Financial Forensics: The Due Diligence Files

Sri Lanka 2022 : The Government Banned Fertilizer to Save Foreign Exchange. The Crop Failure Cost More Foreign Exchange Than the Fertilizer Did — EP65 T1

15 min · 24 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Sri Lanka 2022 : The Government Banned Fertilizer to Save Foreign Exchange. The Crop Failure Cost More Foreign Exchange Than the Fertilizer Did — EP65 T1

Descripción

🔴 FFL Case Library is Live 80 forensic cases · 3 offline tools · zero cloudRun your deals against the pattern database before you sign.Launch price $79 → $99 after EP100 release.[⁠⁠https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc⁠⁠ [https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc]] In April 2021, Sri Lanka banned all chemical fertilizer imports overnight. No transition period. No agronomist review. The government declared it an environmental policy — Sri Lanka would become the world's first 100% organic nation. It was a reserve management decision dressed as an ideology. Forex reserves had fallen from $7.6 billion in 2019 to below $2 billion by mid-2021. The fertilizer bill was $500 million per year. Rather than disclose the reserve crisis, the government eliminated the import. Seven months later, rice production had fallen by nearly a third. Tea yields were down 18%, costing $425 million in lost export earnings. Sri Lanka, self-sufficient in rice, was importing grain from India. The crop failure consumed more reserves than the fertilizer had. This is the financial autopsy of the Sri Lanka sovereign default — the first in the country's 74-year history since independence, announced April 12, 2022. And the multi-policy collapse mechanism that converted three consecutive unforced fiscal errors into a reserve depletion spiral with no exit. We dissect the full sequence: the November 2019 tax cuts that eliminated $1.4 billion in annual revenue and triggered a simultaneous three-agency rating downgrade that closed ISB market access; the Easter Sunday bombing and COVID-19 shocks that hit a sovereign already locked out of capital markets; the organic farming decision that destroyed export earnings in an attempt to conserve the reserves the exports were supposed to protect; and the January 2022 $500M bond repayment made with the last usable reserves to maintain the claim that Sri Lanka had never defaulted — three months before the default. We cover the political collapse: nationwide protests, the occupation of the presidential palace, Gotabaya Rajapaksa fleeing to the Maldives and resigning from Singapore. Debt-to-GDP at default: 125.8%. Usable forex reserves at the moment of default: $50 million — one day of import cover. This was not a China debt trap. Chinese bilateral lending was 6.7% of total debt. This was a government that eliminated its own fiscal options one by one until none remained. Financial Forensics Labs — Every collapse has a pattern. We dissect it. Layer by layer. KEYWORDS Sri Lanka sovereign default 2022, Sri Lanka fertilizer ban collapse, Gotabaya Rajapaksa resignation, Sri Lanka forex reserves collapse, Sri Lanka 2022 economic crisis, Sri Lanka ISB default, organic farming policy economic crisis, Sri Lanka tax cuts 2019 downgrade, Sri Lanka debt-to-GDP 125 percent, Sri Lanka IMF bailout 2023, multi-policy collapse sovereign default, Sri Lanka $50 million reserves, Rajapaksa fled country 2022, Sri Lanka presidential palace protest, sovereign default sequence policy error

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168 episodios

episode Bankhaus Herstatt 1974 : Settlement Asymmetry & Gross Principal Exposure │ GP/LP Analysis - 3 Red Flags │ EP 84 T2 artwork

Bankhaus Herstatt 1974 : Settlement Asymmetry & Gross Principal Exposure │ GP/LP Analysis - 3 Red Flags │ EP 84 T2

