History Daily - The Barings Bank Collapse

Episode Date: February 26, 2025

February 26, 1995. One of Britain’s oldest and most prestigious banks collapses after suffering billion dollar losses on secret investments made by its employee Nick Leeson. This episode originally ...aired in 2024. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.

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Starting point is 00:00:09 It's March 2nd, 1995 at the Frankfurt International Airport in Germany. 28-year-old financial trader Nick Leeson gazes out the window of his plane as it touches down on the runway. This stop in Germany is supposed to be a layover, just a brief stop on the trip from Singapore back to London. But as the plane slowly arrives at the gate, Nick can see a small group of German police officers waiting on the tarmac. He shares an anxious look with his wife Lisa who's sitting beside him. They both know who the police. police officers are looking for. For the last three years, Nick has been working as a general manager for Bering's bank, overseeing futures trades on behalf of clients in Singapore and Japan.
Starting point is 00:00:50 At least, that's what Bering's thought Nick was doing. In actuality, Nick was making his own trades, using the bank's money on high-risk, high-reward bets, and losing millions in the process. Up until now, he's been able to hide these losses with accounting tricks, making sure that the higher-ups never caught on to what he was doing. But this year, after accruing the equivalent of over $1 billion in losses, the bank has finally discovered the operation, and now Nick and his wife are on the run. As the airplane slowly taxis to a stop at the gate, Nick and Lisa don't make any sudden attempt to escape.
Starting point is 00:01:25 They simply grab their luggage from the overhead lockers and politely get in line with the rest of the passengers to disembark. The German police officers spot Lisa first. As she steps down onto the tarmac, they approach her and request her passengers her passport. And just as they begin asking about her husband's whereabouts, Nick quietly comes up beside her and tells the police that it's him they're looking for. As the rest of the plane's passengers look on with intense curiosity, Nick and his wife follow the police to a van, climb in, and are taken away. For over two centuries, Bering's Bank held a reputation as a financial institution
Starting point is 00:02:05 customers could rely on. But in just a few short years, Nick Leeson undid all of that. A combination of ignorance, blind confidence, and a lack of oversight allowed Nick to operate with impunity and cost Bering's bank not only its reputation, but its entire existence when it was forced to cease operations on February 26, 1995. From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily. History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world. Today is February 26, 19th. 1995, the Bering's Bank Collapse.
Starting point is 00:03:10 It's March of 1992 at the Bering's bank offices in London, England, three years before Nick Leeson's arrest in Frankfurt. Nick sits working at his desk. He's been at Bering's for three years now and has become a well-respected member of the team. During his relatively short time of the bank, Nick has shown himself to be especially adept at dealing with Bering's global operations. Thanks to him, the bank's once messy offshoot in Indonesia is now a well-respected enderferenced. in and of itself, but Nick isn't interested in resting on his laurels. The 25-year-old wants a new challenge. Specifically, he wants to help Bering's bank expand its activity in the Singapore market. For the last few months, he's been putting out feelers to the higher-ups at the bank to show his interest in the idea and to convince them that with his help, Nick is sure that the bank
Starting point is 00:03:57 could make a killing. The plan is to beef up Bering's involvement in the Singapore International Monetary Exchange, or Symex. Up until now, the bank has traded stocks there, but hasn't done anything in the futures market. Futures contracts are essentially a promise to purchase a commodity later at a price set now. Investors can trade futures contracts for a number of reasons. But when it comes to Bering's clients, they're most likely to purchase futures in the hopes that the price of these commodities will eventually increase. That way, a client can turn around and sell those futures for more than they originally paid for them. There's often big money to be made, but futures contracts can be risky as well. If the market turns unexpectedly, losses can
Starting point is 00:04:39 quickly add up. It takes a skilled trader to make it all work. Nick Leeson is certain he's the man for the job and is lobbied hard for the role, and today is the day he finally gets his wish. Bering's Bank Development Officer Tony Dickel steps into Nick's office with incredible news. Not only does the bank want Nick to help establish a base in Singapore, they want him to be the general manager there. Nick is going to run the whole thing. He doesn't take long to accept the offer. And once he lands in Singapore, Nick gets to work quickly. The first order of business is to apply for and receive a broker's license.
