INTL 12.31.2011 10-Q
Table of Contents

 
 
 
 
 
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
____________________ 
FORM 10-Q
 ____________________
(Mark One)
x
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the Quarterly Period Ended December 31, 2011
OR
o
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the Transition Period From              to             
Commission File Number 000-23554
____________________ 
INTL FCStone Inc.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
____________________ 
Delaware
 
59-2921318
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
 
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)
708 Third Avenue, Suite 1500
New York, NY 10017
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)
(212) 485-3500
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
____________________ 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.    Yes  x    No  o
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically and posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 305 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files).    Yes  x No o
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or smaller reporting company.
Large accelerated filer
o
  
Accelerated filer
x
 
 
 
 
 
Non-accelerated filer
o
  
Smaller reporting company
o
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).    Yes  o No  x

As of February 3, 2012, there were 18,980,977 shares of the registrant’s common stock outstanding.
 
 
 
 
 


Table of Contents

INTL FCStone Inc.
Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the Quarterly Period Ended December 31, 2011
Table Of Contents
 
 
 
Page
Part I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
 
 
 
 
Item 1.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Item 2.
 
 
 
Item 3.
 
 
 
Item 4.
 
 
Part II. OTHER INFORMATION
 
 
 
 
Item 1.
 
 
 
Item 1A.
 
 
 
Item 6.
 
 
 
 



Table of Contents

PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Item 1. Financial Statements
INTL FCStone Inc.
Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
(in millions, except par value and share amounts)
December 31,
2011
 
September 30,
2011
 
(Unaudited)
 
 
ASSETS
 
 
 
Cash and cash equivalents
$
288.3

 
$
220.6

Cash, securities and other assets segregated under federal and other regulations (including $105.0 and $22.7 at fair value at December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, respectively)
474.1

 
119.4

Deposits and receivables from:

 
 
Exchange-clearing organizations (including $1,013.5 and $1,408.2 at fair value at December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, respectively)
1,015.5

 
1,489.2

Broker-dealers, clearing organizations and counterparties (including $0.4 and $16.2 at fair value at December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, respectively)
133.2

 
146.5

Receivables from customers, net
90.7

 
115.9

Notes receivable, net
20.4

 
26.3

Income taxes receivable
9.1

 
8.8

Financial instruments owned, at fair value
145.7

 
223.1

Physical commodities inventory
113.6

 
160.6

Deferred income taxes
21.4

 
20.7

Property and equipment, net
17.3

 
15.0

Goodwill and intangible assets, net
56.7

 
56.1

Other assets
28.8

 
33.5

Total assets
$
2,414.8

 
$
2,635.7

LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
 
 
 
Liabilities:
 
 
 
Accounts payable and other accrued liabilities (including $22.9 and $22.3 at fair value at December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, respectively)
$
114.5

 
$
122.0

Payables to:
 
 
 
Customers
1,640.5

 
1,739.8

Broker-dealers, clearing organizations and counterparties
15.2

 
3.4

Lenders under loans and overdrafts
115.9

 
77.4

Income taxes payable
5.0

 
4.6

Financial instruments sold, not yet purchased, at fair value
226.6

 
390.9

Total liabilities
2,117.7

 
2,338.1

Commitments and contingencies (Note 11)
 
 
 
Equity:
 
 
 
INTL FCStone Inc. stockholders’ equity:
 
 
 
Preferred stock, $.01 par value. Authorized 1,000,000 shares; no shares issued or outstanding

 

Common stock, $.01 par value. Authorized 30,000,000 shares; 18,919,639 issued and 18,908,082 outstanding at December 31, 2011 and 18,653,964 issued and 18,642,407 outstanding at September 30, 2011
0.2

 
0.2

Common stock in treasury, at cost - 11,557 shares at December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011
(0.1
)
 
(0.1
)
Additional paid-in capital
206.5

 
205.2

Retained earnings
96.6

 
97.0

Accumulated other comprehensive loss
(6.1
)
 
(6.0
)
Total INTL FCStone Inc. stockholders’ equity
297.1

 
296.3

Noncontrolling interests

 
1.3

Total equity
297.1

 
297.6

Total liabilities and equity
$
2,414.8

 
$
2,635.7

See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements.

1

Table of Contents

INTL FCStone Inc.
Condensed Consolidated Income Statements
(Unaudited)
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions, except share and per share amounts)
2011
 
2010
Revenues:
 
 
 
Sales of physical commodities
$
17,175.9

 
$
16,208.8

Trading gains
73.4

 
17.1

Commission and clearing fees
32.0

 
37.5

Consulting and management fees
6.2

 
4.5

Interest income
2.7

 
2.5

Other income
0.2

 
0.4

Total revenues
17,290.4

 
16,270.8

Cost of sales of physical commodities
17,194.1

 
16,174.1

Operating revenues
96.3

 
96.7

Interest expense
2.1

 
3.8

Net revenues
94.2

 
92.9

Non-interest expenses:
 
 
 
Compensation and benefits
45.8

 
42.5

Clearing and related expenses
22.7

 
20.2

Introducing broker commissions
5.8

 
5.4

Communication and data services
4.6

 
3.5

Occupancy and equipment rental
2.8

 
1.8

Professional fees
2.7

 
2.1

Depreciation and amortization
1.5

 
1.0

Bad debts and impairments
0.1

 
2.4

Other
8.9

 
8.1

Total non-interest expenses
94.9

 
87.0

(Loss) income from continuing operations, before tax
(0.7
)
 
5.9

Income tax (benefit) expense
(0.2
)
 
2.1

Net (loss) income from continuing operations
(0.5
)
 
3.8

Income from discontinued operations, net of tax

 
0.2

Net (loss) income
(0.5
)
 
4.0

Add: Net loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
0.1

 

Net (loss) income attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. common stockholders
$
(0.4
)
 
$
4.0

Basic (loss) earnings per share:
 
 
 
(Loss) income from continuing operations attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. common stockholders
$
(0.02
)
 
$
0.22

Income from discontinued operations attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. common stockholders

 
0.01

Net (loss) income attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. common stockholders
$
(0.02
)
 
$
0.23

Diluted (loss) earnings per share:
 
 
 
(Loss) income from continuing operations attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. common stockholders
$
(0.02
)
 
$
0.21

Income from discontinued operations attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. common stockholders

 
0.01

Net (loss) income attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. common stockholders
$
(0.02
)
 
$
0.22

Weighted-average number of common shares outstanding:
 
 
 
Basic
18,163,489

 
17,423,098

Diluted
18,163,489

 
18,424,125

Amounts attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. common stockholders:
 
 
 
(Loss) income from continuing operations, net of tax
$
(0.4
)
 
$
3.8

Income from discontinued operations, net of tax

 
0.2

Net (loss) income
$
(0.4
)
 
$
4.0

See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements.

2

Table of Contents

INTL FCStone Inc.
Condensed Consolidated Cash Flows Statements 
(Unaudited)
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions)
2011
 
2010
Cash flows from operating activities:
 
 
 
Net (loss) income
$
(0.5
)
 
$
4.0

Adjustments to reconcile net (loss) income to net cash provided by (used in) operating activities:

 

Depreciation and amortization
1.5

 
1.0

Provision for bad debts and impairments
0.1

 
2.4

Deferred income taxes
(0.6
)
 
0.8

Amortization of debt issuance costs and debt discount
0.4

 
0.1

Convertible debt interest settled in company stock upon conversion

 
0.1

Amortization of stock-based compensation expense
1.0

 
0.5

Gain on acquisition of INTL Provident

 
(0.4
)
Changes in operating assets and liabilities, net:

 

Cash, securities and other assets segregated under federal and other regulations
(354.7
)
 
(31.9
)
Deposits and receivables from exchange-clearing organizations
473.6

 
(87.2
)
Deposits and receivables from broker-dealers, clearing organizations, and counterparties
11.9

 
60.1

Receivable from customers, net
25.7

 
(3.1
)
Notes receivable from customers, net
6.0

 
(29.7
)
Income taxes receivable
(0.3
)
 
1.5

Financial instruments owned and securities purchased under agreements to resell, at fair value
76.6

 
177.4

Physical commodities inventory
47.0

 
(28.7
)
Other assets
4.2

 
(3.9
)
Accounts payable and other accrued liabilities
(7.3
)
 
4.9

Payable to customers
(99.3
)
 
(94.0
)
Payable to broker-dealers, clearing organizations and counterparties
11.8

 
4.3

Income taxes payable
0.4

 
(0.4
)
Financial instruments sold, not yet purchased, at fair value
(164.4
)
 
19.1

Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities
33.1

 
(3.1
)
Cash flows from investing activities:
 
 
 
Deconsolidation of affiliates
0.4

 

Cash paid for acquisitions, net
(1.0
)
 
(9.3
)
Purchase of securities purchased under agreements to resell

 
(62.3
)
Purchase of exchange memberships and common stock

 
(0.4
)
Purchase of property and equipment
(3.2
)
 
(1.3
)
Net cash used in investing activities
(3.8
)
 
(73.3
)
Cash flows from financing activities:
 
 
 
Net change in payable to lenders under loans and overdrafts
38.5

 
74.1

Payments related to earn-outs on acquisitions
(0.3
)
 

Repayment of subordinated debt

 
(0.5
)
Debt issuance costs

 
(1.2
)
Exercise of stock options
0.3

 
0.1

Net cash provided by financing activities
38.5

 
72.5

Effect of exchange rates on cash and cash equivalents
(0.1
)
 

Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
67.7

 
(3.9
)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period
220.6

 
81.9

Cash and cash equivalents at end of period
$
288.3

 
$
78.0

Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:
 
 
 
Cash paid for interest
$
2.1

 
$
2.0

Income taxes paid, net of cash refunds
$
1.4

 
$
1.2

Supplemental disclosure of non-cash investing and financing activities:
 
 
 
Conversion of subordinated notes to common stock, net
$

 
$
5.6

Identified intangible assets and goodwill on acquisitions
$
1.2

 
$

Additional consideration payable related to acquisitions
$

 
$
3.7

See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements.

3

Table of Contents

INTL FCStone Inc.
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Stockholders’ Equity 
(Unaudited)
(in millions)
Common
Stock
 
Treasury
Stock
 
Additional
Paid-in
Capital
 
Retained
Earnings
 
Accumulated
Other
Comprehensive
Loss
 
Noncontrolling
Interests
 
Total
Balances as of September 30, 2011
$
0.2

 
$
(0.1
)
 
$
205.2

 
$
97.0

 
$
(6.0
)
 
$
1.3

 
$
297.6

Components of comprehensive income:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Net income
 
 
 
 
 
 
(0.4
)
 
 
 
(0.1
)
 
(0.5
)
Change in foreign currency translation, net of tax
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(0.1
)
 
 
 
(0.1
)
Change in pension liabilities, net of tax
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
0.1

 
 
 
0.1

Change in unrealized gain or loss on available-for-sale securities, net of tax
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(0.1
)
 
 
 
(0.1
)
Total comprehensive income
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(0.6
)
Exercise of stock options
 
 
 
 
0.3

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
0.3

Stock-based compensation
 
 
 
 
1.0

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1.0

Disposition or de-consolidation
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(1.2
)
 
(1.2
)
Balances as of December 31, 2011
$
0.2

 
$
(0.1
)
 
$
206.5

 
$
96.6

 
$
(6.1
)
 
$

 
$
297.1

See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements.

4

Table of Contents

INTL FCStone Inc.
Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
(Unaudited)

Note 1 – Basis of Presentation and Consolidation and Recently Issued Accounting Standards
INTL FCStone Inc., a Delaware corporation, and its consolidated subsidiaries (collectively “INTL” or “the Company”), form a financial services group focused on domestic and select international markets. The Company’s services include comprehensive risk management advisory services for commercial customers; execution of listed futures and options on futures contracts on all major commodity exchanges; structured over-the-counter (“OTC”) products in a wide range of commodities; physical trading and hedging of precious and base metals and select other commodities; trading of more than 130 foreign currencies; market-making in international equities; debt origination and asset management.
The Company provides these services to a diverse group of more than 20,000 customers located throughout the world, including producers, processors and end-users of nearly all widely-traded physical commodities to manage their risks and enhance margins; to commercial counterparties who are end-users of the firm’s products and services; to governmental and non-governmental organizations; and to commercial banks, brokers, institutional investors and major investment banks.
Basis of Presentation and Consolidation
The accompanying condensed consolidated balance sheet as of September 30, 2011, which has been derived from audited financial statements, and the unaudited interim condensed consolidated financial statements have been prepared pursuant to the rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"). Certain information and note disclosures normally included in annual financial statements prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America ("U.S. GAAP") have been condensed or omitted pursuant to those rules and regulations. The Company believes that the disclosures made are adequate to make the information presented not misleading. In the opinion of management, all adjustments (consisting of normal recurring accruals) considered necessary for a fair presentation of the condensed consolidated financial statements for the interim periods presented have been reflected as required by Rule 10-01 of Regulation S-X.
Operating results for interim periods are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected for the full year. It is suggested that these interim condensed consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with the Company’s audited consolidated financial statements and related notes contained in the Company’s Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2011 filed with the SEC.
These condensed consolidated financial statements include the accounts of INTL FCStone Inc. and its subsidiaries. Intercompany transactions and balances have been eliminated in consolidation. In accordance with the Consolidation Topic of the Accounting Standards Codification ("ASC"), the Company consolidates any variable interest entities for which it is the primary beneficiary, as defined.
The Company applies the equity method of accounting when the Company does not have a controlling interest in an entity, but exerts significant influence over the entity.
The Company had a majority interest in and was the general partner of the Blackthorn Multi-Advisor Fund, LP (the “Blackthorn Fund”), whose assets, liabilities, income and expenses were included within the Company's consolidated financial statements as of and for the year ended September 30, 2011. During the three months ended December 31, 2011, the Company requested and received approval for the full redemption of its remaining investment in the Blackthorn Fund effective December 31, 2011. As a result of the final redemption, the Company no longer retains any ownership interests in the Blackthorn Fund, has transferred its rights as general partner and deconsolidated its interest in the Blackthorn Fund as of December 31, 2011. The aggregate of the redemption amount and remaining noncontrolling interest less the carrying amount of the net assets of the Blackthorn Fund resulted in a nominal gain and was recorded as a component of trading gains on the consolidated condensed income statement for the three months ended December 31, 2011, as a result of the deconsolidation.
Our fiscal year end is September 30, and our fiscal quarters end on December 31, March 31, June 30 and September 30. Unless otherwise stated, all dates refer to our fiscal years and fiscal interim periods.
The preparation of condensed consolidated financial statements in conformity with U.S. GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, disclosure of contingent liabilities as of the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reporting period. The most significant of these estimates and assumptions relate to fair value measurements for financial instruments and investments, revenue recognition, the provision for potential losses from bad debts, valuation of inventories, valuation of goodwill and intangible assets, incomes taxes and contingencies. Although these and other estimates and assumptions are based on the best available information, actual results could be materially different from these estimates.

5

Table of Contents

Reclassifications
During the quarter ended March 31, 2011, the Company reclassified give-up fee revenue within the condensed consolidated income statement from 'consulting and management fees' to 'commission and clearing fees'. Reclassification in the amount of $0.9 million has been made to the three month period ended December 30, 2010, to conform to the current period presentation. This reclassification had no effect on previously reported total or net revenues.
To conform to the current presentation of the information concerning the Company's operating segments, the Company has reclassified $1.1 million, for the three months ended December 31, 2010, of costs not allocated to operating segments as non-variable direct segment costs, impacting reported net segment income, see Note 16.
Recent Accounting Pronouncements
In January 2010, new guidance was issued to require new disclosures and clarify existing disclosure requirements about fair value measurements as set forth in the Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures Topic in the ASC. The guidance requires that a reporting entity should disclose separately the amounts of transfers in and out of Level 1 and Level 2 fair value measurements and describe the reasons for the transfers; and in the reconciliation for fair value measurements using significant unobservable inputs, a reporting entity should present separately information about purchases, sales, issuances, and settlements. In addition, the guidance clarifies that for purposes of reporting fair value measurement for each class of assets and liabilities, a reporting entity needs to use judgment in determining the appropriate classes of assets and liabilities; and a reporting entity should provide disclosures about the valuation techniques and inputs used to measure fair value for both recurring and nonrecurring fair value measurements. This guidance was effective for the Company as of the first interim period beginning after December 15, 2009, except for the detailed level 3 roll forward disclosure, which is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2010. The Company adopted the requirements of the disclosures during the quarter ended March 31, 2010, except for the detailed level 3 roll forward disclosures. The Company adopted the detailed level 3 roll forward disclosures beginning with the first quarter ended December 31, 2011. The adoption of this guidance did not have a material impact on the Company's disclosures in its condensed consolidated financial statements.
In May 2011, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued an update to the fair value measurement guidance to achieve common fair value measurement and disclosure requirements in U.S. GAAP and International Financial Reporting Standards ("IFRS"). The amendments in the update change the wording used to describe many of the requirements in U.S. GAAP for measuring fair value and for disclosing information about fair value measurements. The amendment is not intended to result in a change in the application of the requirements in the Fair Value Measurements Topic in the ASC. This guidance is effective for interim and annual periods beginning after December 15, 2011. Early application is permitted. The Company adopted this guidance as of the first quarter of fiscal year 2012. The adoption of this guidance did not have a significant impact on the Company's condensed consolidated financial statements.
In June 2011, the FASB issued new guidance on the presentation of comprehensive income. This guidance eliminates the current option to report OCI and its components in the statement of changes in equity. Under this guidance, an entity can elect to present items of net income and OCI in one continuous statement or in two separate, but consecutive, statements. In addition, the guidance requires entities to show the effects of items reclassified from OCI to net income on the face of the financial statements. This guidance is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2011 and interim and annual periods thereafter. Early adoption is permitted, but full retrospective application is required. This guidance is effective for the Company's fiscal year beginning October 1, 2012 and all interim periods within that fiscal year. In December 2011, the FASB issued guidance that deferred the portion of the original guidance that required a company to separately present within net income reclassification adjustments of items out of accumulated other comprehensive income. The deferral is intended to be temporary until the FASB has time to reconsider these changes. The other provisions of the guidance will become effective as originally planned by the FASB. The Company is expecting to adopt this guidance in the first quarter of fiscal year 2013. As the Company reports comprehensive income within its condensed consolidated statements of stockholders' equity, the adoption of this guidance will result in a change in the presentation of comprehensive income in the Company's condensed consolidated financial statements.
In September 2011, the FASB issued amended guidance on goodwill impairment testing. Under the revised guidance, entities testing goodwill for impairment have the option of performing a qualitative assessment, whether it is more likely than not (a likelihood of more than 50%) that the fair value of a reporting unit is less than its carrying amount, before calculating the fair value of the reporting unit. Because the qualitative assessment is optional, entities may bypass it for any reporting unit in any period and begin their impairment analysis with the quantitative calculation in step 1. The guidance does not change how goodwill is calculated or assigned to reporting units, nor does it revise the requirement to test goodwill annually for impairment. In addition, the guidance does not amend the requirement to test goodwill for impairment between annual tests if events or circumstances warrant, however, it does revise the examples of events and circumstances that an entity should consider. The amended guidance is effective for annual and interim goodwill impairment tests performed for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2011. Early adoption is permitted. The Company adopted this guidance at the beginning of fiscal

