Hillary Rodham
Clinton was allowed to order 10 cattle futures contracts,
normally a $12,000 investment, in her first commodity trade in
1978 although she had only $1,000 in her account at the time,
according to trade records the White House released yesterday.
The computerized records of her trades, which
the White House obtained from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange,
show for the first time how she was able to turn her initial
investment into $6,300 overnight. In about 10 months of
trading, she made nearly $100,000, relying heavily on advice
from her friend James B. Blair, an experienced futures trader.
The new records also raise the possibility
that some of her profits -- as much as $40,000 – came from
larger trades ordered by someone else and then shifted to her
account, Leo Melamed, a former chairman of the Merc who
reviewed the records for the White House, said in an
interview. He said the discrepancies in Clinton's records also
could have been caused by human error.
Even allocated trades would not necessarily
have benefited Clinton, Melamed added. "I have no reason to
change my original assessment. Mrs. Clinton violated no rules
in the course of her transactions," he said.
Lisa Caputo, Clinton's spokeswoman, said the
documents were released yesterday "to give as complete a
picture as possible" of her trades. She said Clinton had never
before seen them.
Blair, who urged Clinton to enter the
high-risk futures market and ordered most of her trades, said
in a recent interview that he "talked her into" her first
futures trade in October 1978 before paperwork on her account
was completed. It was liquidated quickly, he recalled, because
"it was bigger than she wanted and required more money."
A close examination of her individual trades
underscores Blair's pivotal role. It also shows that Robert L.
"Red" Bone, who ran the Springdale, Ark., office of Ray E.
Friedman and Co. (Refco), allowed Clinton to initiate and
maintain many trading positions – besides the first – when she
did not have enough money in her account to cover them.
Why would Bone do so? Bone could not be
reached for comment, but Blair said he thought he knew why. "I
was a very good customer," he said, noting he paid Bone
$800,000 in commissions over the years. "They weren't going to
hassle me. If I brought them somebody, they weren't going to
hassle them."
Besides, he added, Bone would not worry if he
agreed with his clients' bet on which way the price of a given
contract would go.
Blair, who at the time was outside counsel to
Tyson Foods Inc., Arkansas' largest employer, says he was
advising Clinton out of friendship, not to seek political gain
for his state-regulated client. At the time of many of the
trades, Bill Clinton was governor.
Hillary Clinton has said she made all the
trading decisions herself and has tried to play down Blair's
role. But she acknowledged in April, three weeks after her
trades were first disclosed, that Blair actually placed most
of the trades.
Blair advised Clinton again on July 17, 1979.
He recalled that she started that trading day by losing
$26,460 on 10 cattle contracts she had held for more than a
month, by far her worst loss as a futures player. On his
recommendation, he said, she immediately went back into the
market. She acquired 50 new cattle contracts – worth $1.4
million -- and when the price moved in her favor, unloaded
them around noon for a quick gain of $10,550. This recouped
part of her loss.
Blair said Clinton and other friends he
suggested trades for had lost money that spring on feeder
cattle. Those trades "caused everyone some grief," he said.
"I'm sure I was pressing to get everyone back above water" in
recommending the quick and bold day trade.
The White House defense of Hillary Clinton's
preferential treatment was that other customers in the same
office also were allowed to trade without having enough cash
in their accounts.
While Clinton's account was wildly successful
to an outsider, it was small compared to what others were
making in the cattle futures market in the 1978-79 period. An
investigation of the cattle futures market at that time by
Rep. Neal Smith (D-Iowa) found that in one 16-month period 32
traders made more than $110 million in profits from large
trades -- those of 50 contracts or more. Clinton traded
positions of 50 or more contracts only three times.
The records the White House released
yesterday were part of an investigative file from 1979, when
the exchange charged Bone and Refco with violations of its
record keeping and margin requirement rules. Bone was
suspended for three years; Refco paid a $250,000 fine, then
the largest in the exchange's history. Internal memos from
that investigation cover transactions from the same period in
June in which Clinton was trading, but not the same trades. In
one instance, the Merc found Bone and a fellow broker were
ordering 1,000 cattle contracts at a time – far over the limit
allowed at the time – and then allocating them to other
customers.
One internal Merc memo said "there is reason
to believe" that a majority of Bone's accounts were traded
without the clients' permission. Blair said that Bone at times
traded his personal account without permission.
Blair said he doubted Bone traded Clinton's
account without her permission.
Melamed said it was "impossible" to determine
the exact cause for the discrepancies between the Merc
computer record of Clinton's trades and the trading records
she received from Refco, which the White House released
earlier.
She said that for six trades, her initial
trading position in the Refco records were not reflected in
the Merc documents. On one other trade neither her purchase
nor sale was included. On that trade she netted $12,150 on 15
cattle contracts she held for four days.
Clinton reported a loss of $2,480 on one of
the trades in question, Melamed noted.
One was a "day trade" on hog contracts that
netted $2,553. Melamed said "day trades" are the only way to
assure profit even if favorable trading positions are
allocated to a customer's account. Any position held overnight
would be subject to the rise and fall in prices in the
volatile futures market, he added.
Staff researcher Barbara J. Saffir
contributed to this report.
In commodities futures trading, an account
that falls below the "maintenance margin" typically triggers a
"margin call," where the trader must put up sufficient cash to
cover the contracts. Although Hillary Rodham Clinton's account
was under-margined for nearly all of July 1979, no margin
calls were made, no additional cash was put up, and she
eventually reaped a $60,000 profit.
June 29 ......... $56,466 (Margin: Value
account should have had to continue trading.)
July 12 ........ -$24,243
July 17 ......... $22,537 (Account value:
Total cash on hand plus (or minus) paper value of contracts.)
July 20 ......... $61,537
July 23, 1979: She withdrew $60,000 and never
traded again, closing the account in October.
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