Friday, April 6, 2012

JPMorgan Trader's Derivatives Positions Said to Distort Credit Indexes

Five counterparts at hedge funds and rival banks have accused a single JP Morgan trader of distorting and driving the $10 trillion CDS market with directional moves. 
So let's get this straight.  A SINGLE JPM trader has a large enough prop position that he is influencing the entire market!?! 
But...but...but...Blythe just told us yesterday that JP Morgan executes on behalf of clients and runs a flat match book! 
LOL!



A JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) trader of derivatives linked to the financial health of corporations has amassed positions so large that he’s driving price moves in the $10 trillion market, traders outside the firm said.



The trader is London-based Bruno Iksil, according to five counterparts at hedge funds and rival banks who requested anonymity because they’re not authorized to discuss the transactions. He specializes in credit-derivative indexes, a market that during the past decade has overtaken corporate bonds to become the biggest forum for investors betting on the likelihood of company defaults.


Investors complain that Iksil’s trades may be distorting prices, affecting bondholders who use the instruments to hedge hundreds of billions of dollars of fixed-income holdings. Analysts and economists also use the indexes to help gauge perceptions of risk in credit markets.


Though Iksil reveals little to other traders about his own positions, they say they’ve taken the opposite side of transactions and that his orders are the biggest they’ve encountered. Two hedge-fund traders said they have seen unusually large price swings when they were told by dealers that Iksil was in the market.


Joe Evangelisti, a spokesman for New York-based JPMorgan, declined to comment on Iksil’s specific transactions. Iksil didn’t respond to phone messages and e-mails seeking comment.
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