Clint funds at FCMs are held in segregated accounts to protect them in the event the FCM goes bankrupt. What happens is the bank that the segregated funds are in goes bankrupt? Is the first 250K even protected by FDIC?
Quote from jeb9999:
Contrary to what the CFTC, the NFA, the futures exchanges and the futures brokers tell you, segregated accounts are not safe.
I am reposting what I posted on June 16, 2010 on page 3 of the thread
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=201683
"Just because there are no recent losses of segregated funds does not mean that such losses cannot happen tomorrow or at some other point in the future.
Segregated funds is a very weak customer protection scheme. Having to take legal action and waiting many months to over a year to get what is left of your money back is not proper customer protection. What the CFTC and the futures industry does not tell you is that you do not get back what is lost on the liquidation of open positons at arbitrary prices.
The Volume Investors clearing firm failure in 1985 was a major mess and embarrassment for the COMEX. The failure of the clearing firm Klein and Co. Futures Inc in May, 2000 was a similar ugly mess.
At some point in the future another futures clearing firm will fail and it will be an ugly mess."
The futures industry refuses to fix itself and the same nonsense repeats itself.
MF Global is just another one of the ugly messes.
The futures industry refuses to fix itself and the same nonsense repeats itself.
MF Global is just another one of the ugly messes.