6

Table of Contents

year 2012.The adoption of this guidance will not have a material impact on the Company's condensed consolidated financial statements.
On December 16, 2011, the FASB issued new guidance on the disclosures about offsetting assets and liabilities. While the FASB retained the existing offsetting models under U.S. GAAP, the new standard requires disclosures to allow investors to better compare and understand significant quantitative differences in financial statements prepared under U.S. GAAP. The new standard is effective for annual periods beginning after January 1, 2013, and interim periods within those annual periods. Retrospective application is required. This guidance is effective for the Company's fiscal year beginning October 1, 2013. The Company is expecting to adopt this guidance starting with the first quarter of fiscal year 2014. The adoption of this guidance is expected to change some of the Company's disclosures within the notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements.
Note 2 – Earnings per Share
The Company presents basic and diluted earnings per share ("EPS") using the two-class method which requires all outstanding unvested share-based payment awards that contain rights to non-forfeitable dividends and therefore participate in undistributed earnings with common stockholders be included in computing earnings per share. Under the two-class method, net earnings are reduced by the amount of dividends declared in the period for each class of common stock and participating security. The remaining undistributed earnings are then allocated to common stock and participating securities, based on their respective rights to receive dividends. Restricted stock awards granted to certain employees and directors and shares held in trust for the Provident Group acquisition contain non-forfeitable rights to dividends at the same rate as common stock, and are considered participating securities.
Basic EPS has been computed by dividing net income by the weighted-average number of common shares outstanding. The following is a reconciliation of the numerator and denominator of the diluted net income per share computations for the periods presented below. 
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions, except share amounts)
2011
 
2010
 Numerator:
 
 
 
 (Loss) income from continuing operations attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. stockholders
$
(0.4
)
 
$
3.8

 Less: Allocation to participating securities

 
(0.1
)
(Loss) income from continuing operations allocated to common stockholders
$
(0.4
)
 
$
3.7

Loss (income) from discontinued operations
$

 
$
0.2

 Less: Allocation to participating securities

 

 Loss (income) from discontinued operations allocated to common stockholders
$

 
$
0.2

 Diluted net (loss) income
$
(0.4
)
 
$
4.0

 Less: Allocation to participating securities

 
(0.1
)
Diluted net (loss) income allocated to common stockholders
$
(0.4
)
 
$
3.9

 Denominator:
 
 
 
 Weighted average number of:
 
 
 
 Common shares outstanding
18,163,489

 
17,423,098

 Dilutive potential common shares outstanding:

 

 Share-based awards

 
1,001,027

 Diluted weighted-average shares
18,163,489

 
18,424,125

The dilutive effect of share-based awards is reflected in diluted net income per share by application of the treasury stock method, which includes consideration of unamortized share-based compensation expense required under the Compensation – Stock Compensation Topic of the ASC. The dilutive effect of convertible debt is reflected in diluted net income per share by application of the if-converted method.
Options to purchase 2,209,102 and 412,503 shares of common stock for the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010, respectively, were excluded from the calculation of diluted earnings per share because they would have been anti-dilutive.


7

Table of Contents

Note 3 – Receivables from Customers and Notes Receivable, net
Receivables from customers, net and notes receivable, net include a provision for bad debts, which reflects our best estimate of probable losses inherent in the receivables from customers and notes receivable. The Company provides for an allowance for doubtful accounts based on a specific-identification basis. The Company continually reviews its provision for bad debts. The allowance for doubtful accounts related to receivables from customers was $3.4 million and $11.8 million as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, respectively. The allowance for doubtful accounts related to notes receivable was $0.1 million as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, respectively.
During the three months ended December 31, 2011, the Company recorded bad debt expense, net of recoveries, of $0.1 million. During the three months ended December 31, 2010, the Company recorded bad debt expense, net of recoveries, of $2.4 million including provision increases and direct write-offs of $4.2 million, offset by recoveries of $1.8 million. The provision increases during the quarter ended December 31, 2010 primarily related to a customer to whom the Company had consigned gold, in the C&RM segment, and a clearing customer deficit account in the CES segment. The recorded recoveries during the quarter ended December 31, 2010 included $1.3 million following a settlement relating to a disputed trade that was "given-up" to FCStone, LLC during the quarter ended June 30, 2010 by another futures commission merchant for a customer that held an account with FCStone, LLC.
Activity in the allowance for doubtful accounts and notes was as follows:
(in millions)
 
Balance, September 30, 2011
$
11.9

Provision for bad debts
0.1

Deductions:

Charge-offs
(8.5
)
Recoveries

Balance, December 31, 2011
$
3.5

Additionally, in the normal course of operations the Company accepts notes receivable under sale/repurchase agreements with customers whereby the customers sell certain commodity inventory and agree to repurchase the commodity inventory at a future date at either a fixed or floating rate. These transactions are short-term in nature, and are treated as secured borrowings rather than commodity inventory, purchases and sales in the Company’s condensed consolidated financial statements. As of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, the Company had outstanding notes receivable of $18.5 million and $24.3 million, respectively, related to this program.
Note 4 – Assets and Liabilities, at Fair Value
The Company’s financial and nonfinancial assets and liabilities reported at fair value are included within the following captions on the condensed consolidated balance sheets:
Cash and cash equivalents
Cash, securities and other assets segregated under federal and other regulations
Deposits and receivables from exchange-clearing organizations
Deposits and receivables from broker-dealers, clearing organizations and counterparties
Financial instruments owned
Accounts payable and other accrued liabilities
Payables to customers
Financial instruments sold, not yet purchased
The table below sets forth an analysis of the carrying value of financial instruments owned and financial instruments sold, not yet purchased as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011. This is followed by tables that provide the information required by the Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures Topic of the ASC for all financial assets and liabilities that are carried at fair value. 

8

Table of Contents

 
December 31, 2011
 
September 30, 2011
(in millions)
Owned
 
Sold, not yet
purchased
 
Owned
 
Sold, not yet
purchased
Common stock and American Depositary Receipts ("ADRs")
$
24.2

 
$
11.3

 
$
46.9

 
$
23.4

Exchangeable foreign ordinary equities and ADRs
6.9

 
13.3

 
9.8

 
23.8

Corporate and municipal bonds
5.1

 

 
8.7

 

U.S. government obligations
6.3

 

 
0.8

 

Foreign government obligations
6.0

 

 
6.7

 

Derivatives
64.5

 
62.4

 
101.9

 
122.9

Commodities leases and unpriced positions
9.7

 
139.6

 
26.1

 
220.8

Commodities warehouse receipts
18.7

 

 
16.2

 

Exchange firm common stock
3.6

 

 
3.7

 

Mutual funds and other
0.7

 

 
1.0

 

Investment in managed funds

 

 
1.3

 

 
$
145.7

 
$
226.6

 
$
223.1

 
$
390.9

Fair Value Hierarchy
The majority of financial assets and liabilities on the condensed consolidated balance sheets are reported at fair value. Cash is reported at the balance held at financial institutions. Cash equivalents include the value of money market funds and certificates of deposit. Cash, securities and other assets segregated under federal and other regulations include the value of cash collateral as well as the value of other pledged investments, primarily U.S. Treasury bills and obligations issued by government sponsored entities and commodities warehouse receipts. Deposits with and receivables from exchange-clearing organizations and broker-dealers, clearing organizations and counterparties and payables to customers and broker-dealers, clearing organizations and counterparties include the value of cash collateral as well as the value of money market funds and other pledged investments, primarily U.S. Treasury bills and obligations issued by government sponsored entities and mortgage-backed securities. These balances also include the fair value of exchange-traded futures and options on futures and exchange-cleared swaps and options. Financial instruments owned and sold, not yet purchased include the value of U.S. and foreign government obligations, corporate debt securities, derivative financial instruments, commodities, mutual funds and investments in managed funds. Notes payable and subordinated debt carry variable rates of interest and thus approximate fair value.
The fair value estimates presented in the financial statements are based on pertinent information available to management as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011. Although management is not aware of any factors that would significantly affect the estimated fair value amounts, such amounts have not been comprehensively revalued for purposes of these financial statements since that date and current estimates of fair value may differ significantly from the amounts presented in the financial statements.
Cash equivalents, securities, commodities warehouse receipts, derivative financial instruments and contingent liabilities are carried at fair value, on a recurring basis, and are classified and disclosed into three levels within the fair value hierarchy. The Company did not have any fair value adjustments for assets or liabilities measured at fair value on a non-recurring basis during the three months ended December 31, 2011, except as disclosed in Note 14, if applicable. The three levels of the fair value hierarchy under the Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures Topic of the ASC are:
Level 1 - Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets that are accessible at the measurement date for identical, unrestricted assets or liabilities;
Level 2 - Quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in markets that are less active, that is, markets in which there are few transactions for the asset or liability that are observable for substantially the full term; and
Level 3 - Prices or valuation techniques that require inputs that are both significant to the fair value measurement and unobservable (i.e., supported by little or no market activity).
The following tables set forth the Company’s financial and nonfinancial assets and liabilities accounted for at fair value, on a recurring basis, as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011 by level within the fair value hierarchy.

9

Table of Contents

 
December 31, 2011
(in millions)
Level 1
 
Level 2
 
Level 3
 
Netting and
Collateral (1)
 
Total
Assets:


 


 


 


 


Money market funds
$
0.1

 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$
0.1

Certificate of deposits
2.6

 

 

 

 
2.6

Unrestricted cash equivalents
2.7

 

 

 

 
2.7

Commodities warehouse receipts
19.8

 

 

 

 
19.8

U.S. government obligations

 
85.2

 

 

 
85.2

Securities and other assets segregated under federal and other regulations
19.8

 
85.2

 

 

 
105.0

Money market funds
494.0

 

 

 

 
494.0

U.S. government obligations

 
675.3

 

 

 
675.3

Mortgage-backed securities

 
8.0

 

 

 
8.0

Derivatives
3,677.7

 

 

 
(3,841.5
)
 
(163.8
)
Deposits and receivables from exchange-clearing organizations
4,171.7

 
683.3

 

 
(3,841.5
)
 
1,013.5

U.S. government obligations

 
0.1

 

 

 
0.1

Derivatives
0.5

 

 

 
(0.2
)
 
0.3

Deposits and receivables from broker-dealers, clearing organizations and counterparties
0.5

 
0.1

 

 
(0.2
)
 
0.4

Common stock and ADRs
28.9

 
1.1

 
1.1

 

 
31.1

Corporate and municipal bonds
0.3

 
1.3

 
3.5

 

 
5.1

U.S. government obligations

 
6.3

 

 

 
6.3

Foreign government obligations
6.0

 

 

 

 
6.0

Derivatives
118.5

 
389.9

 

 
(443.9
)
 
64.5

Commodities leases and unpriced positions

 
11.0

 

 
(1.3
)
 
9.7

Commodities warehouse receipts
18.7

 

 

 

 
18.7

Exchange firm common stock
2.9

 
0.7

 

 

 
3.6

Mutual funds and other
0.3

 

 
0.4

 

 
0.7

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Financial instruments owned
175.6

 
410.3

 
5.0

 
(445.2
)
 
145.7

Total assets at fair value
$
4,370.3

 
$
1,178.9

 
$
5.0

 
$
(4,286.9
)
 
$
1,267.3

Liabilities:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Accounts payable and other accrued liabilities - contingent liabilities
$

 
$

 
$
22.9

 
$

 
$
22.9

Payables to customers - derivatives
3,841.5

 

 

 
(3,841.5
)
 

Common stock and ADRs
24.2

 
0.4

 

 

 
24.6

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Derivatives
132.1

 
356.9

 

 
(426.6
)
 
62.4

Commodities leases and unpriced positions

 
289.2

 

 
(149.6
)
 
139.6

Financial instruments sold, not yet purchased
156.3

 
646.5

 

 
(576.2
)
 
226.6

Total liabilities at fair value
$
3,997.8

 
$
646.5

 
$
22.9

 
$
(4,417.7
)
 
$
249.5

 
(1)
Represents cash collateral and the impact of netting across the levels of the fair value hierarchy. Netting among positions classified within the same level are included in that level.

10

Table of Contents

 
September 30, 2011
(in millions)
Level 1
 
Level 2
 
Level 3
 
Netting and
Collateral (1)
 
Total
Assets:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Money market funds
$
0.1

 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$
0.1

Certificate of deposits
12.6

 

 

 

 
12.6

Unrestricted cash equivalents
12.7

 

 

 

 
12.7

Commodities warehouse receipts
19.0

 

 

 

 
19.0

U.S. government obligations

 
3.7

 

 

 
3.7

Securities and other assets segregated under federal and other regulations
19.0

 
3.7

 

 

 
22.7

Money market funds
1,193.5

 

 

 

 
1,193.5

U.S. government obligations

 
470.5

 

 

 
470.5

Mortgage-backed securities

 
8.5

 

 

 
8.5

Derivatives
7,227.4

 

 

 
(7,491.7
)
 
(264.3
)
Deposits and receivables from exchange-clearing organizations
8,420.9

 
479.0

 

 
(7,491.7
)
 
1,408.2

U.S. government obligations

 
0.1

 

 

 
0.1

Derivatives
47.3

 
1,073.5

 

 
(1,104.7
)
 
16.1

Deposits and receivables from broker-dealers, clearing organizations and counterparties
47.3

 
1,073.6

 

 
(1,104.7
)
 
16.2

Common stock and ADRs
53.4

 
2.2

 
1.1

 

 
56.7

Corporate and municipal bonds

 
5.1

 
3.6

 

 
8.7

U.S. government obligations

 
0.8

 

 

 
0.8

Foreign government obligations
5.8

 
0.9

 

 

 
6.7

Derivatives
210.5

 
557.6

 

 
(666.2
)
 
101.9

Commodities leases and unpriced positions

 
66.3

 

 
(40.2
)
 
26.1

Commodities warehouse receipts
16.2

 

 

 

 
16.2

Exchange firm common stock
3.0

 
0.7

 

 

 
3.7

Mutual funds and other
0.6

 

 
0.4

 

 
1.0

Investment in managed funds

 
1.3

 

 

 
1.3

Financial instruments owned
289.5

 
634.9

 
5.1

 
(706.4
)
 
223.1

Total assets at fair value
$
8,789.4

 
$
2,191.2

 
$
5.1

 
$
(9,302.8
)
 
$
1,682.9

Liabilities:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Accounts payable and other accrued liabilities - contingent liabilities
$

 
$

 
$
22.3

 
$

 
$
22.3

Payables to customers - derivatives
6,234.7

 

 

 
(6,234.7
)
 

Common stock and ADRs
44.9

 
2.3

 

 

 
47.2

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Derivatives
219.9

 
1,679.1

 

 
(1,776.1
)
 
122.9

Commodities leases and unpriced positions

 
431.9

 

 
(211.1
)
 
220.8

Financial instruments sold, not yet purchased
264.8

 
2,113.3

 

 
(1,987.2
)
 
390.9

Total liabilities at fair value
$
6,499.5

 
$
2,113.3

 
$
22.3

 
$
(8,221.9
)
 
$
413.2

(1)
Represents cash collateral and the impact of netting across the levels of the fair value hierarchy. Netting among positions classified within the same level are included in that level.
Realized and unrealized gains and losses are included within ‘trading gains’ in the condensed consolidated income statements.
Information on Level 3 Financial Assets and Liabilities
The Company’s financial assets at fair value classified within level 3 of the fair value hierarchy as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011 are summarized below:

11

Table of Contents

 
(in millions)
December 31, 2011
 
September 30, 2011
Total level 3 assets
$
5.0

 
$
5.1

Level 3 assets for which the Company bears economic exposure
$
5.0

 
$
5.1

Total assets
$
2,414.8

 
$
2,635.7

Total financial assets at fair value
$
1,267.3

 
$
1,682.9

Total level 3 assets as a percentage of total assets
0.2
%
 
0.2
%
Level 3 assets for which the Company bears economic exposure as a percentage of total assets
0.2
%
 
0.2
%
Total level 3 assets as a percentage of total financial assets at fair value
0.4
%
 
0.3
%
The following tables set forth a summary of changes in the fair value of the Company’s level 3 financial assets and liabilities during the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010, including a summary of unrealized gains (losses) during the three months on the Company’s level 3 financial assets and liabilities still held as of December 31, 2011. 
 
