
Audio By Carbonatix
Accused UBS fraudster Kweku Adoboli was not challenged when he told a colleague that he had made a "cosmetic adjustment" to the accounts, a London court heard on Monday.Appearing as a witness at Adoboli's trial, former back office contractor Johannes Zuidmeer also said he had allowed the trader to hold back from entering a $1 billion loss into the accounts, accepting his explanation that it was due to booking errors.Adoboli, 32, denies two counts of fraud and two of false accounting. He was arrested on Sept. 15, 2011, and blamed for losses of $2.3 billion.The prosecution say Adoboli took huge trading positions that far exceeded risk limits and concealed them by booking fictitious hedging trades, routinely lying to the Swiss bank about what he was doing.Adoboli's defence team have sought to show throughout the trial that he openly discussed his methods with colleagues and that rule-breaking was condoned as long as profits rolled in.Zuidmeer, who in 2011 was on the team that reviewed profit and loss accounts for Adoboli's Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) desk, denied that he had understood or approved of the true nature of Adoboli's trading.Paul Garlick, one of Adoboli's lawyers, challenged Zuidmeer by reading out excerpts from an electronic chat between him and Adoboli dated April 26, 2011.In the chat, Adoboli said he had made what he called a "cosmetic adjustment" to the accounts because he had expected a revaluation of a particular trade due to the effect of foreign exchange rate fluctuations.Adoboli went on to say that, if in fact there was no such revaluation, the adjustment should be reversed."IT LOOKS SERIOUS"Under cross-examination by Garlick, Zuidmeer acknowledged that he had let pass the reference to "cosmetic adjustments" without question or challenge. However, he denied that this showed he had known that Adoboli made fictitious entries into the books."Obviously with the benefit of hindsight it looks serious," he said.Garlick also raised a separate incident on Aug. 11, 2011, when Zuidmeer allowed Adoboli to "adjust", or hold back, the booking of $1 billion in losses from the accounts.Zuidmeer acknowledged that the amount involved was enormous and that he did not further investigate or challenge the trader's request.He said Adoboli had explained that the trading desk and the operations team had made conflicting bookings due to an earlier misunderstanding about some trades, and that the adjustment was necessary to give them time to reconcile their records.Zuidmeer said he accepted this explanation and added that financial markets were extremely volatile at the time, which helped to explain why the sum was so large.He also said that at the time, the control accounts were "in a mess", which could have been another reason for the accounting problems."In hindsight, there's a lot of things we would have liked to do differently," he told the court.The trial continues.Copyright 2010 by Reuters. All rights reserved.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Balancing the scales: McDan Aviation, E&P, and politics of opportunity in Ghana’s economy
4 minutes -
GRA credits Publican AI system for exposing GH¢11bn port leakages
7 minutes -
Owabi, Barekese water plants face shutdown threat over pollution and power outages
15 minutes -
Catholic Bishops call for national dialogue on LGBTQ debate
19 minutes -
Softcare FM Manufacturing Ltd backs Consumer Health Week, pushes science-driven care agenda
20 minutes -
The Eyes of Ghana to premiere in April, spotlighting rare Nkrumah-era footage
24 minutes -
$31bn transferred without matching imports in five years — GRA boss
37 minutes -
JoyNews Impact Maker, Williams Akongbabre, presents award to people of Bawku West
37 minutes -
Kenya backs Morocco’s autonomy plan for Western Sahara, signals push for implementation
44 minutes -
Hip-hop pioneer, Afrika Bambaataa, dies aged 68
52 minutes -
Let OSP defend itself in Supreme Court case — Prof Prempeh
1 hour -
Emmanuel Kweenu Haizel aka Simpa Panyin
1 hour -
Police foil planned highway robbery in Ashanti Region, one suspect shot dead
1 hour -
Sunyani Technical University dismisses 3 students over examination malpractice
2 hours -
NPRA prosecutes 11 employers, recovers GH¢27m in 2025
2 hours