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What's The Real Impact of The Milan Derivatives Inquisition? 'I' for Italy after 'G' for Greece? [Image: Milan's Duomo, Second largest Catholic cathedral in the world]

A Milan judge has ordered UBS, JPMorgan Chase, Deutsche Bank and Depfa Bank, a unit of Hypo Real Estate of Germany, to stand trial for alleged fraud in the sale of derivative instruments. The case revolves around a Euro 1.68 (USD 2.31) billion bond issue by the city of Milan on which the four international banks sold derivatives. Over the years, many Italian cities -- amongst other European ones -- have signed up for derivatives contracts, even when the terms were in English(?), in an attempt to cut interest costs on their borrowings. Two former Milan city officials have also been ordered to stand trial on the same charges, along with 11 bankers from the four banks. Those charged are accused of lying about the derivative-based swaps and falsely representing the deal as a way to reduce Milan’s debt. The "Milan Derivatives Inquisition" could open the floodgates to a string of cases by local and national Italian government entities that claim they were misled by investment banks in regard to their borrowing. The banks deny the charges.

In the southern Italian region of Puglia, prosecutors are also seeking to bar Merrill Lynch, part of Bank of America, from government contracts for two years. The move stems from derivatives losses of 870 million euros in regional bonds. Pescara, a southern Italian city, itself took out a total of 108 million euros in interest rate swaps and is suing UniCredit and BNL, a unit of France's BNP Paribas.

Italian cities had Euro 35 billion, a third of local governments' debt, linked to similar derivative contracts at the end of last year according to the Italian Finance Ministry. Mark-to-market losses are in the region of Euro 2.5 billion on the contracts, according to the Bank of Italy. Milan, Italy’s second-biggest city after Rome, is one of several major Italian municipalities that undertook swaps -- derivatives contracts in which a fixed interest rate is exchanged for a floating one -- to save on interest payments. Almost 500 small and large Italian cities are facing large losses on the derivatives contracts, which will only get progressively worse as interest rates rise. Analysts believe the real number could be around 3,000 as more deals emerge. Italian cities are now scrambling to cancel their swaps before interest rates increase, as is widely predicted to happen, sending fees up.

The four financial institutions -- including the largest in Switzerland, Germany and USA -- are accused of misleading the city of Milan authorities when they agreed the complex derivatives deals linked to 30-year bonds issued in 2005. That sale was the biggest by an Italian city. The derivatives arrangement was originally designed to reduce interest payments on the city's outstanding loans and continued until 2007. A move which Milan says leaves it facing a Euro 100 million loss at this stage. Milan is also suing the banks for Euro 239 million in overall liabilities. The Italian government banned new derivatives contracts for similar use in 2008, pending new rules.

Test Case

Prosecutors say the trial, which is due to begin on May 6, is an important test case for hundreds of Italian local and national government entities and other smaller bodies who have lost money through similar complex financial deals involving derivatives in the last two decades. Alfredo Robledo, the prosecutor bringing the case against the banks, has made a number of claims:

1. It is the first time in the world that banks have to stand trial for the sale of derivatives to municipalities;

2. The four banks' London operations allegedly misled Milan over a financing package that included the derivative swaps;

3. While the banks charged nominal fees up front, they allegedly made around Euro 100 million in hidden fees or "illicit profits";

4. If all the hidden costs had been properly included, the deal would have apparently been illegal under an Italian law that allows restructuring of debt by municipalities only if the restructuring produces a saving;

5. The banks London-based advisory operations apparently violated UK securities regulations by failing to inform in writing that the city of Milan was a counterparty to the lenders for the swap deal rather than a customer; and

6. The UK rules say banks must protect customers from conflicts of interest and provide them with clear and fair information.

In an administrative case, the United Kingdom closed its derivatives market in the early 1990s when the House of Lords held that interest rate contracts entered by a London council were unenforceable.

The Banks' Perspective

In separate statements, the four banks denied any wrongdoing and said they would defend themselves.

1. "We are... confident that the strength of our legal position will be demonstrated through the judicial process," JPMorgan said. "...employees involved in the transactions acted with the highest degree of professionalism and entirely appropriately."