Level 3 Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities
For the Three Months Ended December 31, 2011
(in millions)
Balances at
beginning of
period
 
Realized gains
(losses) during
period
 
Unrealized
gains (losses)
during period
 
Purchases,
issuances,
settlements
 
Transfers in
or (out) of
Level 3
 
Balances at
end of period
Assets:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Common stock and ADRs
$
1.1

 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$
1.1

Corporate and municipal bonds
3.6

 

 
(0.1
)
 

 

 
3.5

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Mutual funds and other
0.4

 

 

 

 

 
0.4

Investment in managed funds

 

 

 

 

 

 
$
5.1

 
$

 
$
(0.1
)
 
$

 
$

 
$
5.0

Liabilities:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Contingent liabilities
$
22.3

 
$

 
$
0.9

 
$
(0.3
)
 
$

 
$
22.9


 
Level 3 Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities
For the Three Months Ended December 31, 2010
(in millions)
Balances at
beginning of
period
 
Realized gains
(losses) during
period
 
Unrealized
gains (losses)
during period
 
Purchases,
issuances,
settlements
 
Transfers in
or (out) of
Level 3
 
Balances at
end of period
Assets:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Common stock and ADRs
$
1.2

 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$
1.2

Corporate and municipal bonds
8.0

 

 
0.1

 

 

 
8.1

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Mutual funds and other
0.4

 

 

 

 

 
0.4

Investment in managed funds
0.6

 

 

 

 

 
0.6

 
$
10.2

 
$

 
$
0.1

 
$

 
$

 
$
10.3

Liabilities:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Contingent liabilities
$
32.3

 
$

 
$
1.4

 
$
(3.7
)
 
$

 
$
30.0

The Company is required to make additional future cash payments based on certain financial performance measures of its acquired businesses. The Company is required to remeasure the fair value of the cash earnout arrangements on a recurring basis in accordance with the guidance in the Business Combinations Topic of the ASC. The Company has classified its net liabilities for the contingent earnout arrangements within level 3 of the fair value hierarchy because the fair value is determined using significant unobservable inputs, which include projected cash flows. The estimated fair value of the contingent purchase consideration is based upon management-developed forecasts, a level 3 input in the fair value hierarchy. These cash flows are discounted employing present value techniques in arriving at the acquisition-date fair value. The discount rate was developed using market participant company data, a level 2 input in the fair value hierarchy, and there have been no significant changes in the discount rate environment. From the dates of acquisition to December 31, 2011, certain acquisitions have had changes in the estimates of undiscounted cash flows, based on actual performances fluctuating from estimates. During the three months ended December 31, 2011, the fair value of the contingent consideration changed $0.9 million, with the corresponding amount classified as 'other' within the condensed consolidated income statements.

12

Table of Contents

The Company reports transfers in and out of levels 1, 2 and 3, as applicable, using the fair value of the securities as of the beginning of the reporting period in which the transfer occurred.
The Company did not have any transfers between level 1 and level 2 fair value measurements for the three months ended December 31, 2011.
The Company has recorded unrealized gains of $0.1 million, net of income tax expense of $0.1 million related to U.S. government obligations and corporate bonds classified as available-for-sale securities in OCI as of December 31, 2011. The following tables summarize the amortized cost basis, the aggregate fair value and gross unrealized holding gains and losses of the Company’s investment securities classified as available-for-sale as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011:
December 31, 2011
Amounts included in financial instruments owned:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Amortized
Cost
 
Unrealized Holding (1)
 
Estimated
Fair Value
(in millions)
 
Gains
 
(Losses)
 
U.S. government obligations
$
6.0

 
$

 
$

 
$
6.0

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
$
6.0

 
$

 
$

 
$
6.0

 
(1)
Unrealized gain/loss on financial instruments owned as of December 31, 2011 is less than $0.1 million.

Amounts included in deposits with and receivables from exchange-clearing organizations:
 
Amortized
Cost
 
Unrealized Holding
 
Estimated
Fair  Value
(in millions)
Gains
 
(Losses)
 
U.S. government obligations
$
637.3

 
$

 
$

 
$
637.3

Mortgage-backed securities
7.9

 
0.1

 

 
8.0

 
$
645.2

 
$
0.1

 
$

 
$
645.3

 
September 30, 2011
Amounts included in financial instruments owned:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Amortized
Cost
 
Unrealized Holding (1)
 
Estimated
Fair  Value
(in millions)
Gains
 
(Losses)
 
U.S. government obligations
$
0.5

 
$

 
$

 
$
0.5

Corporate bonds
5.0

 

 

 
5.0

 
$
5.5

 
$

 
$

 
$
5.5

 
(1)
Unrealized gain/loss on financial instruments owned as of September 30, 2011 is less than $0.1 million.

Amounts included in deposits with and receivables from exchange-clearing organizations:
 
Amortized
Cost
 
Unrealized Holding
 
Estimated
Fair  Value
(in millions)
Gains
 
(Losses)
 
U.S. government obligations
$
440.6

 
$
0.1

 
$

 
$
440.7

Mortgage-backed securities
8.3

 
0.2

 

 
8.5

 
$
448.9

 
$
0.3

 
$

 
$
449.2

As of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, investments in debt securities classified as available-for-sale ("AFS") mature as follows:
December 31, 2011
 
Due in
 
Estimated
Fair  Value
(in millions)
Less than 1 year
 
1 year or more
 
U.S. government obligations
$
643.3

 
$

 
$
643.3

 
 
 
 
 
 
Mortgage-backed securities

 
8.0

 
8.0

 
$
643.3

 
$
8.0

 
$
651.3


13

Table of Contents

September 30, 2011
 
Due in
 
Estimated
Fair Value
(in millions)
Less than 1 year
 
1 year or more
 
U.S. government obligations
$
441.2

 
$

 
$
441.2

Corporate bonds
5.0

 

 
5.0

Mortgage-backed securities

 
8.5

 
8.5

 
$
446.2

 
$
8.5

 
$
454.7

There were no sales of AFS securities during the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010, and as a result, no realized gains or losses were recorded for the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010.
For the purposes of the maturity schedule, mortgage-backed securities, which are not due at a single maturity date, have been allocated over maturity groupings based on the expected maturity of the underlying collateral. Mortgage-backed securities may mature earlier than their stated contractual maturities because of accelerated principal repayments of the underlying loans.
The Company has also classified equity investments in exchange firms' common stock not pledged for clearing purposes as available-for-sale. The investments are recorded at fair value, with unrealized gains and losses recorded, net of taxes, as a component of OCI until realized. As of December 31, 2011, the cost and fair value of the equity investments in exchange firms was $4.4 million and $3.7 million, respectively. The Company recorded unrealized losses of $0.5 million, net of income tax benefit of $0.3 million in OCI related to equity investments in exchange firms as of December 31, 2011. The Company monitors the fair value of exchange common stock on a periodic basis, and does not consider any current unrealized losses to be anything other than a temporary impairment.
Note 5 – Financial Instruments with Off-Balance Sheet Risk and Concentrations of Credit Risk
The Company is party to certain financial instruments with off-balance sheet risk in the normal course of its business. The Company has sold financial instruments that it does not currently own and will therefore be obliged to purchase such financial instruments at a future date. The Company has recorded these obligations in the condensed consolidated financial statements as of December 31, 2011 at the fair values of the related financial instruments. The Company will incur losses if the fair value of the underlying financial instruments increases subsequent to December 31, 2011. The total of $226.6 million as of December 31, 2011 includes $62.4 million for derivative contracts, which represent a liability to the Company based on their fair values as of December 31, 2011.
Derivatives
The Company utilizes derivative products in its trading capacity as a dealer in order to satisfy client needs and mitigate risk. The Company manages risks from both derivatives and non-derivative cash instruments on a consolidated basis. The risks of derivatives should not be viewed in isolation, but in aggregate with the Company’s other trading activities. The majority of the Company’s derivative positions are included in the consolidating balance sheets within ‘financial instruments owned, at fair value’, ‘deposits and receivables from exchange-clearing organizations’ and ‘financial instruments sold, not yet purchased, at fair value’.
The Company continues to employ an interest rate risk management strategy, implemented in April 2010, that uses derivative financial instruments in the form of interest rate swaps to manage a portion of the aggregate interest rate position. The Company’s objective is to invest the majority of customer segregated deposits in high quality, short-term investments and swap the resulting variable interest earnings into the medium-term interest stream, by using a strip of interest rate swaps that mature every quarter, in order to achieve the two year moving average of the two year swap rate. The risk mitigation of these interest rate swaps is not within the documented hedging designation requirements of the Derivatives and Hedging Topic of the ASC, and as a result they are recorded at fair value, with changes in the marked-to-market valuation of the financial instruments recorded within 'trading gains' in the condensed consolidated income statements. As of December 31, 2011, approximately $965 million in notional principal of interest rate swaps were outstanding with a weighted-average life of 12 months.

14

Table of Contents

Listed below are the fair values of the Company's derivative assets and liabilities as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011. Assets represent net unrealized gains and liabilities represent net unrealized losses.
 
December 31, 2011
 
September 30, 2011
(in millions)
Assets (1)
 
Liabilities (1)
 
Assets (1)
 
Liabilities (1)
Derivative contracts not accounted for as hedges:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Exchange-traded commodity derivatives
$
3,600.1

 
$
3,762.7

 
$
7,074.2

 
$
6,062.4

OTC commodity derivatives
471.4

 
485.0

 
763.7

 
780.1

Exchange-traded foreign exchange derivatives
58.0

 
45.9

 
126.9

 
89.8

OTC foreign exchange derivatives (2)(3)
35.6

 
3.4

 
1,074.3

 
1,118.9

Interest rate derivatives
2.9

 
5.7

 
5.5

 
2.8

Equity index derivatives
18.6

 
27.8

 
71.7

 
79.7

Gross fair value of derivative contracts
4,186.6

 
4,330.5

 
9,116.3

 
8,133.7

Impact of netting and collateral
(4,285.6
)
 
(4,268.1
)
 
(9,262.6
)
 
(8,010.8
)
Total fair value included in ‘Deposits and receivables from exchange-clearing organizations’
$
(163.8
)
 
 
 
$
(264.3
)
 
 
Total fair value included in 'Deposits and receivables from broker-dealers, clearing organizations and counterparties'
$
0.3

 
 
 
$
16.1

 
 
Total fair value included in ‘Financial instruments owned, at fair value’
$
64.5

 
 
 
$
101.9

 
 
Fair value included in ‘Financial instruments sold, not yet purchased, at fair value’
 
 
$
62.4

 
 
 
$
122.9

 
(1)
As of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, the Company’s derivative contract volume for open positions was approximately 4.0 million and 3.9 million contracts, respectively.
(2)
In accordance with agreements with counterparties, the Company is allowed to periodically take advances against its open trade fair value. These amounts exclude advances against open trade fair value of $18.7 million outstanding as of December 31, 2011.
(3)
In accordance with agreements with counterparties, the Company has to maintain a sufficient margin collateral balance based on the value of the open positions. These amounts exclude deposits with the counterparties for margin collateral, which are included in netting and collateral line, of $53.5 million as of September 30, 2011.
The Company’s derivative contracts are principally held in its Commodities and Risk Management Services ("C&RM") segment. The Company assists its C&RM segment customers in protecting the value of their future production by entering into option or forward agreements with them on an OTC basis. The Company also provides its C&RM segment customers with sophisticated option products, including combinations of buying and selling puts and calls. The Company mitigates its risk by generally offsetting the customer's transaction simultaneously with one of the Company's trading counterparties or will offset that transaction with a similar but not identical position on the exchange. The risk mitigation of these offsetting trades is not within the documented hedging designation requirements of the Derivatives and Hedging Topic of the ASC. These derivative contracts are traded along with cash transactions because of the integrated nature of the markets for these products. The Company manages the risks associated with derivatives on an aggregate basis along with the risks associated with its proprietary trading and market-making activities in cash instruments as part of its firm-wide risk management policies. In particular, the risks related to derivative positions may be partially offset by inventory, unrealized gains in inventory or cash collateral paid or received.
The following table sets forth the Company's gains (losses) related to derivative financial instruments for the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010, in accordance with the Derivatives and Hedging Topic of the ASC. The gains (losses) set forth below are included within ‘trading gains’ in the condensed consolidated income statements. 
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions)
2011
 
2010
Gains (losses) from derivative contracts
$
31.9

 
$
(19.2
)
Credit Risk
In the normal course of business, the Company purchases and sells financial instruments, commodities and foreign currencies as either principal or agent on behalf of its customers. If either the customer or counterparty fails to perform, the Company may

15

Table of Contents

be required to discharge the obligations of the nonperforming party. In such circumstances, the Company may sustain a loss if the fair value of the financial instrument or foreign currency is different from the contract value of the transaction.
The majority of the Company’s transactions and, consequently, the concentration of its credit exposure are with commodity exchanges, customers, broker-dealers and other financial institutions. These activities primarily involve collateralized and uncollateralized arrangements and may result in credit exposure in the event that a counterparty fails to meet its contractual obligations. The Company’s exposure to credit risk can be directly impacted by volatile financial markets, which may impair the ability of counterparties to satisfy their contractual obligations. The Company seeks to control its credit risk through a variety of reporting and control procedures, including establishing credit limits based upon a review of the counterparties’ financial condition and credit ratings. The Company monitors collateral levels on a daily basis for compliance with regulatory and internal guidelines and requests changes in collateral levels as appropriate.
The Company is a party to financial instruments in the normal course of its business through customer and proprietary trading accounts in exchange-traded and OTC derivative instruments. These instruments are primarily the execution of orders for commodity futures, options on futures and forward foreign currency contracts on behalf of its customers, substantially all of which are transacted on a margin basis. Such transactions may expose the Company to significant credit risk in the event margin requirements are not sufficient to fully cover losses which customers may incur. The Company controls the risks associated with these transactions by requiring customers to maintain margin deposits in compliance with individual exchange regulations and internal guidelines. The Company monitors required margin levels daily and, therefore, may require customers to deposit additional collateral or reduce positions when necessary. The Company also establishes credit limits for customers, which are monitored daily. The Company evaluates each customer’s creditworthiness on a case by case basis. Clearing, financing, and settlement activities may require the Company to maintain funds with or pledge securities as collateral with other financial institutions. Generally, these exposures to both customers and exchanges are subject to master netting, or customer agreements, which reduce the exposure to the Company by permitting receivables and payables with such customers to be offset in the event of a customer default. Management believes that the margin deposits held as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011 were adequate to minimize the risk of material loss that could be created by positions held at that time. Additionally, the Company monitors collateral fair value on a daily basis and adjusts collateral levels in the event of excess market exposure. Generally, these exposures to both customers and counterparties are subject to master netting, or customer agreements which reduce the exposure to the Company.
The Company is also a party to a guarantee of payment and performance by a third party of an ethanol marketing agreement with a risk management customer which would require the Company to purchase the output of the customer if the third party could not perform under the marketing agreement. The guarantee does not have a set term, and the underlying agreement cannot be terminated by the third party unless the customer breaches the agreement. The maximum potential amount of future payments required under the guarantee cannot be estimated because the underlying marketing agreement does not specify the amount or the price of the ethanol to be purchased during the term of the agreement. The price of the ethanol to be purchased is at the discretion of the Company.
Derivative financial instruments involve varying degrees of off-balance sheet market risk whereby changes in the fair values of underlying financial instruments may result in changes in the fair value of the financial instruments in excess of the amounts reflected in the condensed consolidated balance sheets. Exposure to market risk is influenced by a number of factors, including the relationships between the financial instruments and the Company’s positions, as well as the volatility and liquidity in the markets in which the financial instruments are traded. The principal risk components of financial instruments include, among other things, interest rate volatility, the duration of the underlying instruments and changes in foreign exchange rates. The Company attempts to manage its exposure to market risk through various techniques. Aggregate market limits have been established and market risk measures are routinely monitored against these limits.
Note 6 – Physical Commodities Inventory
Physical commodities inventory is valued at the lower of cost or fair value, determined using the weighted-average cost method. Commodities in process include commodities in the process of being recycled. As of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, $112.8 million and $159.4 million, respectively, of physical commodities inventory served as collateral under one of the Company’s credit facilities, as detailed further in Note 10. The carrying values of the Company’s inventory as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011 are shown below. 
(in millions)
December 31,
2011
 
September 30, 2011
Commodities in process
$
1.7

 
$
2.4

Finished commodities
111.9

 
158.2

Physical commodities inventory
$
113.6

 
$
160.6


16

Table of Contents

As a result of declining market prices for some commodities, the Company recorded lower of cost or market ("LCM") adjustments for physical commodities inventory of $3.0 million and $21.9 million as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, respectively. The adjustments are included within 'cost of sales of physical commodities' in the condensed consolidated income statements.
Note 7 – Goodwill
The carrying value of goodwill by segment is as follows:
(in millions)
As of December 31, 2011
 
September 30,
2011
Commodity and Risk Management Services
$
30.9

 
$
30.9

Foreign Exchange
6.3

 
6.3

Securities
5.3

 
5.3

Goodwill
$
42.5

 
$
42.5


Note 8 – Intangible Assets
The gross and net carrying values of intangible assets as of the balance sheet dates, by major intangible asset class are as follows:
 
December 31, 2011
 
September 30, 2011
(in millions)
Gross Amount
 
Accumulated
Amortization
 
Net Amount
 
Gross Amount
 
Accumulated
Amortization
 
Net Amount
Intangible assets subject to amortization
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Noncompete agreement
$
3.7

 
$
(2.0
)
 
