Commodities And Trading


 Commodities And Trading Commodity Futures Act Commodity Trading Manager
Refco ex-VP pleads guilty

A former senior executive at Refco Inc. became the first company official to plead guilty to defrauding investors in the failed trading giant on Wednesday, one day after a Mayer Brown lawyer was indicted on criminal charges.

Santo Maggio, former executive vice president, admitted in a New York federal court that he "participated with others to hide the true financial health of Refco." He worked at Refco from the late 1990s to October 2005, when the futures and commodities broker collapsed after disclosing that an entity partially owned by former Chief Executive Phillip Bennett owed the company about $430 million.

The debt stemmed from client losses that had piled up since the mid-1990s, according to federal prosecutors. Mayer Brown partner Joseph Collins, who represented Refco for more than a decade, helped hide the debt for several years, prosecutors charge in his indictment.


DMCC names new Executive Director of Gold and Precious Metals

MacDonald takes over from Colin Griffith, who has held this position for the last four years. This move comes as DMCC works to consolidate the strides the division has made under Griffith and build upon those successes. In his new role at DMCC, spearheading the Gold & Precious Metals division, MacDonald will focus on further enhancing Dubai's role as a global centre for the gold and precious metals trade, through broadening local market horizons in refining, manufacturing and trading skills. He will also oversee business development, strengthen stakeholder relationships and develop new products while promoting best practices in the local and regional markets. MacDonald will also explore and develop DMCC-branded commodities-based investment vehicles to grow DMCC's current footprint in the precious metals sector.


Oil price strikes record $US90

CRUDE oil prices struck a record $US90 a barrel in after-hours trading in New York overnight, amid increased tensions between Turkey's government and Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq.

Traders said a weak US dollar and supply jitters had also stoked the price surge. The price gains came after New York's main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in November, had jumped $US2.07 to a record close of $US89.47 a barrel.

London prices also pushed higher in after-hours trading, as Brent North Sea crude for December delivery soared to $US84.88 after the contract had earlier settled $US1.47 higher at $US84.60.

Oil prices have pushed higher this week amid geopolitical angst related to the Turkey-Iraq border and a weakening dollar, which makes dollar-priced commodities such as oil cheaper for buyers with stronger currencies and therefore lifts crude demand.


Emissions Trading Commodifies Carbon, But Does It Really Help Solve ...

Proponents of carbon trading see markets as the best mechanism for reducing emissions, while critics characterize carbon trading as a devil's bargain that steers profits to polluters.

SocialFunds.com -- You cant solve problems just by throwing money at them, the old saying goes. Capitalists, who think markets are the solution to everything, reverse this equation by turning problems from money-pits into money-makers. Essentially, they seek to harness the profit motive to cure societys woes by transforming problems into commodities. This is precisely the strategy behind the emerging carbon trading markets.

While most markets facilitate product accumulation, these markets encourage problem elimination. For example, by trading carbon emission rights that are capped and subsequently ratcheted down, the rights become more scarce and hence more valuable.


Citigroup, GM Slide; Xerox Rises

As Citigroup and General Motors helped push the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its lowest close since mid-August, investors turned to EchoStar Communications amid the prospect of the satellite-TV provider's being purchased.

"Goldman predicting additional steep subprime write-downs for big U.S. brokerages, including Citigroup, and Chinese officials telling their domestic banks to freeze lending through year end raised deep concerns about the sustainability of global growth," said Robbert van Batenburg, head of trading research at Louis Capital Markets. "As a result, there was broad selling, with financials bearing much of the brunt. But commodities and industrials that had been holding ...

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HSBC to set up brokerage in UAE equity markets

The company, to be called HSBC Middle East Securities, will offer UAE domestic market brokerage services to both institutional and retail investors. The company is expected to begin trading for institutions by the end of 2007, and to offer retail brokerage services in 2008. Emirates Securities and Commodities Authority (ESCA), the regulator for the UAE's securities markets, recently granted HSBC authorisation to establish the brokerage company. The authorisation is subject to the various legal and infrastructural requirements meeting the approval of ESCA, as well ADSM and DFM. With this approval, HSBC is poised to become the first global bank on the UAE's exchanges. HSBC already buys and sells UAE shares on behalf of Western institutions through third party brokers. In addition, HSBC is a sub-custodian on both ADSM and DFM, and this service will continue to be provided by the bank's specialist sub-custody operation.


 
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