2. UBS said it didn't commit any fraud. "No illicit profit was earned by the banks, since the intermediation costs applied were fully legitimate and were not hidden from the City," it said.

3. Deutsche Bank said it was confident its employees involved in the transactions acted with integrity. “We are comfortable saying we believe our case is compelling and we will be cleared,” it said.

4. Hypo Real Estate, Depfa's parent since October 2007, said that Depfa had not "violated any law or regulation". Depfa said in a written statement, “We are convinced that neither Depfa nor the accused employees have violated any law or regulation. We will keep on defending our case.”

Conclusion

The "Milan Derivatives Inquisition" will fuel the growing global debate about the use of complex derivatives. If it becomes clear that the municipalities did not understand the risks and costs they were taking on, this case will clarify who has responsibility for that. Milan may not be able to argue that it was ignorant about derivatives since the 2005 swap replaced a contract that had been renegotiated repeatedly. With banks putting in place a complex deal that had to be overseen for 30 years with hefty back-office costs, the city of Milan could not expect that the banks were going to take that position for free. However, if the banks are found guilty all swap deals, involving complex derivatives contracts, with Italian cities could be called into question and other banks could find themselves facing similar charges.

Remember the recent ATCA briefing, "Enigmatic Greek Saga of Hiding Government Debt via Complex Derivatives"? Greece, in the use of complex derivatives, did nothing more than get itself money right away, with an agreement to pay it back slowly against future revenues. Government entities in Italy have essentially done something similar. Italian local governments rushed into derivatives in part because they helped ease the rigidity of a 2001 law that bars taking on new debt except to finance investment. The big draw was the upfront payment many cities got in advance for signing revamped agreements, usually done without a bidding process. Renegotiated deals shoved back payment and costs. Revised deals also carried increasingly restrictive terms and higher costs for municipalities and other local governments. When rates were low, when many contracts were agreed, local authorities using a variable rate could find their costs shrinking in Italy and elsewhere in Europe. However, as rates began to rise, Italian officials found themselves owing much more money. This is the Faustian pact for using derivative instruments for such purposes. Italian national and local government entities are now trapped via the restrictive derivative contracts, with adverse consequences for Italian sovereign debt and cascading effects for the Eurozone. Incidentally, where did Christoforos Sardelis, head of Greece’s Public Debt Management Agency from 1999 to 2004, go? He joined Banca IMI, the investment-banking unit of Italy’s Intesa Sanpaolo. He clearly knew what comes after 'G' for Greece? 'I' for Italy! Will the financial markets come to a similar conclusion?

[ENDS]

We welcome your thoughts, observations and views. To reflect further on this, please respond within Twitter, Linked and Facebook's ATCA Open and related Socratic dialogue platform of HQR.

All the best


DK Matai

Chairman and Founder: mi2g.net, ATCA, The Philanthropia, HQR, @G140

To connect directly with:

. DK Matai: http://twitter.com/DKMatai

. Open HQR: http://twitter.com/OpenHQR

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- ATCA, The Philanthropia, mi2g, HQR, @G140 --

This is an "ATCA Open, Philanthropia and HQR Socratic Dialogue."

The "ATCA Open" network on LinkedIn and Facebook is for professionals interested in ATCA's original global aims, working with ATCA step-by-step across the world, or developing tools supporting ATCA's objectives to build a better world.