🔴 FFL Case Library is Live 80 forensic cases · 3 offline tools · zero cloudRun your deals against the pattern database before you sign.Launch price $79 → $99 after EP100 release. All Info is in the Link [⁠⁠⁠⁠https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc⁠⁠⁠⁠ [https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc]] Settlement risk and credit risk are not the same analytical category. Credit risk asks if a counterparty can pay; settlement risk asks if the infrastructure itself will allow the transaction to complete. At Bankhaus Herstatt, that systemic distinction cost global counterparty banks billions and forced a multi-decade rewrite of international financial market infrastructure. This GP/LP technical episode dissects the structural mechanics of settlement timing asymmetry as principal risk: how cross-border currency legs route through disconnected national payment systems operating on separate schedules, and why a counterparty can be perfectly solvent while the transaction fails to complete due to clearing execution gaps. We analyze the structural parallel to cross-border operational restructurings like Agrokor and Icesave, framing how jurisdictional boundaries split supervisory oversight from actual settlement execution. We identify three institutional-grade red flags and risk metrics derived from clearing data: (1) gross principal exposure vs net replacement cost—the critical measurement failure where risk frameworks understated exposure by looking at marked-to-market numbers rather than full principal value during the settlement window; (2) settlement channel concentration—the high-cliff operational risk of routing multi-currency clearing through a single correspondent node or window; and (3) cross-jurisdictional supervisory coordination gaps—the structural reality that national regulators retain authority to close local institutions at their own convenience without regard to non-domestic settlement legs. We provide the active market context: what CLS Bank's payment-versus-payment mechanism resolved for 18 major currencies, and where unmeasured settlement exposure remains live today in emerging market currencies, swaps, and over-the-counter options. For credit risk officers, FX desk managers, treasury allocators, and institutional due diligence teams managing multi-currency books. Financial Forensics Labs — Every collapse has a pattern. We dissect it. Layer by layer. KEYWORDS Herstatt settlement risk analysis, gross principal exposure FX, payment versus payment mechanism, settlement timing asymmetry risk, CLS Bank residual risk, foreign exchange risk management, CPSS report 1996 banking, interbank clearing channel concentration, replacement cost vs principal risk, cross jurisdictional supervisory gap, Bankhaus Herstatt GP LP analysis, counterparty credit risk metrics, non-CLS currency risk due diligence, Basel Committee banking standards, payment system infrastructure failure

Ayer15 min
episode Bankhaus Herstatt 1974 : The German Regulator Did the Right Thing. In New York, It Was 10:30 AM. The Dollars Never Arrived — EP84 T1 artwork

Bankhaus Herstatt 1974 : The German Regulator Did the Right Thing. In New York, It Was 10:30 AM. The Dollars Never Arrived — EP84 T1

🔴 FFL Case Library is Live 80 forensic cases · 3 offline tools · zero cloudRun your deals against the pattern database before you sign.Launch price $79 → $99 after EP100 release. All Info is in the Link [⁠⁠⁠https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc⁠⁠⁠ [https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc]] On June 26th, 1974, the Federal Banking Supervisory Office in Frankfurt correctly determined that Bankhaus Herstatt, a private bank in Cologne and the 35th largest in Germany, was insolvent due to massive foreign exchange losses. The regulator withdrew its license at 4:30 PM Cologne time and ordered it to cease operations immediately. But in New York, it was 10:30 AM. That six-hour gap—the space between the end of the German banking day and the middle of the American one—exposed a catastrophic structural flaw in the architecture of global cross-border payments. Banks in New York had been sending Deutsche marks to Herstatt all morning in exchange for US dollars due later that day. When Herstatt was revoked, the dollar payments stopped. The Deutsche marks were gone; the dollars never arrived. This is the financial autopsy of Bankhaus Herstatt—not a case of fraud or governance failure, but a pattern of pure structural timing exposure across synchronized currency markets. We trace the full narrative: how Herstatt built its FX growth strategy on high-volatility bets after the Bretton Woods collapse, how internal losses grew to 470 million Deutsche marks against just 44 million in capital, and how its closure triggered an immediate interbank market seizure. We cover Chase Manhattan Bank's $156 million exposure, the subsequent failures of Franklin National Bank and British-Israel Bank, and the unprecedented multi-decade regulatory contagion that forced central banks to establish the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and eventually engineer CLS Bank twenty-eight years later. Financial Forensics Labs — Every collapse has a pattern. We dissect it. Layer by layer. KEYWORDS Bankhaus Herstatt failure 1974, foreign exchange settlement risk, settlement timing asymmetry, banking insolvency Cologne, Herstatt FX trading losses, German banking regulator 1974, Chase Manhattan Herstatt exposure, interbank market contagion, Basel Committee on Banking Supervision origin, Continuous Linked Settlement history, CLS Bank FX settlement, cross border payment architecture, Bretton Woods collapse volatility, Ivan David Herstatt bank, systemic risk payment system