$
1.7

 
$
3.7

 
$
(1.7
)
 
$
2.0

Trade name
0.6

 
(0.5
)
 
0.1

 
0.6

 
(0.5
)
 
0.1

Software programs/platforms
2.1

 
(0.8
)
 
1.3

 
2.1

 
(0.6
)
 
1.5

Customer base
10.1

 
(1.1
)
 
9.0

 
8.9

 
(1.0
)
 
7.9

 
16.5

 
(4.4
)
 
12.1

 
15.3

 
(3.8
)
 
11.5

Intangible assets not subject to amortization
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Trade name
2.1

 

 
2.1

 
2.1

 

 
2.1

Total intangible assets
$
18.6

 
$
(4.4
)
 
$
14.2

 
$
17.4

 
$
(3.8
)
 
$
13.6

Amortization expense related to intangible assets was $0.6 million and $0.5 million for the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010, respectively. As of December 31, 2011, the estimated future amortization expense was as follows:
(in millions)
 
Fiscal 2012 (remaining nine months)
$
2.3

Fiscal 2013
2.2

Fiscal 2014
0.9

Fiscal 2015
0.7

Fiscal 2016
0.4

Fiscal 2017 and thereafter
5.6

 
$
12.1


17

Table of Contents


Note 9 – Other Expenses
Other expenses for the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010 are comprised of the following:
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions)
2011
 
2010
Business development
$
3.2

 
$
1.9

Non-trading hardware and software maintenance and software licensing
0.6

 
0.5

Contingent consideration, net(1)
1.3

 
3.1

Insurance
0.4

 
0.4

Other non-income taxes
0.7

 
0.6

Advertising, meetings and conferences
0.6

 
0.2

Office supplies and printing
0.3

 
0.3

Other
1.8

 
1.1

Total other expenses
$
8.9

 
$
8.1

(1) Contingent consideration includes remeasurement of contingent liabilities related to business combinations accounted for in accordance with the provisions of the Business Combinations Topic of the ASC (see Note 4) and additional purchase price, based on achieving specific conditions and earnings targets, relating to FCStone, LLC's previous acquisition of Downes O'Neill, LLC ("Downes O'Neill") and Globecot, Inc. ("Globecot"). When the Downes O'Neill and Globecot acquisitions occurred, they were recorded in accordance with SFAS No. 141, Business Combinations ("SFAS 141"). As a result of the Company's merger with FCStone Group, Inc. on September 30, 2009, this contingent purchase price amount was considered a pre-acquisition contingency, which was not reasonably estimable during the merger allocation period following the FCStone transaction. In accordance with SFAS 141, adjustments to pre-acquisition contingencies, made after the end of the allocation period, are included in earnings in the current period.
Note 10 – Credit Facilities
As of December 31, 2011, the Company had four committed credit facilities under which the Company may borrow up to $375 million, subject to certain conditions. Additionally, the Company had an uncommitted forward contract for commodities agreement under which the Company may borrow up to $50 million to fund forward contract commodity transactions. The amounts outstanding under these credit facilities are short term borrowings and carry variable rates of interest, thus approximating fair value.
A summary of the Company’s credit facilities in place as of December 31, 2011 is as follows:
A one-year revolving syndicated committed loan facility established on September 22, 2010 and renewed by amendment on September 21, 2011, under which the Company’s subsidiary, INTL Commodities, Inc. ("INTL Commodities") is entitled to borrow up to $140 million, subject to certain conditions. The loan proceeds are used to finance the activities of INTL Commodities and are secured by its assets. The facility is guaranteed by the Company.
A three-year syndicated committed loan facility established on October 29, 2010 and amended on September 30, 2011 to increase the amount under which the Company is entitled to borrow up to $85 million, subject to certain conditions. The loan proceeds are used to finance working capital needs of the Company and certain subsidiaries. The line of credit is secured by a pledge of shares held in certain of the Company’s subsidiaries.
An unsecured syndicated committed line of credit, established on June 21, 2010 and renewed by amendment on June 20, 2011, under which FCStone, LLC may borrow up to $75 million. This line of credit is intended to provide short term funding of margin to commodity exchanges as necessary. This line of credit is subject to annual review, and the continued availability of this line of credit is subject to FCStone, LLC’s financial condition and operating results continuing to be satisfactory as set forth in the agreement. The facility is guaranteed by the Company.
A one-year syndicated committed borrowing facility established on December 2, 2010, and renewed by amendment on October 11, 2011, under which the Company’s subsidiary, FCStone Financial, Inc. ("FCStone Financial"), is entitled to borrow up to $75 million, subject to certain conditions. The loan proceeds are used to finance traditional commodity financing arrangements or the purchase of eligible commodities from sellers who have agreed to sell and later repurchase such commodities from FCStone Financial, and are secured by its assets. The facility is guaranteed by the

18

Table of Contents

Company.
An uncommitted forward contract for commodities agreement established on June 23, 2011, under which the Company’s subsidiary, FCStone Merchant Services, LLC ("FCStone Merchant Services") is entitled to borrow up to $50 million to fund forward contracts on specified commodities. The forward contract commodity transactions include a simultaneous agreement from the lender to purchase specified commodities from FCStone Merchant Services and to sell the same specified commodities to FCStone Merchant Services, on a forward sale basis. The price at which FCStone Merchant Services will be obligated to repurchase the specified commodities from the lender is calculated as the purchase price plus accrued interest on the purchase price at the cost of funds rate determined by the lender. The facility is guaranteed by the Company.
Credit facilities and outstanding borrowings as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011 were as follows:
(in millions)
 
 
 
 
Amounts Outstanding
Security
Renewal / Expiration Date
 
Total
Commitment
 
December 31,
2011
 
September 30,
2011
 Certain pledged shares
October 1, 2013
 
$
85.0

 
$

 
$

 Certain commodities assets
September 20, 2012
 
140.0

 
110.0

 
60.0

 None
June 18, 2012
 
75.0

 

 

 Certain commodities assets
October 9, 2012
 
75.0

 
4.0

 
15.5

 Certain forward commodity contracts
n/a
 

 
1.9

 
1.9

 
 
 
$
375.0

 
$
115.9

 
$
77.4

During fiscal 2012, $215 million of the Company’s committed credit facilities are scheduled to expire. While there is no guarantee that the Company will be able to renew or replace current agreements when they expire, based on its strong liquidity position and capital structure the Company believes it will be able to do so.
The Company’s facility agreements contain certain financial covenants relating to financial measures on a consolidated basis, as well as on a certain stand-alone subsidiary basis, including minimum net worth, minimum working capital, minimum regulatory capital, minimum net unencumbered liquid assets, minimum equity, minimum interest coverage and leverage ratios and maximum net loss. Failure to comply with any such covenants could result in the debt becoming payable on demand. As of December 31, 2011, the Company was in compliance with all of its covenants under its credit facilities.
Note 11 – Commitments and Contingencies
Legal Proceedings
Certain conditions may exist as of the date that the financial statements are issued, which may result in a loss to the Company but which will only be resolved when one or more future events occur or fail to occur. The Company assesses such contingent liabilities, and such assessment inherently involves an exercise of judgment. In assessing loss contingencies related to legal proceedings that are pending against the Company or unasserted claims that may result in such proceedings, the Company's legal counsel evaluates the perceived merits of any legal proceedings or unasserted claims as well as the perceived merits of the amount of relief sought or expected to be sought therein.
If the assessment of a contingency indicates that it is probable that a material loss had been incurred at the date of the financial statements and the amount of the liability can be estimated, then the estimated liability would be accrued in the Company's financial statements. If the assessment indicates that a potentially material loss contingency is not probable, but is reasonably possible, or is probable but cannot be estimated, then the nature of the contingent liability, together with an estimate of the range of possible loss if determinable and material, would be disclosed. Neither accrual nor disclosure is required for loss contingencies that are deemed remote. We accrue legal fees related to contingent liabilities as they are incurred.
In addition to the matters discussed below, from time to time and in the ordinary course of business, we are involved in various legal actions and proceedings, including tort claims, contractual disputes, employment matters, workers' compensation claims and collections. We carry insurance that provides protection against certain types of claims, up to the policy limits of our insurance. As of December 31, 2011, the condensed consolidated balance sheet includes loss contingency accruals, recorded in fiscal 2011, which are not material. In the opinion of management, possible exposure in these matters in excess of the amounts accrued is not material to the Company's earnings, financial position or liquidity.
The following is a summary of significant legal matters involving the Company.
Securities Litigation
FCStone and certain officers of FCStone were named as defendants in an action filed in the United States District Court for the

19

Table of Contents

Western District of Missouri on July 15, 2008. A consolidated amended complaint ("CAC") was subsequently filed on September 25, 2009. As alleged in the CAC, the action purports to be brought as a class action on behalf of purchasers of FCStone common stock between November 15, 2007 and February 24, 2009. The CAC seeks to hold defendants liable under Section 10(b) and Section 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and concerns disclosures included in FCStone's fiscal year 2008 public filings. Specifically, the CAC relates to FCStone's public disclosures regarding an interest rate hedge, a bad debt expense arising from unprecedented events in the cotton trading market, and certain disclosures beginning on November 3, 2008 related to losses it expected to incur arising primarily from a customer energy trading account. FCStone and the named officers moved to dismiss the action. Although the court denied that motion on November 16, 2010, it limited the action to the public disclosures made on November 3, 2008 and November 4, 2008 related to the energy trading account. The parties have completed briefing of lead plaintiffs' motion to certify a class on behalf of purchasers of FCStone stock between April 14, 2008 and February 24, 2009, and that motion is pending the court's ruling. Discovery has commenced and is continuing. The Company and the FCStone defendants continue to believe the action is meritless, and intend to defend the action vigorously.
In August, 2008, a shareholder derivative action was filed against FCStone and certain directors of FCStone in the Circuit Court of Platte County, Missouri, alleging breaches of fiduciary duties, waste of corporate assets and unjust enrichment. An amended complaint was subsequently filed in May, 2009 to add claims based upon the losses sustained by FCStone arising out of a customer's energy trading account. On July 7, 2009, the same plaintiff filed a motion for leave to amend the existing case to add a purported class action claim on behalf of the holders of FCStone common stock.
On July 8, 2009, a purported shareholder class action complaint was filed against FCStone and its directors, as well as the Company, in the Circuit Court of Clay County, Missouri. The complaint alleged that FCStone and its directors breached their fiduciary duties by failing to maximize stockholder value in connection with the contemplated acquisition of FCStone by the Company. This complaint was subsequently consolidated with the complaint filed in the Circuit Court of Platte County, Missouri. The plaintiffs subsequently filed an amended consolidated complaint which does not assert any claims against the Company. This complaint purports to be filed derivatively on FCStone and the Company's behalf and against certain of FCStone current and former directors and officers and directly against the same individuals. The Company, FCStone and the defendants filed motions to dismiss on multiple grounds. That motion is fully briefed and pending decision.
The staff of the Fort Worth Regional Office of the SEC is conducting a formal investigation of FCStone's disclosures and accounting for losses associated with the energy trading account, which occurred prior to the Company's acquisition of FCStone on September 30, 2009. During the quarters ended March 31, 2011 and June 30, 2011, certain employees of the Company testified before the SEC in connection with this investigation. The Company is cooperating fully with the SEC staff in its investigation, but cannot predict the scope, duration or outcome of the matter, including monetary penalties or fines, if any.
The Company has also received a request from the CFTC for certain information relating to the energy trading account matter. The Company is cooperating fully with the staff of the CFTC, and cannot predict the scope, duration or outcome of the CFTC's review, including monetary penalties or fines, if any.
In February 2011, the Company's Board of Directors formed a special committee to conduct an independent investigation of FCStone's disclosures and accounting for losses associated with the energy trading account. The Board of Directors determined that it would be appropriate and consistent with its governance and oversight responsibilities to form the special committee to investigate these matters as they pertain to the private litigation and the SEC investigation described above. The special committee, which is comprised solely of independent directors of the Company who were not formerly directors of FCStone, retained an independent law firm to represent and assist it in its investigation.
Convertible Note Holder Litigation
In November 2009, an investor in a principal amount of $3.7 million of the Company’s senior subordinated convertible notes due 2011 (the “Notes”) filed a notice of motion for summary judgment on the Company, claiming that the FCStone transaction resulted in a change of control as defined in the Notes; and that, as a result, the Company should have afforded the investor the opportunity to have the Notes redeemed at a 15% premium. The investor also claimed default interest at the rate of 15% per annum established in the Notes. The investor's motion was denied in March, 2010, and the investor filed an amended complaint in April, 2010. The remaining three holders of the Notes, holding Notes in an aggregate amount of $13.0 million, filed a similar lawsuit on the Company on October 20, 2010.
During the year ended September 30, 2011, the holders of the Notes converted the principal amount and accrued interest into shares of common stock of the Company. Subsequent to conversion, two holders of the Notes, each a holder of $4.0 million in principal amount of the convertible notes as of September 30, 2009, persisted in their claim against the Company. Subsequent to the quarter ended December 31, 2011, the Company entered into an agreement with the two holders of the Notes, pursuant to which the Company paid the plaintiffs the amount of $0.2 million in settlement of all claims.
Sentinel Litigation

20

Table of Contents

In August 2008, the bankruptcy trustee for Sentinel Management Group, Inc. ("Sentinel") filed adversary proceedings against one of the Company's subsidiaries, FCStone, LLC, and a number of other FCMs in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois. This case was subsequently reassigned to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. In the complaint, the trustee is seeking avoidance of alleged transfers or withdrawals of funds received by the Company and other FCMs within 90 days prior to the filing of the Sentinel bankruptcy petition, as well as avoidance of post-petition distributions and disallowance of the proof of claim filed by the FCStone, LLC. The trustee seeks recovery of pre- and post-petition transfers totaling approximately $15.5 million. In April 2009, the trustee filed an amended complaint adding a claim for unjust enrichment. FCStone, LLC answered the complaints and all parties entered into the discovery phase of the litigation. On January 21, 2011 the trustee filed a motion for summary judgment on various counts in the adversary proceedings filed in August, 2008 against FCStone, LLC and a number of other FCMs. The motion has since been fully briefed, and is pending before the court awaiting decision. On January 13, 2012, the Company filed a motion for summary judgment in its favor with respect to the transfer of approximately $1.1 million to its customer segregated account on August 17, 2007 pursuant to the "safe harbor" provisions of Section 546(e) of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. The court has not set a deadline for ruling on any pending motions, and has not set a trial date. FCStone, LLC intends to defend the matter vigorously, and to coordinate its defense with the other FCMs.
Contractual Commitments
Contingent Liabilities - Acquisitions
Under the terms of the purchase agreements related to the acquisitions listed below, the Company has obligations to pay additional consideration if specific conditions and earnings targets are met. In accordance with the Business Combinations Topic of the ASC, the fair value of the additional consideration is recognized as a contingent liability as of the acquisition date. The contingent liability for these estimated additional purchase price considerations are included within ‘accounts payable and other accrued liabilities’ in the condensed consolidated balance sheets as of December 31, 2011. The acquisition date fair value of additional consideration is remeasured to its fair value each reporting period, with changes in fair value recorded in current earnings.
The Company has a contingent liability relating to the November 2011 acquisition of Coffee Network which may result in the payment of additional purchase price consideration, see Note 14.
The Company has a contingent liability relating to the October 2010 acquisition of Hencorp Becstone Futures, L.C., subsequently renamed INTL Hencorp Futures, LLC ("Hencorp Futures"), which may result in the payment of additional purchase price consideration. The contingent liability recorded represents the fair value of the expected consideration to be paid, based on the forecasted adjusted pre-tax net earnings during the second, third and fourth fiscal years following the closing of the acquisition and a discount rate being applied to those future payments. The change in fair value for the three months ended December 31, 2011 was an increase of $0.1 million, included within ‘other expense’ in the condensed consolidated income statements. The present value of the estimated total purchase price, including contingent consideration, is $6.5 million as of December 31, 2011, of which $2.5 million has not been paid and is included within ‘accounts payable and other liabilities’ in the condensed consolidated balance sheets.
The Company has a contingent liability relating to the July 2010 acquisition of the Hanley Companies, which may result in the payment of additional purchase price consideration. The contingent liability recorded represents the fair value of the expected consideration to be paid, based on the contingent payments equal to 15% of the forecasted adjusted earnings before interest and taxes of the soft commodities derivatives business of the acquired Hanley Companies and INTL Hanley, LLC (the “Derivatives Division”) for the two twelve-month periods ending June 30, 2012 and June 30, 2013 and a final contingent payment based on the cumulative Adjusted EBIT of the Derivatives Division for the three year period commencing on July 1, 2010, with a discount rate being applied to those future payments. The change in fair value for the three months ended December 31, 2011 was an increase of $1.1 million, included within ‘other expense’ in the condensed consolidated income statements. The present value of the estimated total purchase price, including contingent consideration, is $52.6 million as of December 31, 2011, of which $14.6 million has not been paid and is included within ‘accounts payable and other liabilities’ in the condensed consolidated balance sheets.
The Company has a contingent liability relating to the April 2010 acquisition of the RMI Companies, which may result in the payment of additional consideration. The contingent liability recorded represents the fair value of expected consideration to be paid based on the forecasted sales during the two twelve-month periods ending March 31, 2012 and 2013, and a discount rate being applied to those future payments. The change in fair value for the three months ended December 31, 2011 was a decrease of $0.2 million, included within ‘other expense’ in the condensed consolidated income statements. The present value of the estimated total purchase price, including contingent consideration, is $14.9 million as of December 31, 2011, of which $5.8 million has not been paid and is included within ‘accounts payable and other liabilities’ in the condensed consolidated balance sheets.
The Company has a contingent liability relating to the February 2008 acquisition of Globecot, Inc. by FCStone, LLC. Under the terms of the purchase agreement, the Company has an obligation to pay additional consideration if specific conditions and