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— with Patricia Hubner, Gloria O'Neil Savage, Swami Neelamber, Yasmeen Baroness Von Schleinitz, Max Speed, Adriana Ochoa Margáin, Deepak Chopra, Princess Maya, Dove Daniel, Lila JaNe, Michael Buchanan, Jane Chavez Umali, Athanasia Chroni, Suzanne Valdez, Cosmic Kimaya, Douglas Ward Kelley, Daniel D. Woo, Linda Darling Langlois, Subhashish Acharya, Gail Blackman, Michelle-Jennifer Del Rosario Santos, Libby Patterson, Mary Baxter, Mariamme Baum, Ingrid Marie Aquino, Zenaida Ioana Sasaran, Judy Osmundson, Marie-Ora de Villiers Scheel, Ross Stokes, Arno Du Pisanie, Mari Geiger-Howiler, Sid Kataki and Fabiana Marcela Capello.
  • Philip Turner, Emma Farr Rawlings, Ivan Emiro Canas-Gutierrez and 14 others like this.
    • Fabiana Marcela Capello OMG DK ... thank you for educating me! WOW !!
      March 18, 2010 at 7:02am
    • Princess Maya I was puzzled for a while how come everyone could take purchases of derivative instruments so lightly. These instruments are extremely difficult to value and to mitigate the risks related to the instruments and to underlying securities and / or instruments....etc. However, in the bigger picture, frankly, it is not a surprise for me anymore.... Thanks, DK. xox
      March 18, 2010 at 7:10am
    • Diane Wallrich Yes...smoke and mirrors...and nothing much has changed.
      March 18, 2010 at 7:15am
    • Mona Radler they want my attention NOW
      when i asked for help for months, they screw up my credit, so as far as I AM concerned they better get use to their karma!
      March 18, 2010 at 7:33am
    • Mari Geiger-Howiler Gratitude & bOW to you DK _( ♥ )_ You are my Sensei~* My friends in Milan were expressing mess in their banking system, politics. This topis surely bring us back the discussion from yesterday on our financial institutions- we need more transparent & trustworthy system. Afterall, our monetary system is based upon TRUST. Thank U ,D
      March 18, 2010 at 8:03am
    • DrSuzanne Holt Ballard
      What is fascinating about these developments, DK, is the almost complete absence of accountability at the site of the initial crisis: Wall Street. The Obama administration has taken a very weak stance with the financial actors who propelled... this catastrophe. I strongly recommend Michael H Lewis' book, The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine. This describes the process by which those who saw the impending crisis were able to accumulate vast profits by betting against the success of instruments such as credit default swaps and, of course, derivatives. See More
      March 18, 2010 at 8:57am
    • Fabiana Marcela Capello If i may add ... the dollar is about to crash very soon! ♥ Beware ...
      March 18, 2010 at 8:59am
    • James Birthrong Gee, why are we picking on the poor banks? They are honest institutions and just like the other global corporate entities... they only have the peoples interests at heart. Capitalism is shining AWFULly bright these days. Wait! Did I just hear a domino tip over?! (;oD THX, DK
      March 18, 2010 at 9:05am
    • Marie-Ora de Villiers Scheel James, I think that's the sound of many dominoes tipping over..........
      March 18, 2010 at 9:12am
    • Marie-Ora de Villiers Scheel Oh my goodness, Fabi, do say more about that!
      March 18, 2010 at 9:14am
    • Michael Buchanan Yes, it will be most fascinating to see how humanity deals with the Status Quo crumbling all about it! We will need to be grounded in a state of unconditional Love and learn that we are truly linked and need to take accountability for our actions. There really is now where to hide you know. Ultimately, responsibility will be ours to make the decisions on how we are to begin the New Paradigm. Blessings to all. ";-)
      March 18, 2010 at 9:16am
    • Max Speed
      When borrowing, there is of course a promise to repay with interest - the incentive to the lender. The incentives are devised by the banks - and are not easily calculated - especially in the instance of derivitives.

      Seperate teams of the ...best legal minds and mathematicians would probably not agree as to the probable result of a given instrument over time, given all the possible market forces at play.

      In fact, the investment banks structure deals that will favor their balance sheet. They also seem to have devised ways to disguise how little capital they have vs the size of their own obligations - how much of their capital is borrowed.

      One particularly nasty aspect of all this is that the banks have manipulated the markets - hedging their positions by betting against their couter-parties.
      See More
      March 18, 2010 at 9:57am
    • Fabiana Marcela Capello The whole monetary system will collapse Marie. The new money was printed months ago ...
      March 18, 2010 at 10:02am
    • Judy Osmundson
      Wow, first I have to react to the picture. Isn't the Duomo just breath taking? Where could we find such inspiration?

