at Société Générale in 2007. JP Morgan CEO Jaime Dimon was slow to realize the magnitude of the "London Whale" losses, first calling the incident "a tempest in a teapot." Later, to his chagrin, he had to admit the truth about his bank's rogue trader.
Related terms:
Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy is a legal proceeding for people or businesses that are unable to repay their outstanding debts. read more
Barings Bank
Barings Banks was a British merchant bank that collapsed in 1995 after one of its traders lost over $1 billion in unauthorized trades. read more
Bear Straddle
A bear straddle is an options strategy that involves writing a put and a call on the same security with an identical expiration date and strike price. read more
and Example of a Blow Up
Blow up is a slang term used to describe the very public and amusing financial failure of an individual, corporation, bank, or hedge fund. read more
Derivative
A derivative is a securitized contract whose value is dependent upon one or more underlying assets. Its price is determined by fluctuations in that asset. read more
Fire Sale
A fire sale is the selling of a security or product at a price well below market value. read more
Fraud
Fraud, in a general sense, is purposeful deceit designed to provide the perpetrator with unlawful gain or to deny a right to a victim. read more
Internal Controls
Internal controls are processes and records that ensure the integrity of financial and accounting information and prevent fraud. read more
Jerome Kerviel
Jerome Kerviel was a trader for Société Générale charged with losing more than $7 billion in company assets through unauthorized trades between 2006 and 2008. read more
Moral Hazard
Moral hazard exists when a party to a transaction has an incentive to take unusual business risks because he is unlikely to suffer potential consequences. read more