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http://www.sblincoln.com/investments_eagleone2.htm
Kerviel is appealing the ruling and says he hopes in the new trial "to prove once and for all that I wasn't the only one in the boat." The bank says Kerviel made bets of up to euro50 billion -- more than the bank's total market value
-- on futures contracts on three European equity indices, and that he masked the size of his bets by recording fictitious offsetting transactions. The euro4.9 billion figure is the sum the bank says it lost unwinding Kerviel's complex positions in January 2008. It's a sum nobody realistically expects him to repay. Kerviel said he is currently making about euro900 ($1,245) a month working part-time as a computer consultant
-- he reduced his hours to concentrate on the trial.
[Associated
Press]
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