by OilsNotWell » Tue 25 Oct 2005, 04:50:44
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')eing quite close to the Refco story, I find this number not believable. I would like to see the link and not to
www.faulkingtruth.com, but to the filing where it says Refco has a $10.5 billion dollar position period? The bankruptcy of Refco Inc. involves numerous legal entities, but I do not know any that would have this type of liability on their books.
Keep posting MrBill, your posts are quite interesting, but just to let you know if you had clicked on the link I provided with the quote

, you'd find the rest of the article, as well as a direct link to follow where those numbers were cited from - the BK filing.
For example, I did just that right now, and am pasting this from Refco's BK filing:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')EFCO GROUP LTD., LLC, AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS (unaudited)
As of May 31, 2005
Cash and cash equivalents $405,029,000
Cash and securities segregated
under federal and other regulations:
Cash and cash equivalents 1,053,218,000
Securities purchased under agreements to resell 67,013,000
Securities purchased under agreements to resell 46,551,374,000
Deposits with clearing organizations 2,519,147,000
Receivables from securities borrowed 2,631,989,000
Receivables from broker-dealers and
clearing organizations 10,770,348,000
Receivables from customers, net of reserves 1,807,446,000
Securities owned, at market or fair value 6,774,039,000
Memberships in exchanges 36,159,000
Goodwill 744,110,000
Identifiable intangible assets 595,931,000
Other assets 363,888,000
---------------
Total assets $74,319,691,000
===============
Liabilities
Short-term borrowings, including current
portion of long-term borrowings $144,913,000
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase 43,333,241,000
Payable from securities loaned 2,458,147,000
Payable to broker-dealers
and clearing organizations 8,444,520,000
Payable to customers 7,622,809,000
Securities sold, not yet purchased 10,590,379,000 Accounts payable, accrued expenses
and other liabilities 278,149,000
Long-term borrowings 1,236,000,000
---------------
Total liabilities 74,108,158,000
---------------
Commitments and contingent liabilities
Membership interests issued by
subsidiary and minority interest 23,606,000
Member's equity 187,927,000
---------------
Total liabilities and member's equity $74,319,691,000
===============
http://bankrupt.com/refco.txt I have bolded the text to which the author of this article is referring to.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ut, in any case, let me get this straight, to jump from supposed facts to obvious conclusions as it were. You're saying that a firm short sold stocks which would in any case have a lower net present value if you assume that a) interest rates are going higher, b) energy prices are going higher, c) consumer spending is slowing, d) and 'the market' is expecting a downward correction in stocks.
So, far from a risky position, this 'short sell' would make money in a falling market. If you have an October 1987 all over again, they would stand to gain what 20% on $10.5 billion? Not bad proprietary trading. If it is true, that is? I see nothing wrong being short the Nasdaq -2.74%, the DJIA -3.69% and the S&P500 -1.03% this year? Better than being long at this point.
Well, in any case, short selling stocks carries exactly the same risk as being long. At every price quoted there is a 50/50 chance the stock goes higher or lower. And it does not matter as it is a zero sum game. One man's loss is another's gain.
By the way, can you tell me if Refco has bought calls or sold puts against those naked short positions? From an accounting perspective, they would show up on different sides of the balance sheet. One as a liability, one as an asset? From a risk management point of view, they would net one another?
Smoking gun indeed? More like florensic accounting.