Quote from Apex Capital:
Please cite a specific example in which the issues that have affected the closure of business at Refco Capital Markets have in fact, spilled over as you say into the futures division that handles segregated accounts.
While credit lines and banking relationships are critical to the Prime Brokerage and foreign-exchange and fixed-income over the counter trading along with securities lending, please show how this effects the futures division and their segregated accounts.
Last time I checked, Banks had very little to do with the margin FCM's extend to clients . . .
This might come as a surprise to you, but when you buy a futures contract it is simply a performance bond given to the Exchange Clearing Corporation. As a fellow ET poster has stated ( Brandonf ), Banks have nothing at all to do with this.
Again, please cite a specific example in which the issues that have affected the closure of business at Refco Capital Markets have in fact, spilled over as you say into the futures division that handles segregated accounts.
Problems haven't spilled over to the futures side yet. However, Refco did say earlier that Refco Securities was unaffected. Now they are winding it down. So it seems they have spilled over to the B/D side of their business.
I do agree with you though that someone will most likely take over Refco's futures business. But why would you leave your clients money in there until this thing gets sorted out? Even if the money is safe, who knows how long it will be tied up if this does end up spilling over into Refo LLC.
Quote from Apex Capital:
But for most of us average folk who trade futures, the "regulatory capital and excess regulatory capital of Refco, LLC, its regulated Futures Commission Merchant, and Refco Securities, LLC, its regulated Broker Dealer, have been substantially unaffected by the events of this week. The business at these subsidiaries is being conducted in the ordinary course including customer deposit and withdrawal of segregated funds."
The company continues with Goldman Sachs as a financial advisor and has hired Eugene Ludwig the former U.S. Comptroller of the Currency and former Chairman of the SEC and American Stock Exchange, Arthur Levitt to the board of directors as special advisors.
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/051013/nyth091.html?.v=27
