I guess the OP is correct. The financial health of the broker is less important than that of an under capitalized trader.
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MF Global Loss Narrows, Plans Up to 15% Staff Cut (Update1)
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By Matthew Leising
May 20 (Bloomberg) -- MF Global Holdings Ltd., the futures and options broker headed by former New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine, posted an unexpected loss in its fourth quarter and plans to eliminate as much as 15 percent of its workforce.
ââ¬ÅThis performance is simply unacceptable,ââ¬Â Corzine, who took over as chief executive officer in March, said in an e- mailed statement. MF Global fell as much as 8.9 percent in pre- market trading.
The loss attributable to common shareholders in the quarter ended March 31 narrowed to $96.5 million, or 78 cents a share, from $119.3 million, or 98 cents, a year earlier, the New York- based company said in a statement. Excluding certain costs, the company lost 17 cents. On that basis, MF Global was estimated to earn 1 cent, according to a Bloomberg survey of 11 analysts.
The company will freeze hiring, eliminate 10 percent to 15 percent of its 3,200 workers this quarter and is restructuring, postponing or terminating ââ¬Ånon-core initiativesââ¬Â and associated ââ¬Ånon-compensation expenses,ââ¬Â according to the release. Those steps should produce savings of more than $60 million in the next year, said Corzine, the former chairman of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
ââ¬ÅWe are taking decisive action to fundamentally improve the earnings profile of this company,ââ¬Â Corzine said.
Interest Income
Benchmark interest rates near zero percent have cut into the brokerââ¬â¢s interest income, the revenue it receives from client money it holds as collateral for trades on exchanges. While that amount rose 57 percent to $156.5 million, the firm earned $1.77 billion in the same quarter in 2007 when rates were 5.25 percent. MF also earns fees for brokering trades at futures and options exchanges.
Revenue rose 20 percent to $565 million from $471 million in the same period last year, the company said. Compensation and benefit expenses climbed 20 percent to $184 million while interest outlays almost quadrupled to $109 million from $28 million.
Shares of MF Global, formerly the brokerage unit of Man Group Plc, the worldââ¬â¢s largest publicly traded hedge-fund manager, dropped 35 cents yesterday to $8.12 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares had gained 17 percent through yesterday this year.
Bonuses Cut
The firm said it canââ¬â¢t estimate the charge it will incur to reduce its payroll by as much as 15 percent, according to a regulatory filing today.
Last quarterââ¬â¢s results included one-time pretax items such as impairment of goodwill of $51.7 million, costs associated with cutting future sign-on bonus and retention payments to employees that resulted in an upfront compensation charge of $27.5 million and costs related to its initial public offering of $6.7 million, the company said.
The amount of client money MF Global had during the quarter for investments rose to $12 billion compared with $11.8 billion a year ago, the company said.
The number of trades MF Global executed on exchanges for clients fell 23 percent in the quarter to 87.8 million while the transactions it sent to clearinghouses rose 24 percent to 338.2 million.
(The company plans to hold a conference call for analysts at 8:30 a.m. New York time. To listen, access the companyââ¬â¢s Web site,
http://www.mfglobalinvestorrelations.com.)
To contact the reporter on this story: Matthew Leising in New York at
mleising@bloomberg.net.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aF9jLXAZCJdA&pos=5