Quote from jem:
For what its worth -
for now I base my opinion by what he wrote in his own book, and his results,
which almost took down a prominent clearing firm from what I read.
Is this what you mean??
http://www.dailyspeculations.com/vic/refco.html
No matter how much detail I go into to show that Refco's association with my firm in 1997 was not a link in its debacle, someone, somewhere, is going to allude to some anonymous source saying something to the effect that Refco's problems started with losses they suffered with me in 1997. The latest was an Oct. 27 Bloomberg story saying that someone said that Refco suffered $35 million of losses relating to the settlements and agreements we came to in 1997. Not mentioned is the offset provided by the value of all the assets turned over to them by me and my funds. Worse yet, just having my name linked with Refco is enough for 99.9% of the public to think that there is some substance to the idea that unbeknownst to me they hid their losses with me, and that somehow this morphed into massive losses and debts that killed the firm eight years later.
It's apparent that someone has been trying to deflect attention from true key links in the Refco debacle. The NYT reported today that before the acquisition of Refco by Thomas Lee & Co. in 2004, which valued the firm at $2.25 billion, Phil Bennett and Tone Grant, the previous Refco CEO, took out a total of $1 billion in cash bonuses, according to SEC filings. Bloomberg reported the same, and noted that an additional $862 million was paid out to an "a former shareholder" who went unnamed in the documents. It has also been reported that a Refco comptroller was granted a $50 million bonus in connection with his leaving the firm in October of 2004. This should provide a reasonable corpus of those likely to benefit from deflected attention. Regardless, if Refco in 2004 still had $2 billion or so in cash seven years after they last had contact with me, with which to pay out cash bonuses, as well as additional money to pay a $82 million special dividend in connection with the August 2005 public offering, any bookkeeping transactions that they may have wrongfully kept on their books relating to how they closed out their transactions with me in 1997 had to be de minimis.
Yet even after this $2 billion payment, the firm was still valued by Lee at $2.3 billion and was sold to the public valuing it at $3.5 billion. Please, if they had a $4 billion or $5 billion value eight years after they last had contact with me, wouldn't it have been possible for them to write off, pay back or properly account for any losses or fictitious debts they still had on their books with me? Better yet, please someone expose me to losses and let me still have a firm where I can take out $2 billion in cash 8 years later, and still have a $3 billion value.
That's it. I can't spend any more time responding to these damaging, nebulous and untrue rumors. -- Victor Niederhoffer
Refco and Niederhoffer: The Real Story (Updated Oct. 25)
Over the past several days, my name has surfaced in news stories blaming Refco's collapse in part to a debt that the firm is said to have incurred as the result of my losses in 1997, when Refco was my broker. Typical of these was the Oct. 21 Wall Street Journal article headlined: "Refco's Debts Started With Several Clients: Bennett Secretly Intervened to Assume Some Obligations; Return of Victor Niederhoffer," complete with a picture of me. The article said former Refco CEO Philip Bennett allegedly took steps to hide debts that Refco incurred with my firm and as many as nine other customers. "Niederhoffer and Flotti both denied owing Refco any money," the article said in the third paragraph. Yet not even the anonymous sources cited have stated that I owed Refco money. Talk about "when did you stop beating your wife?" journalism.
"The people familiar with the matter say they believe the customers, including Mr. Niederhoffer, had no knowledge of the steps Mr. Bennett allegedly took to hide the debts," the Journal article said. The article makes it seem as though these debts played a major role in Refco's collapse. I believe this is highly unlikely and that it unfairly tarnishes me and my present firm, as I explain
http://www.dailyspeculations.com/vic/refco.html