21

Table of Contents

earnings targets are met in the twelve-month period ending December 31, 2012. Although this transaction was made prior to the Company's acquisition of FCStone, any additional consideration would be considered an adjustment to a pre-acquisition contingency made after the end of the allocation period, and included in earnings in the current period. The additional consideration is limited to $0.4 million for the twelve-month period.
Exchange Member Guarantees
The Company is a member of various exchanges that trade and clear futures and option contracts. Associated with its memberships, the Company may be required to pay a proportionate share of the financial obligations of another member who may default on its obligations to the exchanges. While the rules governing different exchange memberships vary, in general the Company’s guarantee obligations would arise only if the exchange had previously exhausted its resources. In addition, any such guarantee obligation would be apportioned among the other non-defaulting members of the exchange. Any potential contingent liability under these membership agreements cannot be estimated. The Company has not recorded any contingent liability in the condensed consolidated financial statements for these agreements and believes that any potential requirement to make payments under these agreements is remote.
Note 12 – Capital and Other Regulatory Requirements
The Company's subsidiary FCStone, LLC is a commodity futures commission merchant registered with the CFTC servicing customers primarily in grain, energy and food service-related businesses. Pursuant to the rules, regulations, and requirements of the CFTC and other regulatory agencies, FCStone, LLC is required to maintain certain minimum net capital as defined in such rules, regulations, and requirements. Net capital and the related net capital requirement may fluctuate on a daily basis. Pursuant to the requirements of the Commodity Exchange Act, funds deposited by customers of FCStone, LLC relating to futures and options on futures in regulated commodities must be carried in separate accounts which are designated as segregated customers’ accounts.
The Company’s subsidiary INTL Trading, Inc. ("INTL Trading") is a registered broker dealer and member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority ("FINRA") and is subject to the SEC Uniform Net Capital Rule 15c3-1. This rule requires the maintenance of minimum net capital, and requires that the ratio of aggregate indebtedness to net capital not exceed 15 to 1. A further requirement is that equity capital may not be withdrawn if this ratio would exceed 10 to 1 after such withdrawal.
The Company’s subsidiary FCStone Australia Pty Ltd ("FCStone Australia") is regulated by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission and is subject to a surplus liquid funds requirement. FCStone Australia is also regulated by the New Zealand Clearing Limited, and is subject to a capital adequacy requirement.
The Company’s subsidiary FCC Investments, Inc. is a registered broker-dealer and a member of FINRA, and is subject to the SEC Uniform Net Capital Rule 15c3-1.
The Company's subsidiaries Risk Management Incorporated and Hencorp Futures are regulated by the CFTC and the National Futures Association and are both subject to a minimum capital requirement.
The Company's subsidiaries INTL FCStone (Europe) and INTL Global Currencies Limited are regulated by the Financial Services Authority ("FSA"), the regulator of the financial services industry in the United Kingdom, and subject to a consolidated net capital requirement.
The subsidiaries of the Company are in compliance with all of their regulatory requirements as of December 31, 2011, as follows: 

22

Table of Contents

(in millions)
 
 
 
 
As of December 31, 2011
Subsidiary
Regulatory Authority
 
Requirement Type
 
Actual
 
Minimum
Requirement
 FCStone, LLC
CFTC
 
Net capital
 
$
116.9

 
$
72.0

 FCStone, LLC
CFTC
 
Segregated funds
 
$
1,293.6

 
$
1,263.9

 INTL Trading
SEC
 
Net capital
 
$
2.0

 
$
1.0

 FCC Investments, Inc.
SEC
 
Net capital
 
$
0.4

 
$
0.3

 FCStone Australia
Australian Securities and Investment Commission
 
Net capital
 
$
2.9

 
$
1.3

 FCStone Australia
New Zealand Clearing Ltd
 
Capital adequacy
 
$
13.1

 
$
3.9

 Risk Management Incorporated
CFTC
 
Net capital
 
$
0.4

 
$
0.1

Hencorp Futures
CFTC
 
Net capital
 
$
1.2

 
$
0.1

INTL FCStone (Europe)
FSA
 
Net capital
 
$
5.5

 
$
3.3

FCStone Europe
Central Bank of Ireland
 
Net capital
 
$
1.1

 
$
0.5

INTL Global Currencies Limited
FSA
 
Net capital
 
$
3.1

 
$
1.1

Certain other non-U.S. subsidiaries of the Company are also subject to capital adequacy requirements promulgated by authorities of the countries in which they operate. As of December 31, 2011, these subsidiaries were in compliance with their local capital adequacy requirements.
Note 13 – Stock-Based Compensation
Stock-based compensation expense is included within 'compensation and benefits' in the condensed consolidated income statements and totaled $1.0 million and $0.5 million for the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010, respectively.
Stock Option Plans
The Company sponsors a stock option plan for its directors, officers, employees and consultants. As of December 31, 2011, 786,962 shares were authorized for future grant under this plan. Awards that expire or are canceled generally become available for issuance again under the plan. We settle stock option exercises with newly issued shares of common stock.
Fair value is estimated at the grant date based on a Black-Scholes-Merton option-pricing model using the following weighted-average assumptions:
 
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
 
2010
Expected stock price volatility
77
%
Expected dividend yield
%
Risk free interest rate
0.72
%
Average expected life (in years)
2.94

Expected stock price volatility rates are based on the historical volatility of the Company’s common stock. The Company has not paid dividends in the past and does not currently expect to do so in the future. Risk free interest rates are based on the U.S. Treasury yield curve in effect at the time of grant for periods corresponding with the expected life of the option or award. The average expected life represents the estimated period of time that options or awards granted are expected to be outstanding, based on the Company’s historical share option exercise experience for similar option grants. The weighted average fair value of options issued during the three months ended December 31, 2010 was $11.66.
The following is a summary of stock option activity for the three months ended December 31, 2011:
 

23

Table of Contents

 
Shares
Available for
Grant
 
Number of
Options
Outstanding
 
Weighted
Average Price
 
Weighted
Average
Grant Date
Fair Value
 
Weighted
Average
Remaining
Term
(in years)
 
Aggregate
Intrinsic
Value
($ millions)
Balances as of September 30, 2011
750,481

 
1,344,646

 
$
21.05

 
$
8.93

 
3.06

 
$
9.8

Exercised
 
 
(24,063
)
 
$
12.79

 
$
8.59

 
 
 
 
Expired
36,481

 
(36,481
)
 
$
27.89

 
$
11.88

 
 
 
 
Balances as of December 31, 2011
786,962

 
1,284,102

 
$
21.01

 
$
8.85

 
2.92

 
$
12.3

Exercisable as of December 31, 2011
 
 
961,084

 
$
24.98

 
$
10.40

 
2.93

 
$
7.6

The total compensation cost not yet recognized for non-vested awards of $0.9 million as of December 31, 2011 has a weighted-average period of 1.86 years over which the compensation expense is expected to be recognized. The total intrinsic value of options exercised during the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010 was $0.3 million, respectively.
At the 2012 annual meeting of shareholders, the Company's shareholders will vote on an amendment to the stock option plan that increases the maximum number of shares that may be issued under the stock option plan from 2,250,000 to 3,250,000 shares. During the three months ended December 31, 2011, 925,000 shares were approved by the Company's board of directors to be awarded at a weighted average price of $25.71 with a weighted average remaining term of 8.61 years that are subject to cancellation, if shareholders do not approve the amendment.
Restricted Stock Plan
The Company sponsors a restricted stock plan for its directors, officers and employees. As of December 31, 2011, 49,351 shares were authorized for future grant under our restricted stock plan. Awards that expire or are canceled generally become available for issuance again under the plan. The Company utilizes newly issued shares of common stock to make restricted stock grants.
The following is a summary of restricted stock activity through December 31, 2011:
 
Shares
Available for
Grant
 
Number of
Shares
Outstanding
 
Weighted
Average
Grant Date
Fair Value
 
Weighted
Average
Remaining
Term
(in years)
 
Aggregate
Intrinsic  Value
($ millions)
Balances as of September 30, 2011
290,963

 
299,118

 
$
17.71

 
1.92

 
$
6.2

Granted
(241,612
)
 
241,612

 
$
24.70

 
 
 
 
Vested
 
 
(74,938
)
 
$
13.76

 
 
 
 
Balances as of December 31, 2011
49,351

 
465,792

 
$
19.37

 
2.39

 
$
11.0

The total compensation cost not yet recognized of $9.1 million as of December 31, 2011 has a weighted-average period of 2.39 years over which the compensation expense is expected to be recognized. Compensation expense is amortized on a straight-line basis over the vesting period. Restricted stock grants are included in the Company’s total issued and outstanding common shares.
The Company's current restricted stock program expired on January 31, 2012. At the 2012 annual meeting of shareholders, the Company's shareholders will vote on a proposal to adopt a new restricted stock program which would authorize the Company to issue up to 1.5 million restricted shares.
Note 14 – Acquisitions
Coffee Network
In November 2011, the Company entered into an agreement to acquire 100% of the ownership interests in Coffee Network LLC ("Coffee Network"), an online news and analysis portal for the global coffee industry. Coffee Network provides up-to-the-minute news and in-depth analysis to subscribers around the globe from a network of correspondents and commodity analysts located in key coffee producing and consuming regions. These services provide a unique information solution to subscribers and a competitive advantage in today's information-driven marketplace.
The purchase price for the Coffee Network acquisition consists of an initial payment of $0.2 million, three additional annual contingent payments and a final contingent payment. The value of certain assets and liabilities are preliminary in nature, and are subject to adjustment as additional information is obtained, including but not limited to the calculation of the contingent

24

Table of Contents

consideration and valuation of separately identifiable intangible assets. These areas are subject to change within the measurement period (up to one year from the acquisition date) as valuations are finalized. When the valuations are finalized, any changes to the preliminary valuation of assets acquired or liabilities assumed may result in adjustments to separately identifiable intangible assets and goodwill. The purchase provisional amounts recorded and the total purchase price for the acquisition of Coffee Network is not material.
MF Metals Team
On November 25, 2011, INTL FCStone (Europe), the Company's wholly owned subsidiary in the United Kingdom, arranged with the administrator of MF Global's UK operations to acquire the Metals Division of MF Global UK Limited (in special administration). As part of the arrangement, the Company received an assignment of customer accounts and customer account documentation. Additionally, as part of the transaction, the Company hired more than 50 professional staff from MF Global's metals trading business based in London. The Company anticipates that a number of the customers of this metals trading operation will elect to become active trading customers of the Company. The Company expects to allocate equity capital to integrate these brokers and their customers into the Company's operations, through a combination of increased regulatory capital to support the accounts of these customers and increased compensation and related personnel costs for the brokers. The amount of the required capital will primarily depend upon the activity in and balances of the new accounts.
The allocation of the purchase price to separately identifiable intangible assets is preliminary in nature, and is subject to adjustment as additional information is obtained. The purchase provisional amounts recorded and the total purchase price of this transaction is not material.
TRX Futures Limited
In December 2011, the Company's wholly-owned subsidiary in the United Kingdom ("UK"), INTL Holding (UK) Limited, entered into a memorandum of understanding with Neumann Gruppe GmbH to acquire its subsidiary TRX Futures Limited ("TRX"). TRX is a London-based niche clearing firm for commercial coffee and cocoa customers, as well as energy and financial products. The acquisition is contingent upon the approval by the UK Financial Services Authority of the proposed change of control of TRX. The purchase price is expected to be equal to the tangible net asset value ("NAV") of TRX, which is estimated to be approximately $13.0 million. The acquisition is not expected to have any immediate impact on the Company's earnings, and this transaction is not considered to be material.
Note 15 – Income Taxes
In determining the quarterly provision for income taxes, management uses an estimated annual effective tax rate which is based on the expected annual income and statutory tax rates in the various jurisdictions in which it operates. The Company’s effective tax rate differs from the U.S. statutory rate primarily due to state and local taxes, and differing statutory tax rates applied to the income of non-U.S. subsidiaries. The Company records the tax effect of certain discrete items, including the effects of changes in tax laws, tax rates and adjustments with respect to valuation allowances or other unusual or nonrecurring tax adjustments, in the interim period in which they occur, as an addition to, or reduction from, the income tax provision, rather than being included in the estimated effective annual income tax rate. In addition, jurisdictions with a projected loss for the year or a year-to-date loss where no tax benefit can be recognized are excluded from the estimated annual effective income tax rate.
The Company is required to assess its deferred tax assets and the need for a valuation allowance at each reporting period. This assessment requires judgment on the part of management with respect to benefits that may be realized. The Company will record a valuation allowance against deferred tax assets when it is considered more likely than not that all or a portion of our deferred tax assets will not be realized.
The income tax benefit from continuing operations of $0.2 million and income tax expense from continuing operations of $2.1 million for the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010, respectively, reflect estimated federal, foreign and state taxes. For the three months ended December 31, 2011, the Company’s effective tax rate was 29%, compared to 36% for the three months ended December 31, 2010.
The Company and its subsidiaries file income tax returns with the U.S. federal jurisdiction and various state and foreign jurisdictions. In January 2012, the Internal Revenue Service concluded its examination of the U.S. income tax return of FCStone for its fiscal year ended August 31, 2009, which was prior to the Company's acquisition of FCStone on September 30, 2009.The Service made adjustments to FCStone's return.Both INTL FCStone Inc. and FCStone are under separate state examinations for various periods, ranging from August 31, 2006 through September 30, 2009.
Note 16 – Segment Analysis
The Company reports its operating segments based on services provided to customers. The Company’s activities are divided

25

Table of Contents

into the following five functional areas:
Commodity and Risk Management Services
Foreign Exchange
Securities
Clearing and Execution Services
Other
Commodity and Risk Management Services (C&RM)
The Company serves its commercial customers through its force of approximately 168 risk management consultants with a high value added service that differentiates us from other competitors and maximizes the opportunity to retain customers. The Integrated Risk Management Program ("IRMP®") involves providing customers with commodity risk management consulting services that are designed to develop a customized long term hedging program to help them mitigate their exposure to commodity price risk and maximize the amount and certainty of their operating profits. Customers are assisted in the execution of their hedging strategies through the Company’s exchange-traded futures and options clearing and execution operations and through access to more customized alternatives provided by the OTC trading desk. Generally, customers direct their own trading activity and risk management consultants do not have discretionary authority to transact trades on behalf of customers. When transacting OTC contracts with customers, the Company may offset the customer’s transaction simultaneously with one of its trading counterparties. Alternatively, the OTC trade desk will accept a customer transaction and offset that transaction with a similar but not identical position on the exchange.
In addition, the Company provides a full range of trading and hedging capabilities to select producers, consumers, recyclers and investors in both precious and base metals, as well as certain other related commodities. This includes acting as a Category One ring dealing member of the LME, providing execution, clearing and advisory services in exchange traded futures and OTC products. Acting as a principal, the Company commits its own capital to buy and sell the metals on a spot and forward basis.
The Company records its physical commodities revenues on a gross basis. Operating revenues and losses from the Company’s commodities derivatives activities are included within ‘trading gains’ in the condensed consolidated income statements. Inventory for the commodities business is valued at the lower of cost or fair value under the provisions of the Inventory Topic of the ASC. The Company generally mitigates the price risk associated with commodities held in inventory through the use of derivatives. The Company does not elect hedge accounting under U.S. GAAP in accounting for this price risk mitigation. In such situations, unrealized gains in inventory are not recognized under U.S. GAAP, but unrealized gains and losses in related derivative positions are recognized under U.S. GAAP. As a result, the Company’s reported earnings from commodities trading may be subject to significant volatility when calculated under U.S. GAAP.
Foreign Exchange
The Company provides treasury, global payment and foreign exchange services to financial institutions, multi-national corporations, government organizations and charitable organizations as well as assisting commercial customers with the execution of foreign exchange hedging strategies. The Company transacts in over 130 currencies and specializes in smaller, more difficult emerging markets where there is limited liquidity. In addition, the Company executes trades based on the foreign currency flows inherent in the Company’s existing business activities. The Company primarily acts as a principal in buying and selling foreign currencies on a spot basis. The Company derives revenue from the difference between the purchase and sale prices.
The Company also provides spot foreign currency trading for a customer base of eligible contract participants and high net worth retail customers as well as operating a proprietary foreign exchange desk which arbitrages the futures and cash markets.
Securities
Through INTL Trading, the Company acts as a wholesale market maker in select foreign securities including unlisted ADRs and foreign ordinary shares. INTL Trading provides execution and liquidity to national broker-dealers, regional broker-dealers and institutional investors.
The Company also originates, structures and places a wide array of emerging market debt instruments in the international and domestic capital markets. These instruments include complex asset backed securities, unsecured bond and loan issues, negotiable notes and other trade-related debt instruments used in cross-border trade finance. On occasions the Company may invest its own capital in debt instruments before selling them. It also actively trades in a variety of international debt instruments.
Clearing and Execution Services (CES)
The Company seeks to provide competitive and efficient clearing and execution of exchange-traded futures and options for the institutional and professional trader market segments. Through its platform, customer orders are accepted and directed to the appropriate exchange for execution. The Company then facilitates the clearing of customers’ transactions. Clearing involves the

26

Table of Contents

matching of customers’ trades with the exchange, the collection and management of margin deposits to support the transactions, and the accounting and reporting of the transactions to customers. The Company seeks to leverage its capabilities and capacity by offering facilities management or outsourcing solutions to other FCMs.
Other
This segment consists of the Company’s asset management and commodity financing and facilitation business. The asset management revenues include fees, commissions and other revenues received by the Company for management of third party assets and investment gains or losses on the Company’s investments in funds and proprietary accounts managed either by the Company’s investment managers or by independent investment managers.
The Company operates a commodity financing and facilitation business which provides financing to commercial commodity-related companies against physical inventories, including grain, lumber, meats, energy products and renewable fuels. Sale and repurchase agreements are used to purchase commodities evidenced by warehouse receipts, subject to a simultaneous agreement to sell such commodities back to the original seller at a later date. These transactions are accounted for as product financing arrangements, and accordingly no commodity inventory, purchases or sales are recorded. Additionally, the Company, as a principal, engages in physical purchase and sale transactions related to inputs to the renewable fuels and feed ingredient industries.
********
The total revenues reported combine gross revenues for the physical commodities business and net revenues for all other businesses. In order to reflect the way that the Company’s management views the results, the tables below also reflect the segment contribution to ‘operating revenues’, which is shown on the face of the condensed consolidated income statements and which is calculated by deducting physical commodities cost of sales from total revenues.
Segment data includes the profitability measure of net contribution by segment. Net contribution is one of the key measures used by management to assess the performance of each segment and for decisions regarding the allocation of the Company’s resources. Net contribution is calculated as revenue less direct cost of sales, clearing and related expenses, variable compensation, introducing broker commissions and interest expense. Variable compensation paid to risk management consultants / traders generally represents a fixed percentage of an amount equal to revenues generated, and in some cases, revenues produced less clearing and related charges, base salaries and an overhead allocation.
Segment data also includes segment income which is calculated as net contribution less non-variable direct expenses of the segment. These non-variable direct expenses include trader base compensation and benefits, operational employee compensation and benefits, communication and data services, business development, professional fees, bad debt expense and other direct expenses.
Inter-segment revenues, charges, receivables and payables are eliminated upon consolidation, except revenues and costs related to foreign currency transactions undertaken on an arm’s length basis by the foreign exchange trading business for the securities business. The foreign exchange trading business competes for this business as it does for any other business. If its rates are not competitive, the securities businesses buy or sell their foreign currency through other market counterparties.
To conform to the current presentation of the information concerning the Company's operating segments, the Company has reclassified $1.1 million, for the three months ended December 31, 2010, of costs not allocated to operating segments as non-variable direct segment costs, impacting reported net segment income. On a recurring basis, the Company sweeps excess cash from certain operating segments to a centralized corporate treasury function in exchange for an intercompany receivable asset. The intercompany receivable asset is eliminated during consolidation, and therefore this practice may impact reported total assets between segments.

