BBC News, 3
April 2013
Former
Goldman Sachs trader Matthew Marshall Taylor has pleaded guilty to defrauding
the bank with an $8.3bn (£5.5bn) unauthorised trade in 2007.
Earlier in
the day Taylor, 34, handed himself in to FBI agents in New York.
He pleaded
guilty - before US District Judge William Pauley in a federal court in lower
Manhattan - to a count of wire fraud, and said he was "truly sorry".
Taylor was
dismissed in December 2007 after the incident, which resulted in a $118m loss
for the Wall Street bank.
Goldman
paid $1.5m last year to settle charges that it had failed to appropriately
supervise Taylor.
Taylor told
the court he knew his actions were wrong and illegal but established the trade
to boost his reputation and pay packet.
His salary
was $150,000 and he expected a $1.6m bonus.
Taylor
started his Wall Street career at Morgan Stanley in 2001 after attending the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
He joined
Goldman Sachs in 2005 and worked there until his sacking, for building up
"inappropriately large proprietary futures positions in a firm trading
account", according to a filing with the Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority (Finra).
After leaving
Goldman, Taylor returned to Morgan Stanley, where he remained until July 2012.
He will be
sentenced on 26 July.

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