Back to Journal

Peregrine Financial Trustee Seeks to Return $41 Mln to Clients

N
Written by
NIBA
Published
Reading time
2 min

Peregrine Financial Group's bankruptcy trustee plans to return up to $41 million to former customers of the failed futures brokerage in the second payout since the firm collapsed 17 months ago.

Court-appointed trustee Ira Bodenstein is seeking to return about 7 percent, or $27.5 million, to Peregrine customers who traded on U.S. exchanges, according to court filings. In the first payout last year, the group, which comprised the bulk of the firm's clients, received back about 30 percent of the money they had in accounts when Peregrine failed.

Clients who traded on foreign markets would get back about 45 percent more of their money, or $13.5 million, in the second payout, court documents show. They received back about 40 percent of their missing money in the first payout last year.

A hearing on the trustee's motion is set for Dec. 18.

"Just in time for the holidays, former customers of Peregrine Financial are getting a long awaited stocking stuffer," said Attain Capital Management, a trading firm that lost money when Peregrine failed, in a blog post on its website.

Peregrine filed for bankruptcy protection in July 2012 after founder Russell Wasendorf Sr. attempted suicide and confessed to a long-running fraud. He was later sentenced to 50 years in jail for looting hundreds of millions of dollars from his clients.

Wasendorf said in a suicide note that he had been bilking customers for nearly the entire 20 years of the brokerage's existence, and had spent most of it on keeping the firm afloat and building a state-of-the-art headquarters in Cedar Falls, Iowa.

Bodenstein has about $68.7 million on hand that belongs to customers with different kinds of accounts, documents show. He said he was seeking to hold back nearly $28 million in the second payout because some customer claims still need to be reconciled.

"There's still some futures claims that are subject to resolution," Bodenstein said in an interview. "We believe that this is obviously a safe amount of money to disburse."

The first payout last year returned about $123 million to customers.

Bodenstein proposed to make the second payout by the end of the year. He declined to estimate how much money he will ultimately be able to return to Peregrine customers.

Stay Informed

Subscribe to the NIBA Journal for the latest insights and industry updates

Related Articles

View All
MF Global Updates

MF Global customers to be fully reimbursed, trustee says

Today marks the beginning of a $6.7 billion payout to the former customers of MF Global Holdings. The process is expected to take several weeks but will return all the money that is owed to the approximately 26,500 former commodities and securities customers of the failed brokerage. "Checks are going in the mail that will make all public customers of MF Global Inc. 100% whole," trustee James Giddens said in a statement. Read Full Article at FIA SmartBrief

MF Global Updates

Request for Comments – CPO/CTA Capital Requirement and Customer Protection Measures-Comments Due by April 15, 2014

NFA regularly reviews the continued effectiveness of its regulatory requirements. Over the past three years, NFA has issued 26 Member Responsibility Actions (MRAs), and 92% of those MRAs were against CPO and/or CTA Members. Most of these matters involved misuse of customer funds (including one CPO that improperly used pool funds because it had insufficient assets to operate as a going concern) and/or misstating net asset values and/or performance information. In light of these actions, NFA is reviewing the current regulatory structure applicable to CPO and CTA operations. In particular, NFA is looking at ways to strengthen the regulatory structure governing CPO operations to provide greater protection for customer funds. Additionally, NFA is exploring ways to ensure that CPOs and...

MF Global Updates

Corzine loses bid to dismiss lawsuit

Jon Corzine, former CEO of MF Global, lost a bid to dismiss litigation that seeks to hold him, other executives and banks responsible for the company's bankruptcy. "Defendants' contentions would suggest that ... perhaps the debacle must have been the fateful work of supernatural forces, or else that the explanation for a spectacular multi-billion dollar crash of a global corporate giant is simply that 'stuff happens,' " U.S. District Judge Victor Marrero wrote in his ruling.  >Click here to read the full article