Ayer16 min
episode Agrokor 2017 : Sovereign Restructuring Intervention & Factoring Exposure │ GP/LP Analysis - 3 Red Flags │ EP83 T2 artwork

Agrokor 2017 : Sovereign Restructuring Intervention & Factoring Exposure │ GP/LP Analysis - 3 Red Flags │ EP83 T2

🔴 FFL Case Library is Live 80 forensic cases · 3 offline tools · zero cloudRun your deals against the pattern database before you sign.Launch price $79 → $99 after EP100 release. All Info is in the Link [⁠⁠⁠https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc⁠⁠⁠ [https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc]] A corporate issuer’s declared trade payables and its true structural supply-chain financing obligations are not the same analytical category. Declared trade payables measure standard commercial terms with vendors; structural supply-chain financing measures a systemic, unhedged financing matrix where the corporate utilizes its suppliers' balance sheets as a credit pass-through node to bypass traditional banking lending constraints. At Agrokor, that structural distortion hid billions in high-velocity leverage from international high-yield bondholders until a total liquidity freeze occurred. This GP/LP technical episode dissects the mechanics of sovereign restructuring intervention and factoring exposure: how ad-hoc legislative mechanisms (Lex Agrokor) override traditional bankruptcy prioritization, wiping out unsecured credit structures to protect domestic political and macro stability. We analyze the structural parallel to bilateral creditor information asymmetry cases like Zambia's Eurobond default, framing how large, opaque institutional or state lenders use information and structural leverage to complicate restructurings for global private creditors. We identify three institutional-grade red flags and risk metrics derived from corporate and factoring data: (1) factoring-to-operating-cash-flow divergence—the critical accounting mismatch where short-term financing cash inflows are systematically categorized as trade operational payables rather than financial debt; (2) systemic supplier credit concentration ratios; and (3) sovereign macroeconomic footprint exposure—the reality that any private corporate accounting for more than 10% of a country’s GDP carries structural sovereign override risk where standard credit parameters will be legally set aside during a default event. For credit risk officers, high-yield distressed debt allocators, corporate due diligence teams, and emerging market fixed income managers. Financial Forensics Labs — Every collapse has a pattern. We dissect it. Layer by layer. KEYWORDS Agrokor supply chain financing, factoring debt classification, Lex Agrokor credit analysis, trade payables accounting fraud, sovereign override risk, systemic credit concentration, distressed debt GP LP analysis, corporate factoring mechanics, macro footprint exposure metric, Sberbank bilateral restructuring, high yield bond due diligence, emerging market corporate default, off balance sheet liabilities, financial forensics credit review, supply chain financing matrix

Ayer17 min
episode Agrokor 2017 : The Sovereign Override Mechanism. How a Bill of Exchange Matrix Blew Up the Balkans' Largest Corporate — EP 83 T1 artwork

Agrokor 2017 : The Sovereign Override Mechanism. How a Bill of Exchange Matrix Blew Up the Balkans' Largest Corporate — EP 83 T1

