WASHINGTON - After several hours of questioning by members of the House Agriculture Committee, Jon Corzine still could not explain why brokerage house MF Global is missing $1.2 billion in client funds.
"I simply do not know where the money is," Corzine, the Democrat and one-time U.S. senator and governor from New Jersey, said Thursday.
MF Global filed for bankruptcy protection on Oct. 31 after disclosing sizable exposure to derivatives and other investments related to European sovereign debt. Corzine resigned as CEO on Nov. 3 and hadn't spoken publicly until his appearance before the committee.
The missing funds have caused bankruptcy trustees to freeze tens of millions of dollars held in trading accounts for futures trading, impacting thousands of farmers across the country and in Minnesota. Apparently, MF Global moved funds that were suppose to remain segregated into the risky European investments. A bankruptcy official testified Thursday that he is not sure that farmers will ever get all of their money back.
Corzine told committee members he was "stunned" when, on Oct. 30, company officials told him they "could not account for hundreds of millions of dollars of client money." The next day, MF Global declared insolvency in what could be the eighth-largest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history.
"What did you do when you first found out?" asked Rep. Dennis Cardoza (D-Calif.). "Did you call the police? Did you run to the bathroom and throw up?"
Corzine replied that he told his management team, "Let's recheck the figures."
The numbers could never be reconciled. Desperate attempts to sell MF Global failed, and the company went under.