27

Table of Contents

Information concerning operations in these segments of business is shown in accordance with the Segment Reporting Topic of the ASC as follows:
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions)
2011
 
2010
Total revenues:
 
 
 
Commodity and Risk Management Services
$
17,202.0

 
$
16,223.9

Foreign Exchange
17.9

 
14.5

Securities
9.9

 
7.9

Clearing and Execution Services
17.7

 
17.1

Other
45.2

 
7.1

Corporate unallocated
(2.3
)
 
0.3

Total
$
17,290.4

 
$
16,270.8

Operating revenues (loss):
 
 
 
Commodity and Risk Management Services
$
50.0

 
$
54.1

Foreign Exchange
17.9

 
14.5

Securities
9.9

 
7.9

Clearing and Execution Services
17.7

 
17.1

Other
3.1

 
2.8

Corporate unallocated
(2.3
)
 
0.3

Total
$
96.3

 
$
96.7

Net contribution:
 
 
 
(Revenues less cost of sales, clearing and related expenses, variable bonus compensation, introducing broker commissions and interest expense):
 
 
 
Commodity and Risk Management Services
$
29.8

 
$
27.7

Foreign Exchange
11.7

 
9.0

Securities
4.5

 
4.5

Clearing and Execution Services
2.5

 
3.3

Other
2.1

 
1.7

Total
$
50.6

 
$
46.2

Net segment income (loss):
 
 
 
(Net contribution less non-variable direct segment costs):
 
 
 
Commodity and Risk Management Services
$
13.1

 
$
13.6

Foreign Exchange
9.0

 
6.9

Securities
1.1

 
1.2

Clearing and Execution Services
(0.1
)
 
2.1

Other
0.8

 
0.8

Total
$
23.9

 
$
24.6

Reconciliation of segment income to income from continuing operations, before tax:
 
 
 
Net segment income
$
23.9

 
$
24.6

Costs not allocated to operating segments
24.6

 
18.7

(Loss) income from continuing operations, before tax
$
(0.7
)
 
$
5.9

 
 
 
 
(in millions)
As of December 31, 2011
 
As of September 30, 2011
Total assets:
 
 
 
Commodity and Risk Management Services
$
1,077.2

 
$
1,540.8

Foreign Exchange
142.0

 
146.1

Securities
64.8

 
104.8

Clearing and Execution Services
984.6

 
734.4

Other
41.4

 
43.4

Corporate unallocated
104.8

 
66.2

Total
$
2,414.8

 
$
2,635.7



28

Table of Contents

Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
The following discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction with the financial statements and notes thereto appearing elsewhere in this report. This Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond the control of INTL FCStone Inc. and its subsidiaries (collectively “INTL” or “the Company”), including adverse changes in economic, political and market conditions, losses from the Company’s market-making and trading activities arising from counter-party failures and changes in market conditions, the possible loss of key personnel, the impact of increasing competition, the impact of changes in government regulation, the possibility of liabilities arising from violations of federal and state securities laws and the impact of changes in technology in the securities and commodities trading industries. Although the Company believes that its forward-looking statements are based upon reasonable assumptions regarding its business and future market conditions, there can be no assurances that the Company’s actual results will not differ materially from any results expressed or implied by the Company’s forward-looking statements. The Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Readers are cautioned that any forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance.
Recent Events Affecting the Financial Services Industry
On October 31, 2011, MF Global Holdings Ltd. ("MF Global"), the parent company of the jointly registered futures commission merchant and broker-dealer, MF Global Inc., filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. The Company has no material direct exposure to MF Global. The Company has two wholly owned subsidiaries which introduced customers to MF Global Inc. Following the bankruptcy filing, the CME Group Inc. selected our wholly owned subsidiary FCStone, LLC as one of a number of FCM's chosen to receive blocks of MF Global customers. During this process, FCStone, LLC opened accounts for the customers of these introducing brokers and completed the transfer of their positions. In conjunction with the block transfer and during the subsequent period, the Company has opened over 2,300 new accounts for former MF Global customers.
In addition, on November 25, 2011, the Company arranged with the administrator of MF Global's UK operations to acquire the Metals Division of MF Global UK Limited (in special administration). As part of the arrangement, the Company has received assignment of customer accounts and customer account documentation. Additionally, the Company has hired more than 50 professional staff based in London, New York, Hong Kong and Sydney from MF Global's metals trading business based in London. The Company anticipates that a substantial number of the customers of this metals trading business, which serves institutional investors and financial services firms in the Americas, Europe, and the Asia-Pacific region, will elect to become active trading customers of the Company. Following this transaction, INTL FCStone (Europe) received approval from the London Metals Exchange ("LME") to upgrade its LME Category Two membership to a LME Category One ring dealing membership.
At the time of the MF Global bankruptcy filing, MF Global notified the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the "CFTC") of potential deficiencies in customer segregated futures accounts held at MF Global Inc. The CFTC has extensive regulations to provide for the safety and security of customer assets on deposit with FCMs. These regulations require that all FCMs maintain customer segregated assets in approved depositories in excess of its customer segregated liabilities and to complete a daily calculation of this excess as well as monthly filings under CFTC Form 1-FR. As of December 31, 2011, FCStone, LLC maintained $29.7 million in segregated assets in excess of its segregated liabilities.
In addition, the CFTC governs the acceptable investment of customer segregated assets. These regulations allow for the investment of customer segregated assets in readily marketable instruments, including U.S. Treasury securities, municipal securities, government sponsored enterprise securities, certificates of deposit, commercial paper, corporate notes or bonds, general obligations of a sovereign nation, interest in money market mutual funds, and repurchase transactions with affiliated entities in otherwise allowable securities. The Company primarily invests its customer segregated assets in U.S. Treasury Bills and money market mutual funds, maintains no investment in the general obligations of a sovereign nation and does not engage in repurchase transactions with affiliated entities.
On July 21, 2010, the President signed into law the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the “Dodd-Frank Act”). The Dodd-Frank Act creates a comprehensive new regulatory regime governing the OTC and listed derivatives markets and their participants by requiring, among other things: centralized clearing of standardized derivatives (with certain stated exceptions); the trading of clearable derivatives on swap execution facilities or exchanges; and registration and comprehensive regulation of new categories of market participants as “swap dealers” and swap “introducing brokers.”  These initiatives and legislation may not only affect us but also certain of our customers and counterparties. Although the original date set for completion of final rules was mid-July 2011, the CFTC has announced that it will phase in its new rules through June 30, 2012.  Because many of the rules that the CFTC and the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") are required to

29

Table of Contents

promulgate are not yet final, we cannot predict with any degree of certainty how our business will be affected. The Company will continue to monitor all applicable developments in the implementation of the Dodd-Frank Act. 
Overview
INTL FCStone Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries form a financial services group employing 1,014 people in offices in 12 countries. The Company’s services include comprehensive risk management advisory services for commercial customers, execution of listed futures and options on futures contracts on all major commodity exchanges, the sale of structured over-the-counter (“OTC”) products in a wide range of commodities, physical trading and hedging of precious and base metals and select other commodities, trading of more than 130 foreign currencies, market-making in international equities, debt origination and asset management.
The Company provides these services to a diverse group of more than 20,000 customers located in more than 100 countries, including producers, processors and end-users of nearly all widely-traded physical commodities; commercial counterparties who are end-users of our products and services; governmental and non-governmental organizations; and commercial banks, brokers, institutional investors and major investment banks.
The Company’s activities are divided into the following five functional areas consisting of Commodity and Risk Management Services ("C&RM"), Foreign Exchange, Securities, Clearing and Execution Services ("CES") and Other.
Commodity and Risk Management Services (C&RM)
We serve our commercial customers by providing high value-added-service that differentiates the Company from our competitors and maximizes the opportunity to retain customers. The Integrated Risk Management Program ("IRMP®") involves providing customers with commodity risk management consulting services with a goal of developing a customized long term hedging program to help them mitigate their exposure to commodity price risk and maximize the amount and certainty of their operating profits. Customers are assisted in the execution of their hedging strategies through the Company’s exchange-traded futures and options on futures clearing and execution operations and through access to more customized alternatives provided by the OTC trading desk. Generally, customers direct their own trading activity and risk management consultants do not have discretionary authority to transact trades on behalf of customers. When transacting OTC contracts with a customer, the Company may offset the customer’s transaction simultaneously with one of its trading counterparties. Alternatively, the OTC trade desk will accept a customer transaction and offset that transaction with a similar but not identical position on the exchange.
We also provide a full range of trading and hedging capabilities to select producers, consumers, recyclers and investors in both precious and base metals, as well as certain other related commodities. This includes acting as a Category One ring dealing member of the LME, providing execution, clearing and advisory services in exchange traded futures and OTC products. Acting as a principal, the Company commits its own capital to buy and sell the metals on a spot and forward basis.
The Company records all of its physical commodities revenues on a gross basis. Operating revenues and losses from the Company’s commodities derivatives activities are recorded within ‘trading gains’ on the condensed consolidated income statements. Inventory for the commodities business is valued at the lower of cost or fair value, under the provisions of the Inventory Topic of the Accounting Standards Codification ("ASC"). The Company generally mitigates the price risk associated with commodities held in inventory through the use of derivatives. The Company does not elect hedge accounting under accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America ("U.S. GAAP") in accounting for price risk mitigation. In such situations, unrealized gains in inventory are not recognized under U.S. GAAP, but unrealized gains and losses in related derivative positions are recognized under U.S. GAAP. As a result, the Company’s reported earnings from commodities trading may be subject to significant volatility.
Foreign Exchange
The Company provides treasury, global payment and foreign exchange services to financial institutions, multi-national corporations, government organizations and charitable organizations. We also assist commercial customers with the execution of foreign exchange hedging strategies. The Company transacts in over 130 currencies and specializes in smaller, more difficult emerging markets where there is limited liquidity. In addition, the Company executes trades based on the foreign currency flows inherent in the Company’s existing business activities. The Company primarily acts as a principal in buying and selling foreign currencies on a spot basis. The Company derives revenue from the difference between the purchase and sale prices.
The Company also provides spot foreign currency trading for a customer base of eligible contract participants and high net worth retail customers as well as operating a proprietary foreign exchange desk which arbitrages the futures and cash markets.
Securities
Through the Company's subsidiary, INTL Trading, Inc. ("INTL Trading"), the Company acts as a wholesale market maker in

30

Table of Contents

select foreign securities including unlisted American Depository Receipts ("ADRs") and foreign ordinary shares and provides execution in select debt instruments and exchange-traded funds ("ETFs"). INTL Trading provides execution and liquidity to national broker-dealers, regional broker-dealers and institutional investors.
The Company makes markets in approximately 800 ADRs and foreign ordinary shares traded in the OTC market. In addition, the Company will, on request, make prices in more than 8,000 other ADRs and foreign common shares. As a market-maker, the Company provides trade execution services by offering to buy shares from, or sell shares to, broker-dealers and institutions. The Company displays the prices at which it is willing to buy and sell these securities and adjusts its prices in response to market conditions. When acting as principal, the Company commits its own capital and derives revenue from the difference between the prices at which the Company buys and sells shares. The Company also earns commissions by executing trades on an agency basis.
While the Company’s customers are other broker-dealers and institutions, the business tends to be driven by the needs of the private clients of those broker-dealers and institutions. The size of private client trades may be uneconomical for the in-house international equities trading desks of our customers to execute. The Company is able to provide execution of smaller trades at profitable margins.
The Company provides a full range of investment banking advisory services to commercial customers including the issuance of loans or equity. On occasion we may invest our own capital in debt instruments before selling them into the market.
Clearing and Execution Services (CES)
The Company seeks to provide competitive and efficient clearing and execution of exchange-traded futures and options for the institutional and professional trader market segments. Through its platform, customer orders are accepted and directed to the appropriate exchange for execution. The Company then facilitates the clearing of customers’ transactions. Clearing involves the matching of customers’ trades with the exchange, the collection and management of margin deposits to support the transactions, and the accounting and reporting of the transactions to customers. The Company seeks to leverage its capabilities and capacity by offering facilities management or outsourcing solutions to other futures commission merchants ("FCMs").
Other
This segment consists of the Company’s asset management and commodity financing and facilitation businesses. The asset management revenues include fees, commissions and other revenues received by the Company for management of third party assets and investment gains or losses on the Company’s investments in funds and proprietary accounts managed either by the Company’s investment managers or by independent investment managers.
We operate a commodity financing and facilitation business that makes loans to commercial commodity-related companies against physical inventories, including grain, lumber, meats, energy products and renewable fuels. Sale and repurchase agreements are used to purchase commodities evidenced by warehouse receipts, subject to a simultaneous agreement to sell such commodity inventory back to the original seller at a later date. These transactions are accounted for as product financing arrangements, and accordingly no commodity inventory, purchases or sales are recorded.
Executive Summary
During the three months ended December 31, 2011, the Company experienced a significant decline in both operating revenues and net income compared to the prior year period as a result of difficult market conditions, particularly in our core C&RM segment. Results in this core segment suffered from relatively low price volatility and lower absolute price levels, particularly in agricultural commodities, which constrained both exchange-traded volumes and margins realized on OTC transactions. In addition, the bankruptcy filing of MF Global during the period dampened overall industry trading volumes. This resulted in lost revenues from clients which we introduced to MF Global and reduced activity from these clients once their accounts were transferred to our system, as they continued to have margin deposits frozen at MF Global.
Although the bankruptcy filing of MF Global adversely affected our operating results, the Company opened more than 2,300 new accounts from former customers of MF Global. In addition, on November 25, 2011, the Company acquired the Metals Division of MF Global UK Limited, which was a leading LME member, with more than 50 professional staff which served over 600 commercial customers, mostly involved in hedging activities. Subsequent to this transaction, the Company applied for and received Category One ring dealing membership on the LME. In addition, during November 2011 the Company acquired Coffee Network LLC, an online news and analysis portal for the global coffee industry. The Company intends to leverage this platform with its expertise in a wide range of commodities, and expand this unique information solution to subscribers in a wide variety of commodity industries throughout the world.
While the profitability of our CES segment during the period continued to be constrained by low short term interest rates and lower industry trading volumes, the segment did experience strong growth in exchange-traded volumes as it expanded its

31

Table of Contents

customer base. Both our Foreign Exchange and Securities segment experienced double digit growth compared to the year ago period. An increase in the number of financial institutions utilizing our treasury services as well as an increase in hedging activity, most notably in Brazil, has driven the growth in our Foreign Exchange segment. The Securities segment continued to experience stronger volumes from retail customers of our institutional clients and has expanded its offering into the Latin American markets during the period. The Company's interest income increased modestly compared to the prior year period as commodity financing activity has increased, however interest income on average customer exchange-traded margin deposits of $1.4 billion for the three months ended December 31, 2011 continued to be constrained by historically low short term interest rates.
The Company has recently implemented several initiatives, which have marginally added to operating revenues for the three months ended December 31, 2011, however they have not yet resulted in increased profitability. Most notable is the acquisition of Ambrian Commodities Limited, which was renamed INTL FCStone (Europe) Limited and its subsequent acquisition of the LME metals team discussed above. In addition to adding the capabilities of the LME metals team, this initiative included the build out of our C&RM, CES, foreign exchange prime brokerage, and OTC derivative trading capabilities in London. This resulted in a $3.3 million increase in fixed costs as compared to the three months ended December 31, 2010. In addition, the Company added $1.3 million in fixed compensation expense as we expanded our investment banking and soft commodities product lines as well as our global operations staff. We have expanded our internal information technology development capabilities, which resulted in an increase in fixed expenses of $0.9 million for the three months ended December 31, 2011 compared to the prior period. This expansion was primarily focused upon an expansion of our OTC trading capabilities, resulting in a more rapid deployment of OTC product offerings.
Selected Summary Financial Information
As discussed in previous filings and elsewhere in this Form 10-Q, U.S. GAAP requires the Company to carry derivatives at fair value but physical commodities inventory at the lower of cost or fair value. These requirements may have a significant temporary impact on our reported earnings. Under U.S. GAAP, gains and losses on commodities inventory and derivatives which the Company intends to be offsetting are often recognized in different periods. Additionally, in certain circumstances, U.S. GAAP does not require us to reflect changes in estimated values of forward commitments to purchase and sell commodities. In such circumstances, the forward commitments to purchase and sell commodities, which the Company does not reflect within the condensed consolidated balance sheets, qualify for the normal purchases and sales exception in the Derivatives and Hedging Topic of the ASC.
For these reasons, management primarily assesses the Company’s operating results on a marked-to-market basis. Management relies on these adjusted operating results to evaluate the performance of the Company’s commodities business segment and its personnel.
Under "Adjusted Non-GAAP Data" in the tables below are the Company’s adjusted operating revenues, adjusted net income and adjusted stockholders’ equity, which have been adjusted to reflect the marked-to-market differences in the Company’s commodities business during each period (in the case of operating revenues and net income) and the cumulative differences (in the case of stockholders’ equity). The Company has also included the estimated tax liability which would have been incurred as a result of these adjustments, utilizing an estimated tax rate of 37.5%.
The Company determines the fair value of physical commodities inventory on a marked-to-market basis by applying quoted market prices to the inventory owned by the Company on the balance sheet date. In the Company’s precious metals business, the Company obtains the closing COMEX nearby futures price for the last business day of the month and then adjusts that price to reflect an exchange for physical transaction, utilizing bids obtained from one or more market participants. In the Company’s base metals business, for copper inventory, the Company obtains the closing COMEX or LME nearby futures price and then adjusts that price to reflect any freight charges to the relevant delivery point. For the Company’s lead inventory, the Company obtains the closing LME nearby futures month price and then adjusts that price to reflect any tolling and freight charges to the relevant delivery point. If inventories were required to be valued using fair value instead of under U.S. GAAP at the lower of cost or market, our physical commodities inventory would be classified as Level 2 assets using the Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures Topic of the ASC.

