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Word: daiwa (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...were "Tosh" and "Toshy"--had acted alone or with the help of friends in high places at the bank. It was noted that nearly two months passed between the time Iguchi blew the whistle on himself in a July 13 letter to bank president Akira Fujita and the time Daiwa informed authorities on Sept. 18--despite the fact that U.S. state and federal regulations require banks to give immediate notification of criminal behavior. And although Daiwa relieved Iguchi of his responsibilities in July, it did not get around to firing him until Sept. 26--two days after the FBI went...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A BLOWN BILLION | 10/9/1995 | See Source »

...While Daiwa said it needed time to ascertain facts before informing the authorities, some Wall Street experts said the delay looked suspicious and improper. "That is not acceptable behavior in our view," says Heinz Binggeli, managing director of Emcor Risk Management, a consulting firm. "You don't let two months pass before you shut down the operation." Says the chief government-bond trader for a large Wall Street firm: "This went on undetected for 11 years? Come on, who's kidding whom? It's a joke...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A BLOWN BILLION | 10/9/1995 | See Source »

...real estate loans. Just last week a government report urged the use of taxpayer funds to bail out the banking system. That outraged critics like Hatsuko Yoshioka, the head of Japan's powerful Housewives' Association, an umbrella organization of 391 women's civic groups. Yoshioka wants major banks like Daiwa to commit some of their vast resources to shoring up ailing banks and housing lenders. Says she: "Daiwa Bank, although it lost $1.1 billion, is still going to be in the black this year. Why is that? Even when banks have big problems, they can still have profits...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A BLOWN BILLION | 10/9/1995 | See Source »

After briefly selling used cars, Iguchi joined Daiwa in New York City and spent eight years handling back-office paperwork for government-bond trading. He was promoted to trader in 1984 and, because the office was a small one, remained in charge of keeping the books. But things took a wrong turn from the get-go when Iguchi lost an estimated $200,000 trading bonds and allegedly recouped it through his illegal scheme. "We had great expectations for him, and so he felt obliged to keep going instead of coming clean," says Kenji Yasui, a Daiwa deputy president...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A BLOWN BILLION | 10/9/1995 | See Source »

Iguchi grew bolder and bolder, reportedly trading as much as $500 million worth of bonds in a single day. But by late 1993, Iguchi was finding it increasingly difficult to dip into Daiwa's bond accounts to make up for losses. That year, Daiwa split up the bond-trading and record-keeping functions in its New York offices. In his letter to bank president Fujita, Iguchi reportedly said the change had made it hard to continue concealing his losses. Yet the very fact that Iguchi kept up the deception for two years more heightened suspicions on Wall Street that someone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A BLOWN BILLION | 10/9/1995 | See Source »

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