0 a stockbroker (= someone who buys and sells shares for other people) who secretly loses a large amount of their employer's money after making a bad or illegal investment
1 someone at a financial organization who loses a large amount of its money in bad or illegal transactions , and who tries to hide this:
The banking industry cannot afford many more rogue traders tarnishing its reputation.
As a result, he is a good example of a rogue trader.
In other words, the rogue trader is not playing by the same set of rules.
The problems associated with the cold calling practised by various types of rogue trader do not exist in a vacuum.
The time that it takes to collect the evidence is time enough for the rogue trader to take the money and run.
It changes the request for a rogue trader to agree to better practice for a requirement to trade fairly.
There is always a rogue trader and you have to plan on that basis.
Will he confirm that the change in the regulations will make life much tougher for the rogue trader and improve consumer standards, which will be widely welcomed by consumers?
The rogue trader often uses careful lies that either only imply things or are incorporated into what is said but never into what is written down.