SPONSORED BY:
BUSINESS

The Madoff Dilemma

How can you spot a Wall Street Crook?

 

Email To A Friend

Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.

Separate multiple addresses with commas

SPONSORED BY
 

Bernard Madoff, one of Wall Street's best-known brokers and money managers, was arrested on Thursday after allegedly confessing to his sons in a near nervous-breakdown-type meeting that instead of the $17 billion they thought he had in his funds, there was pretty much zip. The whole thing was—as the criminal complaint quotes Madoff himself saying—"basically, a giant Ponzi scheme" in which investors who wanted their money back got paid with earlier investors' money. (Story continued below...)

Advertisement
Your video will begin in   seconds
Adjust volume for sound

Ex-Nasdaq Head Arrested in 'Giant Ponzi Scheme'

There's no shortage of cases in which shady hedge-fund managers have disappeared with hundreds of millions of dollars, but the size of what seems to have happened with Madoff is well beyond anything in Wall Street memory. The amount of money involved—at least $17 billion, and maybe as much as $50 billion (a number that Madoff himself put on the money lost)—is bigger than the losses that took down Bear Stearns, bigger than the $7 billion in hidden losses in Societe Generale's Jerome Kerviel scandal, and these were big banks with thousands of clients. Madoff seems to have had one or two dozen clients, in accounts he closely watched over himself.

The question that everybody with big chunks of money parked with exclusive fund managers on Wall Street will be asking today is whether there are other possible Bernard Madoffs out there: high-profile managers who've been lying about their returns for years. The answer to this is going to be "yes," which leads to the second question of, "Is there any way to spot them?" Or, in other words: Is there a way to know whether a money manager's returns are too good to be true?

It's a question everyone wonders about but that few investors, even the big ones, ask directly, because there seems to be no way to answer it except by looking a fund manager in the eye and hoping you trust him. Ordinary intuition tells us that just by looking at a string of numbers in a fund manager's reports, there's no way to know if those numbers might be made out of whole cloth. But in fact, it turns out that there may be a good way to guess—and it could well have helped the investors who'd given their money to Madoff see what was going on earlier.

The key here is not looking just at how well Madoff seemed to perform. It's how consistently he seemed to be doing it. Stories in both the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal both noted the pattern. According to the stories, he seemed to make a return of 10 percent or 11 percent a year, year in and year out. And it wasn't just an annual return kind of thing. Almost every month, the WSJ story says, Madoff made somewhere between 0 percent and 2 percent. Hardly any losses, no really outsize gains.

Professional investors are taught to value steady returns—it implies that managers aren't taking excessive risks. The latest research on hedge funds, however, reveals that overly smooth returns may not indicate that the risks are small, but that they are hidden.

Label

Newsweek Top Stories
Visions of a Decade
Visions of a Decade

From 2000-2009, one photo per month.

The Failure of Copenhagen
The Failure of Copenhagen

Why there could be a silver lining in a failed climate treaty.

Sex Scandals of the 2000s
Sex Scandals of the 2000s

From John Edwards to Mark Sanford, the decade's memorable affairs.

118 Days in Hell
118 Days in Hell

A NEWSWEEK journalist recounts his captivity in Iran.

Discuss

Sponsored by

Member Comments

  • Posted By: Moij Siddiqi @ 02/02/2009 3:53:35 AM

    We must find out ways to make accounting numbers more verifiable and access to information easier readily available in to prevent such nexus of fund managers and auditors.The auditors must be brought to book for hoaxing the public. Madoff and his likes can be stopped only with stricter and quicker punishment.

    Moij Siddiqi,Bangladesh

  • Posted By: John-Brown-Fla @ 01/05/2009 12:30:29 PM

    The first paragraph of the SEC???s Introduction states, ???The mission of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is to protect investors ???..

    Will someone, please, tell me what they have done to protect the people that invested with the likes of Bayou Group LLC and Bernard L. Madoff???s stuff?

    The SEC regulators have access to, are supposed to avail themselves of and act on information that investors would be considered insiders and prosecuted for having such access and information and acting on it. These are very regulators that are supposed to be our insiders and protect our interests but do not seem to expose or regulate the crooks. The SEC has been absolutely negligent and likely implicated in the Madoff fraud. Apparently they have not bothered to monitor Madoff???s activities and have even resisted investigating the many complaints received. Now they want to further perpetuate the fraud by ducking out and have the Bankruptcy Court take over to clean up this mess.

    The Bankruptcy Court, looking for money to firstly fund the exorbitant lawyer???s fees, then huge accountant???s fees and then possibly court costs that will occur, will now punish the easily targeted honest investors that have acted in good faith and have been forced to comply with edicts imposed by the SEC regulators.

    In their zeal to bring monies into the Bankruptcy Court, I would hope the Court will look to the negligent SEC regulators as individuals and to the agency as a whole as being financially liable. I don???t really think the Court has the guts to do it but if they did it would be much more appropriate than trying to rob investors that had the good sense realize there might be something wrong and get out before the collapse.

    The biggest Ponzi scheme in the history of the world is what ???Social Security??? has become. When it finally goes broke, will the trustee in bankruptcy try to recover our Social Security benefits?

  • Posted By: kiers @ 01/01/2009 9:16:47 PM

    TOtal failure of all US institutions. Men in Suits and suites. FAILURE. How do u detect PARTIAL Ponzi schemes? Some get gains, some get losses.! How to sleuth THAT, even with a legitimate investing strategy, fake gains can be allotted to your friends, everyone else gtets the losses out of the same portfolio.

    who will invest with these ELITES again...I'm sure many are still lining up!

Reply

Report Abuse

Enter comments if any for reporting abuse

My Take

Customize the NEWSWEEK homepage
to feature your favorite columnists.

Customize Now
 
 
PHOTOS
What About Us?
Wall Street's problems have captured the attention of Congress, the White House and the media. But on the country's Main Streets ordinary folks are wondering if anyone is paying attention to them. A look at how Americans are coping with the economic crisis.

 
 
The Greediest People of All Time
From Bernard Madoff to AIG, Wall Street has reinvented excess. But the Masters of the Universe didn't invent greed. A look at the despots, robber barons and others who made our shortlist.