32

Table of Contents


Adjusted Non-GAAP Financial Information (Unaudited)
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions)
2011
 
2010
U.S. GAAP Data (Unaudited):
 
 
 
Operating revenues
$
96.3


$
96.7

(Loss) income from continuing operations, before tax
$
(0.7
)

$
5.9

Net (loss) income attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. common stockholders
$
(0.4
)

$
4.0

Stockholders' equity
$
297.1


$
251.8

Adjusted Non-GAAP Data (Unaudited):
 
 
 
Data adjusted (on a marked-to-market basis):
 
 
 
Operating revenues, as stated above
$
96.3


$
96.7

Marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)

12.1

Adjusted operating revenues, marked-to-market (non-GAAP)
$
93.1


$
108.8

(Loss) income from continuing operations, before tax, as stated above
$
(0.7
)

$
5.9

Marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)

12.1

Adjusted (loss) income from continuing operations, before tax (non-GAAP)
$
(3.9
)

$
18.0

Net (loss) income attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. common stockholders, as stated above
$
(0.4
)

$
4.0

Marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)

12.1

Tax effect at blended rate of 37.5%
1.2


(4.5
)
Adjusted net (loss) income attributable to INTL FCStone Inc. common stockholders (non-GAAP)
$
(2.4
)

$
11.6

Stockholders' equity, as stated above
$
297.1


$
251.8

Cumulative marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
5.4


29.1

Tax effect at blended rate of 37.5%
(2.0
)

(10.9
)
Adjusted stockholders' equity (non-GAAP)
$
300.5


$
270.0

Adjusted operating revenues, adjusted net income and adjusted stockholders’ equity are financial measures that are not recognized by U.S. GAAP, and should not be considered as alternatives to operating revenues, net income or stockholders’ equity calculated under U.S. GAAP or as an alternative to any other measures of performance derived in accordance with U.S. GAAP. The Company has included these non-GAAP financial measures because it believes that they permit investors to make more meaningful comparisons of performance between the periods presented. In addition, these non-GAAP measures are used by management in evaluating the Company’s performance.
Results of Operations
Set forth below is the Company’s discussion of the results of its operations, as viewed by management, for the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010, respectively. The quarters will be referred to in this discussion as “Q1 2012” and “Q1 2011”. This discussion refers to both U.S. GAAP results and adjusted non-GAAP marked-to-market information, in accordance with the information presented above under the heading 'Adjusted non-GAAP Financial Information'. For the Foreign Exchange, Securities, CES and Other segments, there are no differences between the U.S. GAAP results and the adjusted non-GAAP marked-to-market results. Only the C&RM segment has differences between the U.S. GAAP results and the adjusted non-GAAP marked-to-market results. However, this means that there are differences between the U.S. GAAP basis and the non-GAAP marked-to-market basis total operating revenues, total contribution and net income. Please note that any term below that contains the word ‘adjusted’ refers to non-GAAP, marked-to-market information.
The discussion below relates only to continuing operations. All revenues and expenses, including income tax expense, relating to discontinued operations have been removed from disclosures of total revenues and expenses in all periods and are reflected net, within the income from discontinued operations amount.


33

Table of Contents


Financial Overview (Unaudited) 
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions)
2011
 
%
Change
 
2010
Operating revenues
$
96.3

 
 %
 
$
96.7

Marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)
 
n/m

 
12.1

Adjusted operating revenues (non-GAAP)
93.1

 
(14
)%
 
108.8

Interest expense
2.1

 
(45
)%
 
3.8

Adjusted net revenues (non-GAAP)
91.0

 
(13
)%
 
105.0

Non-interest expenses
94.9

 
9
 %
 
87.0

Adjusted (loss) income from continuing operations, before tax (non-GAAP)
$
(3.9
)
 
(122
)%
 
$
18.0

Reconciliation of net revenues from GAAP to adjusted, non-GAAP numbers:
Net revenues
$
94.2

 
 
 
$
92.9

Marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)
 
 
 
12.1

Adjusted net revenues (non-GAAP)
$
91.0

 
 
 
$
105.0

Reconciliation of income from continuing operations, before tax from GAAP to adjusted, non-GAAP numbers:
(Loss) income from continuing operations before income tax
$
(0.7
)
 
 
 
$
5.9

Marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)
 
 
 
12.1

Adjusted (loss) income from continuing operations, before tax (non-GAAP)
$
(3.9
)
 
 
 
$
18.0

Q1 2012 Operating Revenues vs. Q1 2011 Operating Revenues
The Company’s operating revenues under U.S. GAAP for Q1 2012 and Q1 2011 were $96.3 million and $96.7 million, respectively. This modest decrease in operating revenue was primarily impacted by an 8% decrease in the operating revenues in the C&RM segment. This decrease was partially offset by increases in operating revenues of 23% in the Foreign Exchange segment, 25% in the Securities segment, 4% in the CES segment 11% in the Other segment. Adjusted operating revenues declined 14% from $108.8 million in Q1 2011 to $93.1 million in Q1 2012, primarily resulting from a 29% decrease in adjusted operating revenues in the C&RM segment.
Operating revenues and adjusted operating revenues decreased significantly in the C&RM segment in Q1 2012, due to decreases in exchange-traded volumes in our soft commodities product line of 19% as a result of low underlying commodity volatility and relatively stable prices, particularly in agricultural commodities. This level of volatility and stable price activity also significantly constrained margins realized in OTC contracts, particularly in structured products, which more than offset a 27% increase in the volume of OTC contracts traded.
In addition, adjusted operating revenues in both our precious and base metals product line revenues declined due to decreased worldwide demand as a result of continued slow global economic conditions. Operating revenues in the Foreign Exchange segment in Q1 2012 increased primarily as a result of higher volumes in the global payments business and higher commercial hedging activity, most notably in Brazil, as well as increased trading activity in our speculative customer prime brokerage business. These increases were partially offset by lower revenues in the foreign exchange arbitrage desk businesses.
Operating revenues in the Securities segment in Q1 2012 benefited from an increase in demand from retail customers of our institutional clients in our international equities market-making product line as the overall equities markets volumes recovered. Operating revenues in the CES segment in Q1 2012 rose slightly over the prior year period as a result of new customers acquired following the bankruptcy filing of MF Global. However, operating revenues in this segment continue to be constrained by low short-term interest rates. See the Q1 2012 vs. Q1 2011 Segment Analysis below for additional information on activity in each of the segments.
In Q1 2012, operating revenues include realized gains of $1.0 million and unrealized losses of $2.0 million on interest rate swap derivative contracts used to manage a portion of our aggregate interest rate position. In Q1 2011, operating revenues included realized and unrealized gains of $0.7 million and unrealized losses of $1.1 million, respectively, on interest rate swap derivative contracts. These interest rate swaps are not designated for hedge accounting treatment, and changes in the marked-to-market valuations of these interest rate swaps, which are volatile and can fluctuate from period to period, are recorded in earnings on a quarterly basis. As of December 31, 2011, approximately $965 million in notional principal of interest rate swaps

34

Table of Contents

were outstanding with a weighted-average life of 12 months.
The Company’s adjusted operating revenues were $93.1 million in Q1 2012, compared with $108.8 million in Q1 2011, a decrease of $15.7 million, or 14%. The only difference between operating revenues and adjusted operating revenues, a non-GAAP measure, was the gross marked-to-market adjustment of $(3.2) million and $12.1 million for Q1 2012 and Q1 2011, respectively. The gross marked-to-market adjustment only affects the adjusted operating revenues in the C&RM segment. Adjusted operating revenues were identical to operating revenues in all other segments.
Q1 2012 Interest expense vs. Q1 2011 Interest expense
Interest expense: Interest expense decreased from $3.8 million for Q1 2011 to $2.1 million for Q1 2012. This decrease in interest expense was partially a result of the conversion of the remaining balance of the Company's convertible subordinated debt in September 2011. In 2008, the Company entered into two three-year interest rate swaps for a total notional value of $100 million, which were originally designated as cash flow hedges. Hedge accounting for one of the swaps was discontinued during Q1 2011, which resulted in reclassifying a portion of the deferred loss to earnings during the year. The effective portion of the change in cash flows from the hedge of the remaining forecasted payments during Q1 2011 had the effect of increasing the Company's reported interest expense by $0.5 million. The Company discontinued hedge accounting for the remaining swap in Q2 2011. During 2011, both interest rate swap contracts matured. Additionally, a decrease in borrowings related to the commodity financing business contributed to lower interest expense.
Non-Interest Expenses
The following table shows a summary of our non-interest expenses. 
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions)
2011
 
%
Change
 
2010
NON-INTEREST EXPENSES
 
 
 
 
 
Compensation and benefits
$
45.8

 
8
 %
 
$
42.5

Clearing and related expenses
22.7

 
12
 %
 
20.2

Introducing broker commissions
5.8

 
7
 %
 
5.4

Other non-interest expenses:

 
 
 

Communication and data services
4.6

 
31
 %
 
3.5

Occupancy and equipment rental
2.8

 
56
 %
 
1.8

Professional fees
2.7

 
29
 %
 
2.1

Depreciation and amortization
1.5

 
50
 %
 
1.0

Bad debts and impairments
0.1

 
(96
)%
 
2.4

Other expense
8.9

 
10
 %
 
8.1

 
20.6

 
9
 %
 
18.9

Total non-interest expenses
$
94.9

 
9
 %
 
$
87.0

Q1 2012 Non-Interest Expenses vs. Q1 2011 Non-Interest Expenses
Total Non-Interest Expenses: Non-interest expenses increased by 9% from $87.0 million in Q1 2011 to $94.9 million in Q1 2012, as a result of the factors described below.
Compensation and Benefits: Compensation and benefits expense increased by 8% from $42.5 million to $45.8 million, and represented 48% and 49% of total non-interest expenses in Q1 2012 and Q1 2011, respectively. Total compensation and benefits were 48% of operating revenues and 49% of adjusted operating revenues in Q1 2012, respectively, compared to 44% and 39% in Q1 2011, respectively. The variable portion of compensation and benefits decreased by 15% from $25.2 million in Q1 2011 to $21.5 million in Q1 2012, mainly as a result of the 14% decrease in adjusted operating revenues. The fixed portion of compensation and benefits increased 40% from $17.3 million in Q1 2011 to $24.3 million in Q1 2012, primarily as a result of the acquisition of certain assets of Hudson Capital Energy, Ambrian Commodities Limited and the MF Global LME metals team, as well as an expansion of investment banking and information technology development departments. Administrative and executive bonuses, including deferred compensation expenses (a portion of current year bonuses allocated to restricted stock awards is deferred and expensed ratably over three years, as vesting occurs), were $3.9 million in Q1 2012, compared with $3.2 million in Q1 2011. Stock option expense in Q1 2012 was $1.0 million, compared with $0.5 million in Q1 2011. The number of employees increased 12% from 904 at the end of fiscal 2011 to 1,014 at the end of fiscal Q1 2012, primarily as a result of the acquisitions of the MF Global LME metals team and Ambrian Commodities Limited. The number of employees at the end of

35

Table of Contents

Q1 2011was 773.
Clearing and Related Expenses: Clearing and related expenses increased by 12% from $20.2 million in Q1 2011 to $22.7 million in Q1 2012. This increase was primarily due to a 12% increase in exchange-traded customer volume, a 27% increase in OTC trading volumes in the C&RM segment within the Hanley Companies, as well as an increase in trading volume in our equities market-making business.
Introducing Broker Commissions: Introducing broker commissions increased by 7% from $5.4 million in Q1 2011 to $5.8 million in Q1 2012. This increase was primarily due to an increase in exchange-traded volumes from our introducing brokers, particularly in our CES segment as several new introducing broker relationships were opened following the bankruptcy filing of MF Global.
Other Non-Interest Expenses: Other non-interest expenses increased by 9% from $18.9 million in Q1 2011 to $20.6 million in Q1 2012. Occupancy and equipment rental increased $1.0 million, primarily as a result of the relocation of our London offices, in conjunction with the acquisition of Ambrian and the MF Global LME metals team. Depreciation and amortization increased $0.5 million, primarily due to the increase in depreciation of additional technology infrastructure placed into service since Q1 2011.
Other non-interest expenses include bad debt expense, net of recoveries, and impairments of $0.1 million and $2.4 million in Q1 2012 and Q1 2011, respectively. Q1 2011 included provision increases and direct write-offs of $4.2 million, offset by recoveries of $1.8 million. The provision increases in Q1 2011 primarily related to a customer to whom the Company had consigned gold in the C&RM segment, and a clearing customer deficit account in the CES segment. The recorded recoveries in Q1 2011 included $1.3 million following a settlement relating to a disputed trade that was "given-up" to FCStone, LLC during the quarter ended June 30, 2010 by another futures commission merchant for a customer that held an account with FCStone, LLC.
Additionally, the Company recorded $0.9 million and $1.4 million within ‘other expense' during Q1 2012 and Q1 2011, respectively, related to the revaluation of contingent liabilities related to estimated additional consideration to be paid for the acquisitions of the RMI Companies, the Hanley Companies and Hencorp Futures. The Company also accrued additional contingent consideration during Q1 2012 and Q1 2011 of $0.4 million and $1.6 million, respectively, related to the acquisitions of Downes & O'Neill and Globecot, Inc. Also, as a result of recent acquisitions made in the last twelve months and expansion of our offices in Australia, London, Singapore and South America, employee travel expenses included within 'other expense' increased $1.3 million in Q1 2012 as compared to Q1 2011.
Provision for Taxes: The effective income tax rate on a U.S. GAAP basis was 29% in Q1 2012, compared with 36% in Q1 2011. The effective income tax rate can vary from period to period depending on, among other factors, the geographic and business mix of our earnings. Our effective income tax rate during Q1 2012 was lower than the U.S. federal statutory rate and our prior year effective rate primarily due to a higher mix of earnings taxed at lower rates in foreign jurisdictions.
Variable vs. Fixed Expenses
 
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions)
2011
 
% of
Total
 
2010
 
% of
Total
VARIABLE vs. FIXED EXPENSES
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Variable compensation and benefits
$
21.5

 
23
%
 
$
25.2

 
29
%
Variable clearing and related expenses
21.9

 
23
%
 
19.6

 
23
%
Introducing broker commissions
5.8

 
6
%
 
5.4

 
6
%
Total variable expenses
49.2

 
52
%
 
50.2

 
58
%
Fixed expenses
45.6

 
48
%
 
34.4

 
40
%
Bad debts and impairments
0.1

 
%
 
2.4

 
2
%
Total non-variable expenses
45.7

 
48
%
 
36.8

 
42
%
Total non-interest expenses
$
94.9

 
100
%
 
$
87.0

 
100
%
The Company seeks to make its non-interest expenses variable to the greatest extent possible, and to keep its fixed costs as low as possible. The table above shows an analysis of the Company’s total non-interest expenses for the three months ended December 31, 2011 and 2010, respectively.
The Company's variable expenses include variable compensation paid to traders and risk management consultants, bonuses paid to operational employees, clearing and related expenses and introducing broker commissions. Commencing in the quarter

36

Table of Contents

ended June 30, 2011, the Company began to include accrued administrative and executive bonuses as variable expenses because they are either directly or indirectly determined by profitability of the Company. They were previously treated as fixed expenses. The amounts related to these accruals which had previously been reported as fixed expenses for the three months ended December 31, 2010 were $3.1 million.
As a percentage of total non-interest expenses, variable expenses were 52% in Q1 2012 compared to 58% in Q1 2011.

