
Mr Kerviel himself spoke out for the first time this week. He said that he was operating alone, admitted to having made fictitious entries to cover his tracks, and argued, with sublime understatement, that he “got carried away”. Although he acknowledged his part of the blame, he said that he was being made a “scapegoat” by the bank. Reports in the French press depict a young trader, from a small town in Brittany, keen to prove himself in a trading room dominated by members of France’s educational elite.
According to testimony to the financial police, leaked to Le Monde, Mr Kerviel said that the techniques he used to cover his tracks “are not sophisticated at all”, and that he was convinced his superiors knew what he was up to, as he had received “several questioning emails” in 2007. By the end of that year, Mr Kerviel’s unauthorised positions were €1.4 billion in profit; it was only in 2008 that his trades turned negative. “As long as we earn and it doesn’t show too much,” he said, “nobody says anything.”
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