J
Ponzi Morgan
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt Diggers Digest
What’s
equally damning in the criminal case the bank just resolved
with federal prosecutors is that at times JPM seemed to want to get in on
Madoff’s action.
This
move had to be approved by the bank’s chief risk officer, who in 2007 nixed the
plan after being told by a colleague that there is a “well-known cloud over the
head of Madoff and that his returns are speculated to be part of a Ponzi
scheme.” While he was unwilling to risk $1.3 billion under such circumstances,
the officer did allow the Madoff exposure to remain up to $250 million.
The
JPM London trading desk subsequently became more uneasy about Madoff
Securities. It pulled out of the Madoff feeder funds, and in 2008 it filed a
report with UK regulators expressing concerns that Madoff’s returns were
probably “too good to be true.” JPM failed to do the same in the United States,
and that turned out to be an expensive oversight.
JPM’s
messy history with Madoff illustrates an interesting point about the
relationship between individual white-collar crime and collective corporate
crime. There’s long been a tendency to see corruption for self-enrichment (such
as embezzlement) as being separate from misconduct by groups of people to
enrich corporations (for example, price-fixing conspiracies).
In
the case of Madoff and JPM, the two were closely connected. Madoff, who was
working through his firm but was essentially running a one-man Ponzi operation,
created conditions that were exploited (up to a point) by JPM to enhance the
profits of the bank’s derivatives business. Even when that opportunity was
deemed too risky by JPM, the bank failed to warn U.S. regulators and went on
doing profitable banking business with Madoff.
In
other words, the individual fraud being committed by Madoff was a source of
profit for JPM, which in a sense became his co-conspirator.
The
distinction between individual crime and corporate misbehavior is also a matter
of perennial debate when it comes to punishment. Business apologists like to
claim that corporations cannot really commit crimes and that only individuals
should be prosecuted, knowing full well that such cases are much harder to
prove.
What’s
needed is a more aggressive approach toward the prosecution of both
corporations and the higher-level executives responsible for their misconduct.
The
JPM-Madoff case shows the limitations of the current system. No individuals
were charged, and the bank was able to take advantage of the kind of deferred
prosecution agreement that the Justice Department uses in almost every
corporate case. Neither JPM nor the stock market seems to be fazed by the $2.6
billion payout. In fact, this is just the latest in a series of
large settlements that JPM has made with prosecutors. Just two months ago,
it agreed to
pay $13 billion to resolve a variety of federal and state charges relating to
the sale of toxic mortgage-backed securities.
Madoff
himself was not able to buy his way out of a criminal conviction and prison time
(150 years of it). There was a broad consensus that he deserved every penalty
that could be imposed, to ensure that he could never defraud again.
We’re
still waiting for a system of punishment that provides that kind of definitive
treatment for rogue corporations such as J. Ponzi Morgan.