Updated Saturday, May 18, 2013 as of 5:19 PM ET
Practice - Regulatory/Compliance
Ex-UBS Trader Adoboli Hid Loss From Bosses, Prosecutor Says
by: Lindsay Fortado and Ben Moshinsky
Friday, September 14, 2012
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(Bloomberg) -- Kweku Adoboli "lied to his bosses" at UBS AG to conceal losses of $2.3 billion from unauthorized trading, prosecutor Sasha Wass told a London criminal court on Friday.

Adoboli, 32, exceeded his trading limits and invented "fictitious deals to conceal this," Wass told the 12-person jury at the beginning of the trial. His "motive was to increase his bonus, his status within the bank, his job prospects and his ego."

The former trader is charged with falsifying records on exchange-traded fund transactions and other documents needed for accounting purposes as early as October 2008, according to his indictment. Prosecutors also charged him with fraud for abusing his senior trader position "by causing or exposing UBS Bank to losses intending thereby to make a gain for himself." Adoboli has denied the charges.

In the U.K., fraud charges carry a maximum sentence of 10 years in jail, and seven years for false accounting. Adoboli is facing two counts of each.

Adoboli worked for the Zurich-based investment bank's Delta One desk, which handles trades for clients -- or risks the bank's own money -- typically by speculating on a basket of securities. The loss, which came from trading in Standard & Poor's 500, DAX and EuroStoxx index futures, didn't affect any client positions, according to UBS.

Colossal Loss

"This colossal loss arose purely as a result of Mr. Adoboli's fraudulent deal-making, which amounted, as we will see, to nothing more than gambling," Wass said. "Mr. Adoboli's activities were far more deliberate than that of a mere rogue trader. He did not simply make a few wild bets. He faked bookings, he created false accounts and conducted himself as a master fraudster, deliberately and systematically deceiving and defrauding the bank which was employing him."

The trial comes on the heels of a series of scandals for London's finance industry. Barclays Plc, the country's second- largest lender by assets, settled with regulators in June for a record 290 million pounds ($469 million) for rigging interest rates. Standard Chartered Plc paid $340 million last month to settle allegations by New York's banking regulator that it laundered $250 billion for Iran and HSBC Holdings Plc is also being probed over handling cash for sanctioned nations.

Adoboli worked for the Zurich-based investment bank's Delta One desk, which handles trades for clients -- or risks the bank's own money -- typically by speculating on a basket of securities. The loss, which came from trading in Standard & Poor's 500, DAX and EuroStoxx index futures, didn't affect any client positions, according to UBS.

Wandsworth Prison

Held in Wandsworth prison in southwest London after his arrest on Sept. 15, Adoboli was granted bail and released June 13. He is staying with a friend in the British capital, his lawyer has said. As part of his bail conditions, he has a curfew and has surrendered his Ghanaian passport.

Adoboli was born in Ghana to a former United Nations official and attended a Quaker boarding school in West Yorkshire, England, until 1998. He graduated with honors from the University of Nottingham in July 2003 with a degree in e- commerce and digital business. Photography, cycling and wine are among his interests, according to his LinkedIn profile.

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