      I do think that the principle of the thing is that service is rewarded. When we try to make money we find materialism a...nd complication, etc. etc. Then we have to service the complication! Banks were created to perform a service, and if they stick to this as their mission, and as long as they find that they serve a good purpose, exclusive of self preservation, they may find success. ;) Often we think that preservation is for work which is for money. This is not work of the spirit, and is not work that serves us, and so it is not blessed. We need not work for work's sake. We work for quality of life, and this is often not found in money. When we have always our priorities straight, we will find our Life in pleasure for evermore. ;))See More
      March 18, 2010 at 11:47am
    • Judy Osmundson
      Note that we are having to use a lot of money to service our materialism gig which is measured in work, just to print those greenbacks and make them trade hands. Wouldn't we rather be at the beach? Honestly if we would trust in the Spirit... of Truth and the Truth of Spirit, we would find all that we desire quite free from austerity. Any move toward freeing us from haves and have not mentality will bring us closer to this. (This is our external jihad truthfully). ;))See More
      March 18, 2010 at 11:55am
    • Swami Neelamber Brilliantly researched and presented DK — Thank you once again! As we all slide down the slippery slope to self destruction on this planet, it's interesting to watch those pathetic people in power especially those in our weasel financial institutions squirming away and scrambling to protect their interests. "Illicit profits, you say? — No, we could never do that, we're just offering a service!" — Yeah Right!
      :))))
      March 18, 2010 at 2:02pm
    • Princess Maya how much do we know that we think we have the right to criticize...?
      March 18, 2010 at 2:05pm
    • James Birthrong ‎@ Maya, how much knowledge do we need before we have the "right" to criticize the banks?
      March 18, 2010 at 2:10pm
    • Princess Maya ‎@ James: I personally do not possess enough "knowledge". (or maybe I do, but it is not relevant). Therefore, I refrain from making any comments ... If you can create a better 'system', all accolades are for you ...
      March 18, 2010 at 2:18pm
    • James Birthrong In my opinion,the banking business is pretty transparent these days. And a better system will result out of it's own brought on self demise. But I "feel" you in your perspective of not having enough "knowledge"... I have the same attitude which is why I always end or start my comments with, "In my opinion." (;oD
      March 18, 2010 at 2:23pm
    • Karen Pappageorge I didn't read any of the comments but think that "properties" unclaimed on books should be "lost" to the bank and found to the country the property is located in. $ell with profit back to country property is located in. Or use as economy dictates ... :) Does putting in my 2 cents really mean 50 cents? LOL
      March 18, 2010 at 4:48pm
    • Karen Pappageorge nah.... $.0001
      March 18, 2010 at 4:48pm
    • Robin Lynn Ore Without the Gold, the money is worthless. What happened to the Gold? Where is it physically located?
      March 18, 2010 at 6:04pm
    • Douglas Ward Kelley Well Mr. Matai, You’ve asked the $64,000 question? What’s the problem and which way out? Or: What's The Real Impact of The Milan Derivatives Inquisition? Reform I hope, but first: Here is my preliminary report- http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=422506466152&id=569799282&ref=mf
      March 18, 2010 at 6:32pm
    • Robin Lynn Ore Merrill Lynch which was hacked into was taken over by the Bank of America, which was bought out by the Yakuza mob of Japan.
      March 18, 2010 at 7:16pm
    • Judy Osmundson Just to lay the record straight, we don't find success in exclusion. Perhaps it is appropriate to consider this in our Socratic dialogue. http://christianscience.com/lectures/2010/03/18/true-identity/
      March 18, 2010 at 7:42pm
    • Robin Lynn Ore Judy, thanks for that link but the site does not work. If a person uses Microsoft and refuses to download Adobe, they cannot use the site. In trying to find reading rooms, only the country can be chosen and no state or city. With both Microsoft and Google now hacked by China for source code, neither is working properly. I will check it out when I set up the Google only computer or is it Linux, UNIX?
      March 18, 2010 at 8:03pm
    • Richard Gerber As I said it was and as I said it would be.
      March 19, 2010 at 2:42am
    • DK Matai Dear Friends

      Thank you for your addition to this Socratic dialogue which is highly appreciated.