Starting point is 00:05:14 Considering his sterling reputation in the United Kingdom, Nick gets his license in no time. But on his application in Singapore, he leaves out a key piece of information. Nick does not mention that back home, he was initially denied a broker's license because he had an outstanding debt of over $1,000 and received a court order to repay it. But to Nick, this deception is a minor detail. Past transgressions aren't important now. What matters is that he gets a chance to showcase his skills as a trader in Singapore. And with a broker's license secured, he can get started.
Starting point is 00:05:47 The first few months on the job go even better than Nick had hoped. It seems that he's a natural in his new role and the money is soon rolling in. Before the year is out, Nick has earned Berings Bank 10 million pounds, the equivalent of about $35 million today. That's a huge contribution to the bank's overall profits for the year, and as a reward for his efforts, Nick receives a bonus of 130,000 pounds, almost three times his basic salary. It's clear in the eyes of his superiors in London, Nick Leeson is fast becoming the bank's golden boy. But there is something about this initial profit that the bank management doesn't know. The original plan was for Nick to trade futures on behalf of Bering's bank's clients, buying and selling contracts with their money.
Starting point is 00:06:32 And as far as Bering's knows, that's what Nick did. But he actually decided that he wanted to try a higher risk, higher reward strategy. Without consulting anyone or securing permission, Nick started making speculative trades with the bank's money. Nick figures that what his bosses back in London don't know can't hurt him. And he's just made them a gigantic profit, so if the market continues to serve him well, Nick sees no reason to worry. But while future trades can provide huge profits, they can also result in. catastrophic losses. And soon, Nick's luck will run out. The early successes will be eclipsed by
Starting point is 00:07:08 mounting failures and determined to cover up his mistakes. Nick will discover a handy way of simply making these losses disappear. But as he continues to blow through the bank's money, it will become harder and harder for him to maintain the lie. It's July 17, 1992, on the trading floor of the Singapore International Monetary Exchange, four months after British investment banker Nick Leeson moved to the city. room is a cacophony of voices as brokers answer phones, talk to their clients, and try to make as many commissions as they can before the end of the workday. Nick is in the middle of the action, working the phones alongside his fellow Bering's bank traders. Then the madness of the afternoon is
Starting point is 00:07:58 interrupted by the ringing of a bell, and everyone erupts in cheers. This bell signals the end of the day's trading, and it's been an excellent one for the market, and the Bering's bank traders feel confident they've gotten a lot done today. Before he checks out, though, Nick wants to go over the trading slips to make sure everything looks right. And that's when he notices a problem. One of his employees, Kim Wong, has made a huge mistake. Instead of buying a bunch of contracts on behalf of her client, she's accidentally sold them. As Nick does some quick calculations, he realizes that it's going to cost bearings 20,000 pounds to fix the error. To some people in the industry, this would be a fireable offense. But Nick feels sorry for Kim and wants to avoid having to let her go.
Starting point is 00:08:41 But his solution to the problem isn't exactly above board, even though it is simple. Recently, Bering's bank instructed Nick to create an error account to log small mistakes at the Singapore office. He's labeled the account 88888, since the number 8 is considered lucky in some East Asian cultures. Shortly after setting up the account, though, Nick's superiors changed their minds and told him to stick with the old system of instantly reporting accounting errors so everything could be handled by London directly. Ever since then, the so-called Five-Aids account has been dormant, unused and unmonitored. But when Kim Wong makes her mistake, Nick figures once again that what management in London doesn't know can't hurt them.
Starting point is 00:09:23 So Nick quietly logs the error into the Five-Ats account. And then he makes up a fake client who bought those same shares and logs it as if it's a real commission. That doesn't change the fact that Barings is still short 20,000 pounds, when Nick figures that hiding the mistake will buy him some time to fix the problem on his own. This is supposed to be a one-time solution. But Nick soon starts to find it useful to make other issues disappear. It becomes known throughout his team that if mistakes happen, any broker can simply bring the problem to Nick and he'll handle it.