🔴 FFL Case Library is Live 80 forensic cases · 3 offline tools · zero cloudRun your deals against the pattern database before you sign.Launch price $79 → $99 after EP100 release. All Info is in the Link [⁠⁠⁠https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc⁠⁠⁠ [https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc]] DESCRIPCIÓN SEO In April 2017, the Croatian government enacted a historic, ad-hoc insolvency law known as "Lex Agrokor," effectively seizing control of the largest privately-owned company in the Balkans. Agrokor, a massive retail and agribusiness conglomerate employing over 60,000 people and accounting for 15% of Croatia’s GDP, had collapsed under an unmanageable wave of off-balance-sheet debt. The mechanical engine of this failure was a hidden multi-billion kuna matrix of "bills of exchange" (menice). Agrokor’s founder, Ivica Todorić, had issued these instruments to domestic suppliers, who then discounted them at local financial institutions to generate immediate cash. On paper, these were standard trade payables; in economic reality, they were unhedged commercial bank loans disguised to bypass regulatory credit exposure limits. This is the financial autopsy of Agrokor—not a standard case of operational retail margin pressure, but a structural case of systemic supply-chain financing capture. We trace the full narrative: how Agrokor built an unsustainable regional monopoly funded by high-yield Eurobonds and massive bilateral credit lines from Russian state banks Sberbank and VTB, how the bill of exchange matrix concealed the true leverage from international bondholders, and how the sudden liquidity seizure forced a sovereign intervention that redrew the geopolitical and financial landscape of Southeastern Europe. Financial Forensics Labs — Every collapse has a pattern. We dissect it. Layer by layer. KEYWORDS Agrokor insolvency 2017, Lex Agrokor Croatia, bills of exchange matrix menice, Ivica Todoric accounting fraud, supply chain financing capture, Sberbank Agrokor exposure, high yield Eurobonds Balkans, off balance sheet trade payables, regional agribusiness monopoly, corporate leverage concealment, VTB Bank restructuring Agrokor, financial forensics corporate collapse, credit exposure limit bypass, supplier factoring risk, systemic retail crisis Zagreb

Ayer18 min
episode Icesave 2008 : Jurisdictional Arbitrage & Sovereign Deposit Backstop limits │ GP/LP Analysis - 3 Red Flags │ EP 82 T2 artwork

Icesave 2008 : Jurisdictional Arbitrage & Sovereign Deposit Backstop limits │ GP/LP Analysis - 3 Red Flags │ EP 82 T2

🔴 FFL Case Library is Live 80 forensic cases · 3 offline tools · zero cloudRun your deals against the pattern database before you sign.Launch price $79 → $99 after EP100 release. All Info is in the Link [⁠⁠⁠https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc⁠⁠⁠ [https://sergiostieben.gumroad.com/l/wqyicc]] A banking institution’s capital adequacy ratio and its host-country deposit guarantee capacity are not the same analytical category. Capital adequacy metrics evaluate whether a bank's balance sheet can absorb credit losses under static parameters; guarantee capacity asks if the sovereign backing the local deposit insurance fund has the fiscal architecture to survive a multi-currency wholesale run on its foreign branches. At Icesave, that structural mismatch exposed international institutional allocators to systemic cross-border asset freezes. This GP/LP technical episode dissects the structural mechanics of jurisdictional arbitrage via branch networks: how the EU single passport rules split local asset collection from host-country supervisory oversight, leaving foreign regulators blind to rapid liquidity shifts. We analyze the structural parallel to cross-border operational failures like Bankhaus Herstatt, framing how timing and jurisdictional boundaries break down multi-currency payment and clearing architectures during an insolvency event. We identify three institutional-grade red flags and risk metrics derived from clearing and macro data: (1) deposit-to-sovereign GDP coverage ratios—the critical measurement failure where a bank's total insured cross-border deposits exceed the fiscal printing or taxing capacity of the home state; (2) branch-vs-subsidiary operational structure classification—the high-cliff regulatory risk of routing customer funds through legal structures that bypass local central bank lender-of-last-resort windows; and (3) cross-border wholesale-to-retail funding velocity gaps. For bank credit analysts, macro fund allocators, regulatory compliance officers, and institutional due diligence teams managing international counterparty exposure. Financial Forensics Labs — Every collapse has a pattern. We dissect it. Layer by layer. KEYWORDS Icesave macro risk analysis, sovereign deposit backstop capacity, jurisdictional branch arbitrage, EU single passport rules, deposit to sovereign GDP metric, branch vs subsidiary regulation, lender of last resort limitations, cross border banking due diligence, wholesale retail funding velocity, Landsbanki credit analysis, systemic risk liquidity mismatch, financial market infrastructure failure, EFTA sovereign debt exposure, banking supervisory gaps, counterparty risk assessment

1 de jun de 202616 min