      Best wishes

      DK
      March 19, 2010 at 3:36pm
    • Robin Lynn Ore Thank you DK for a clever use of photos.
      March 19, 2010 at 5:18pm
    • Douglas Ward Kelley
      I'm always so happy to be tagged! I belong, I believe, to every one of DK Matai's pages. His own Facebook page, and all the others he's created, or moderates, and there are several, and some of the material overlaps. But it's growing very ...fast. But he is a prodigious editor, as strategic analyst and valuable Internet content producer. this is in addition to being a very successful engineer/entrepreneur and administrator of a large coalition of philanthropies. He is a strictly legitimate and greatly admired international public servant who is truth teller, with a sense of humor, and no discernible ideological axes to grind, (which, in itself, is very unique on the Internet?) who has, threw his uncanny abilities as a writer, editor, and cutting-edge authority and source of reliable information on topics of keen global interest which are meant to stimulate thought and debate on issues overlapping science, business, politics, climate, technology, poetry and philosophy have turned his overlapping page networks, and audiences into a new form of free online Facebook publication. A sort of Daily International Science, Technology and Economic News Digest with mild universal metaphysical overtones. That has attracted a highly intelligent and impassioned loyal readership. I am very grateful for the friends I've made through this community. Since I've friended him I have received 196 mutual friends who sought me out through his network plus a few that I recommended him to. Its an interesting sub-group because, for the most part, all we really have in common is our appreciation of super intelligent, extremely moderate and careful blogger who obviously loves ways doing. If you read this far, you might as well join up? It's not a cult, it's a discussion group and its fabulous.See More
      March 19, 2010 at 8:25pm
    • Douglas Ward Kelley Hi, Brook, Rebecca, Robin, Michael, Ross, Miriamme, Suzanne and Deepak!
      March 19, 2010 at 8:29pm
    • Robin Lynn Ore Hi Douglas! Where is Deepak?
      March 19, 2010 at 8:40pm
    • Douglas Ward Kelley He's tagged in the Photo. I retitled my answer: “Casino Capitalism.” Naked (And Synthetic) Are The Dead. (Or?) Synthetically Naked Are The Dead? (Or, slightly differently,) The Dead May Be Technically Syntheticly Naked, But They're Still Dead, Naked And Synthetic, By Douglas Ward Kelley, which may make no sense but it amuses me. Thank you!
      http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=422506466152
      March 19, 2010 at 9:05pm
    • Tony Minervino Thanks for this, DK.
      March 20, 2010 at 12:00pm
    • Mary Baxter
      thanks for the tag DK. The more we discuss money and its many complexities the further down the rabbit hole we go. What is illusion and what is reality? What have we agreed to accept as reality, I suppose is the question. I don't believe th...ese municipalities were completely mislead..they are in the game and should become aware of the risks. They were desparate..and like many who are desparate for money, they agreed to get the cash up front.
      what a mess!
      See More
      March 20, 2010 at 12:12pm
    • Robin Lynn Ore Reality and Virtual Reality combine in finality for humanity with this BIG BROTHER BILL S.3801 http://www.opencongress.org/bill/111-s3081/text
      March 20, 2010 at 9:14pm
    • Philip Turner Time to pay the piper! This may indeed threaten our fragile economic recovery in the US but until real reform takes place we are still under the influence (derivative drug dealers) of a banking system gone haywire with de-regulation. Out of control if you will! Helter Skelter may not be so far fetched as least for our global economy and it seems even more imminent with the US economy.
      March 29, 2010 at 7:26pm
    • Brook Bartlett
      All of this is a symtom of a giant slow motion convulsion and not the ultimate explanation of the coming convulsions that are bound to continue. Do due diligence for sure continue to work towards a fairer more transparant just system and it... will make a big difference. The changes we fear, and the ones many are describing as avoidable, are not neccesarily avoidable. We are functioning in the midst of a very complex system of our own making (capitalism/ "civilization" built on the ultimte worship of the autonomy of the individual person) which has it's own destruction at it's very core. It is the nature of it. If we want it to fall and yet not weather the possible consequences in a radical shift in our way of being, connecting to other sentinent beings, and seeing the world, we are deluding ourselves. It will pass, today, tomorrow, or another 200 years, it will pass as all sytems do. The question is not : how do we stop this? But rather " where are we headed???" It's time to stop worrying about the collapse of our degenerating systems and focus our energy into positive channels for directing the ENORMOUS amount of energy that this huge change in human consciousness and civilization itself is about to unleash. (Like, any day now) : )See More
      March 29, 2010 at 7:39pm