Starting point is 00:09:56 And by the end of 1992, Nick has hidden over 30 such errors. But the more losses he squirrels away, the more pressure he feels to earn the money back. He's got a reputation to maintain, and so he starts making bigger and riskier trades. The market isn't always reliable, though, and over the years of vicious cycle forms, Nick trades aggressively and loses, so he trades even more aggressively and loses again. Nick is in a unique position that allows him to continue this without being detected. He is basically his own supervisor, so he can do what he wants without fear of getting caught until 1995.
Starting point is 00:10:33 On January 17th of that year, an earthquake hits Japan and virtually collapses the market there. So much trading in Singapore involves the Japanese market that without it, Nick has very little hope of making back the money he's been losing over the years. But he continues to invest, even though his losses now add up to hundreds of millions of pounds. That kind of money is hard to hide, even for Nick Leeson. In February, he gets a message from a clerk at the London office who says there's a strange discrepancy in Nick's trading account. 190,000 pounds seems to be missing,
Starting point is 00:11:07 and the clerk can't figure out where it's gone. Nick feigns ignorance, but knows the game is up, and in a panic, he decides that he has to make a run for it. On February 23rd, 1995, Nick will leave a note on his desk that simply says, I'm sorry. Then he and his wife, Lisa, will flee Singapore for Malaysia. A day later, Bering's Bank will discover the catastrophic losses that Nick has been hiding for years,
Starting point is 00:11:31 but by then, it will be to be to. too late. It's a little after 9 p.m. on February 26, 1995, in the offices of Bering's Bank in London. Bering's employees have been gathering here all day, anxiously waiting for news. Everyone knows that the situation is dire. The bank is on the verge of total collapse. For the last few days, any attempts to reach the rogue trader Nick Leeson have failed. After he first disappeared, the Barings auditors started poking around, trying to answer some basic questions about the discrepancies they found in the books. But what originally seemed like a small issue has ballooned into an all-out catastrophe. The more the auditors dig into Nick's files, the bigger the problem becomes. This is not
Starting point is 00:12:26 just a matter of a few thousand pounds that are missing. Through risky unauthorized trades, Nick has gambled away over two times the available capital of the entire bank. Bering's employees nervously pace around the offices, unsure of what to do. All anyone knows is that across town, a group of senior bankers from other firms are meeting to see if there's any way to save Barings. But it would take a miracle. And as the hours tick by, the less confident anyone feels. The senior bankers talk well into the night, and then finally the phone rings at Barring's offices. An employee grabs it, hoping for good news. But after a moment's pause, he replaces the receiver. Looking around at the anxious faces of his fellow workers, he tells the room,
Starting point is 00:13:10 the administrators are coming in. Grab what you can and run. Bairing's bank has collapsed. But as chaos erupts in the London financial world, the hunt for the man who caused it continues. It takes several more days for the authorities to locate Nick Leeson, but on the tarmac at Frankfurt International Airport, German officials take him and his wife into custody. Nick Leeson is eventually convicted of fraud in a Singapore court
Starting point is 00:13:35 and sentenced to six and a half years behind bars. After his release, he will write a memoir titled Road Trader, which will then be made into a movie starring Ewan McGregor. And in 2003, Nick will begin working for a firm of corporate private investigators, where he will help companies identify cases of fraud like his own. But it will be difficult for any future fraudster to match the destruction Nick Leeson caused when after years of deception and lies, he brought about the collapse of Bering's Bank on February 26, 1995.
Starting point is 00:14:12 Next on History Daily, February 27, 1943. During the darkest days of World War II, more than a thousand Jews are released from Nazi detention after their non-Jewish wives and family members stage a protest on the streets of Berlin. From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham, audio editing by Mohamed Shazzy, sound designed by Matthew Filler, music by Lindsay Graham. This episode is written and researched by Georgia Hampton, edited by William Simpson, managing producer Emily Burke, executive producers. William Synton for airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.

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