37

Table of Contents

Segment Information
The Company reports its operating segments based on services provided to customers. The following table shows information concerning the Company’s principal business segments.
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions)
2011
 
%
Change
 
2010
SEGMENT RESULTS
 
 
 
 
 
Commodity and Risk Management Services (C&RM)
 
 
 
 
 
Operating revenues
$
50.0

 
(8
)%
 
$
54.1

Gross marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)
 
n/m

 
12.1

Adjusted operating revenues (non-GAAP)
46.8

 
(29
)%
 
66.2

Interest expense
1.4

 
(30
)%
 
2.0

Variable direct expenses
18.8

 
(23
)%
 
24.4

Adjusted net contribution (non-GAAP)
26.6

 
(33
)%
 
39.8

Non-variable direct expenses
16.7

 
18
 %
 
14.1

Adjusted segment income (non-GAAP)
9.9

 
(61
)%
 
25.7

Foreign Exchange
 
 
 
 
 
Operating revenues
$
17.9

 
23
 %
 
$
14.5

Interest expense
0.2

 
(33
)%
 
0.3

Variable direct expenses
6.0

 
18
 %
 
5.1

Net contribution
11.7

 
29
 %
 
9.1

Non-variable direct expenses
2.7

 
23
 %
 
2.2

Segment income
9.0

 
30
 %
 
6.9

Securities
 
 
 
 
 
Operating revenues
$
9.9

 
25
 %
 
$
7.9

Interest expense
0.1

 
 %
 
0.1

Variable direct expenses
5.3

 
56
 %
 
3.4

Net contribution
4.5

 
2
 %
 
4.4

Non-variable direct expenses
3.4

 
6
 %
 
3.2

Segment income
1.1

 
(8
)%
 
1.2

Clearing & Execution Services (CES)
 
 
 
 
 
Operating revenues
$
17.7

 
4
 %
 
$
17.1

Interest expense
0.1

 
(75
)%
 
0.4

Variable direct expenses
15.1

 
12
 %
 
13.5

Net contribution
2.5

 
(22
)%
 
3.2

Non-variable direct expenses
2.6

 
136
 %
 
1.1

Segment (loss) income
(0.1
)
 
(105
)%
 
2.1

Other
 
 
 
 
 
Operating revenues
$
3.1

 
11
 %
 
$
2.8

Interest expense
0.3

 
(25
)%
 
0.4

Variable direct expenses
0.7

 
17
 %
 
0.6

Net contribution
2.1

 
17
 %
 
1.8

Non-variable direct expenses
1.3

 
30
 %
 
1.0

Segment income
0.8

 
 %
 
0.8

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

38

Table of Contents

(continued)
 
 
 
 
 
 
Three Months Ended December 31,
(in millions)
2011
 
%
Change
 
2010
Total Segment Results
 
 
 
 
 
Operating revenues
$
98.6

 
2
 %
 
$
96.4

Gross marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)
 
n/m

 
12.1

Adjusted operating revenues (non-GAAP)
95.4

 
(12
)%
 
108.5

Interest expense
2.1

 
(34
)%
 
3.2

Variable direct expenses
45.9

 
(2
)%
 
47.0

Adjusted net contribution (non-GAAP)
47.4

 
(19
)%
 
58.3

Non-variable direct expenses
26.7

 
24
 %
 
21.6

Adjusted net segment income (non-GAAP)
$
20.7

 
(44
)%
 
$
36.7

Reconciliation of C&RM net contribution from GAAP to adjusted, non-GAAP numbers:
Total C&RM net contribution
$
29.8

 
 
 
$
27.7

Gross marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)
 
 
 
12.1

C&RM adjusted net contribution (non-GAAP)
$
26.6

 
 
 
$
39.8

Reconciliation of C&RM segment income from GAAP to adjusted, non-GAAP numbers:
Total C&RM segment income
$
13.1

 
 
 
$
13.6

Gross marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)
 
 
 
12.1

C&RM adjusted segment income (non-GAAP)
$
9.9

 
 
 
$
25.7

Reconciliation of total operating revenues from GAAP to adjusted, non-GAAP numbers:
Total operating revenues
$
96.3

 
 
 
$
96.7

Gross marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)
 
 
 
12.1

Operating revenue not assigned to a segment
2.3

 
 
 
(0.3
)
Adjusted segment operating revenues (non-GAAP)
$
95.4

 
 
 
$
108.5

Reconciliation of net contribution from GAAP to adjusted, non-GAAP numbers:
Total net contribution
$
50.6

 
 
 
$
46.2

Gross marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)
 
 
 
12.1

Adjusted net contribution (non-GAAP)
$
47.4

 
 
 
$
58.3

Reconciliation of segment income from GAAP to adjusted, non-GAAP numbers:
Total net segment income
$
23.9

 
 
 
$
24.6

Gross marked-to-market adjustment (non-GAAP)
(3.2
)
 
 
 
12.1

Adjusted net segment income (non-GAAP)
$
20.7

 
 
 
$
36.7

Q1 2012 vs. Q1 2011 Segment Analysis
The net contribution of all the Company’s business segments decreased 9% to $50.6 million in Q1 2012 as compared to $46.2 million in Q1 2011. The adjusted net contribution of all the Company’s business segments decreased 19% to $47.4 million in Q1 2012 from $58.3 million in Q1 2011.
Net contribution is one of the key measures used by management to assess the performance of each segment and for decisions regarding the allocation of the Company’s resources. Net contribution is calculated as revenue less direct cost of sales, interest expense, clearing and related expenses, introducing broker commissions and variable compensation. Variable compensation paid to risk management consultants and traders generally represents a fixed percentage of an amount equal to revenues generated, and in some cases, revenues produced less clearing and related charges, base salaries and an overhead allocation.
Total segment income was $23.9 million in Q1 2012, compared with $24.6 million in Q1 2011. Total adjusted segment income was $20.7 million in Q1 2012, compared with $36.7 million in Q1 2011.
Segment income is calculated as net contribution less non-variable direct expenses of the segment. These non-variable direct

39

Table of Contents

expenses include trader base compensation and benefits, operational employee compensation and benefits, communication and data services, business development, professional fees, bad debt expense, trade errors and direct marketing expenses.
Commodity and Risk Management Services – Operating revenues under U.S. GAAP decreased from $54.1 million in Q1 2011 to $50.0 million in Q1 2012. Adjusted operating revenues decreased by 29% from $66.2 million in Q1 2011 to $46.8 million in Q1 2012. Operating revenues within this segment are primarily driven by the soft commodities, precious metals and base metals product lines.
Within the soft commodities product line, operating revenues decreased 28% from $56.2 million in Q1 2011 to $40.4 million in Q1 2012. Exchange-traded contract volumes decreased 19% and OTC contract volumes increased 27%, respectively over the prior year comparative period, which includes primarily agricultural and energy commodities. Low underlying volatility, relatively flat prices in the agricultural commodity markets and the dampening effect of both global economic conditions and the bankruptcy of MF Global were the main contributors to the decrease in exchange-traded volumes. This decline in exchange-traded volumes, as well as the lost revenues from clients introduced by RMI and Hencorp Futures to MF Global, drove the $4.8 million decrease in commission and clearing fee revenues. The majority of the clients previously introduced to MF Global have subsequently opened accounts directly with FCStone LLC. While the Company experienced growth in OTC contract volumes, lower underlying volatility and flat commodity prices in the current period resulted in significantly lower revenues from structured OTC products, particularly in the Brazil markets. This decline in structured OTC product revenue plus a proportionally higher percentage of lower margin exchange look alike OTC transactions resulted in an $11.7 million decrease in overall OTC revenues, primarily reflected within 'trading gains' in our condensed consolidated income statements. Interest income increased 46% over the prior year period as a 28% decrease in the average level of customer deposits to $858 million was more than offset by slightly higher interest rates. However, interest income remains a modest contributor to operating revenues at $1.5 million for Q1 2012, reflecting the continuation of historically low short-term interest rates.
Precious metals operating revenues decreased from $5.4 million in Q1 2011 to $4.1 million in Q1 2012. Precious metals adjusted operating revenues decreased from $5.4 million in Q1 2011 to $4.2 million in Q1 2012. These decreases were primarily a result of a tightening of spreads and a decrease in the number of ounces traded due to global economic conditions and resulting low market volatility.
Base metals operating revenues increased from a loss of $7.4 million in Q1 2011 to $5.5 million in Q1 2012. Base metals adjusted operating revenues decreased from $4.6 million in Q1 2011 to $2.2 million in Q1 2012. The decrease in adjusted operating revenue primarily resulted from a tightening of spreads which outweighed the effect of slightly higher volumes. This decrease was partially offset by the addition of the LME metals team from MF Global.
Segment income decreased from $13.6 million in Q1 2011 to $13.1 million in Q1 2012. Adjusted segment income decreased from $25.7 million to $9.9 million. Variable expenses expressed as a percentage of operating revenues decreased from 45% to 42%. Variable expenses expressed as a percentage of adjusted operating revenues increased from 37% to 40%, year-over-year. Segment income in Q1 2012 was primarily affected by the decrease in revenues, as discussed above, along with increases in non-variable compensation and benefits and communications and data services primarily resulting from the acquisition of the LME metals team. Segment income in Q1 2011 was affected by bad debt expense of $3.3 million related to a precious metals customer to whom the Company had consigned gold.
Foreign exchange trading – Operating revenues increased by 23% from $14.5 million in Q1 2011 to $17.9 million in Q1 2012. The operating revenues in the Company’s global payments product line increased from $8.2 million in Q1 2011 to $10.5 million in Q1 2012. This increase was driven by a 19% increase in the volume of trades in the Company’s global payments product line as the Company continued to benefit from an increase in financial institutions and other customers as well as our ability to offer an electronic transaction order system to our customers.
The customer speculative foreign exchange product line operating revenues increased from $1.5 million in Q1 2011 to $2.4 million in Q1 2012. Operating revenues from customer hedging activity increased 83% from the prior year period to $1.1 million, primarily driven by an increase of hedging by customers of our Brazil operations. The proprietary foreign exchange arbitrage desk, which arbitrages the cash versus the exchange traded markets, experienced a 7% decrease in operating revenues to $3.9 million.
Segment income increased 30% from $6.9 million in Q1 2011 to $9.0 million in Q1 2012. Variable expenses expressed as a percentage of operating revenues decreased from 35% to 32%, primarily as a result of the change in mix of revenues in the current period.
Securities – Operating revenues increased by 25% from $7.9 million in Q1 2011 to $9.9 million in Q1 2012. Operating revenues in the equities market-making business increased 38% from the prior year period to $7.7 million. Operating revenues in the debt capital markets business decreased from $2.3 million in Q1 2011 to $2.2 million in Q1 2012.
Operating revenues in the equities market-making business are largely dependent on overall volume and volatility, and with the increased levels of activity in the global equity markets, the retail customer business which drives the Company’s equity market

40

Table of Contents

making activities has increased. Equity market-making operating revenues include the trading profits earned by the Company before the related expense deduction for ADR conversion fees. These ADR fees are included within the condensed consolidated income statements as 'clearing and related expenses'.
Operating revenues in the debt capital markets business remained constrained during Q1 2012 as a result of global economic conditions. This business focuses on a wide range of services including the arranging and placing of debt issues, merger and acquisition advisory services and asset backed securitization as well as debt trading in the international markets.
Segment income decreased 8%, from $1.2 million in Q1 2011 to $1.1 million in Q1 2012, primarily as a result of compensation and benefits costs related to the expansion of the investment banking and advisory business. Variable expenses expressed as a percentage of operating revenues increased from 43% to 54%.
Clearing and execution services – Operating revenues in the segment were $17.7 million for Q1 2012 compared to $17.1 million for Q1 2011. Operating revenues are primarily generated from two sources: commission and clearing fee revenues from the execution and clearing of exchange-traded futures and options on futures contracts, and interest income derived from cash balances in our customers’ accounts.
Commission and clearing fee revenues increased 4% to $16.7 million in Q1 2012, as a result of a 17% increase in exchange-traded volumes. This increase was primarily driven by accounts transferred to the Company from MF Global during the quarter, including a large introducing broker whose clients generally have higher volumes and lower rates per contract business than the average client in this segment. Interest income declined 13% to $0.7 million in Q1 2012 as average customer deposits declined 35% to $550 million, as customer trading activity, excluding new accounts transferred in, declined due to industry conditions following the bankruptcy of MF Global.
Segment income decreased $2.2 million from $2.1 million in Q1 2011 to a loss of $0.1 million in Q1 2012. Segment income for Q1 2011 included a $1.3 million recovery of bad debt expense related to the settlement of the "given-up" trade dispute, partially offset by a $1.0 million bad debt provision related to a clearing customer deficit account. Variable expenses as a percentage of operating revenues increased from 79% to 85% and are primarily clearing and related expenses.
Other – The Company’s asset management revenues include management and performance fees, commissions and other revenues received by the Company for management of third party assets and investment gains or losses on the Company’s investments in funds or proprietary accounts managed either by the Company’s investment managers or by independent investment managers. In addition, this segment’s revenues include interest income and fees earned in relation to commodity financing transactions as well as a limited amount of principal physical commodity sales transactions related to inputs to the renewable fuels and feed ingredient industries.
Operating revenues in the segment were $3.1 million for Q1 2012 compared to $2.8 million for Q1 2011. Assets under management as of December 31, 2011 were $369 million compared with $356 million as of December 31, 2010. Operating revenues in the asset management product line decreased $0.6 million to $1.2 million in Q1 2012. Operating revenues in the grain financing and physical commodity origination product line increased 90% to $1.9 million in Q1 2012, driven by the establishment of a committed credit facility to finance commodities, which facilitated additional business as well as the expansion of our physical inputs business into the feed ingredient industry and increased demand for fats and oils origination from commercial customers. Segment income was $0.8 million in Q1 2012 consistent with Q1 2011.

Liquidity, Financial Condition and Capital Resources
Overview
Liquidity is defined as our ability to generate sufficient amounts of cash to meet all of our cash needs. Liquidity is of critical importance to us and imperative to maintain our operations on a daily basis. In FCStone, LLC, the Company’s FCM subsidiary, we have responsibilities to meet margin calls at all exchanges on a daily basis and intra-day basis, if necessary. Our customers are required to make any required margin deposits the next business day, and we require our largest customers to make intra-day margin payments during periods of significant price movement. Margin required to be posted to the exchanges is a function of the net open positions of our customers and the required margin per contract.
In addition, in our commodities trading, C&RM OTC, securities and foreign exchange trading activities, we may be called upon to meet margin calls with our various trading counterparties based upon the underlying open transactions we have in place with those counterparties.
The Company continuously reviews its overall credit and capital needs to ensure that its capital base, both stockholders’ equity and debt, as well as available credit facilities can appropriately support the anticipated financing needs of its operating subsidiaries.
As of December 31, 2011, the Company had total equity capital of $297.1 million and outstanding bank loans of $115.9

41

Table of Contents

million.
A substantial portion of the Company’s assets are liquid. As of December 31, 2011, approximately 94% of the Company’s assets consisted of cash; deposits and receivables from exchange-clearing organizations, broker-dealers, clearing organizations and counterparties; customer receivables, marketable financial instruments and investments, and physical commodities inventory, at cost. All assets that are not customer and counterparty deposits are financed by the Company’s equity capital, bank loans, short-term borrowings from financial instruments sold, not yet purchased, and other payables.
Customer and Counterparty Credit and Liquidity Risk
Our operations expose us to credit risk of default of our customers and counterparties. The risk includes liquidity risk to the extent our customers or counterparties are unable to make timely payment of margin or other credit support. These risks expose us indirectly to the financing and liquidity risks of our customers and counterparties, including the risks that our customers and counterparties may not be able to finance their operations. Throughout the commodities and securities industries, continued volatility in commodity prices has required increased lines of credit, and placed a strain on working capital debt facilities. In many cases, our customers have been forced to increase leverage to unprecedented levels in order for them to continue to carry inventory and properly execute hedging strategies. Continuing volatility in the financial markets has tightened credit further.
As a clearing broker, we act on behalf of our customers for all trades consummated on exchanges. We must pay initial and variation margin to the exchanges, on a net basis, before we receive the required payments from our customers. Accordingly, we are responsible for our customers’ obligations with respect to these transactions, which exposes us to significant credit risk. Our customers are required to make any required margin deposits the next business day, and we require our largest customers to make intra-day margin payments during periods of significant price movement. Our clients are required to maintain initial margin requirements at the level set by the respective exchanges, but we have the ability to increase the margin requirements for customers based on their open positions, trading activity, or market conditions.
With OTC derivative transactions, we act as a principal, which exposes us to the credit risk of both our customers and the counterparties with which we offset our customer positions. As with exchange-traded transactions, our OTC transactions require that we meet initial and variation margin payments on behalf of our customers before we receive the required payment from our customers. OTC customers are required to post sufficient collateral to meet margin requirements based on Value-at-Risk models as well as variation margin requirement based on the price movement of the commodity or security in which they transact. Our customers are required to make any required margin deposits the next business day, and we may require our largest clients to make intra-day margin payments during periods of significant price movement. We have the ability to increase the margin requirements for customers based on their open positions, trading activity, or market conditions. On a limited basis, we provide credit thresholds to certain customers, based on internal evaluations and monitoring of customer creditworthiness.
In addition, with OTC transactions, we are at risk that a counterparty will fail to meet its obligations when due. We would then be exposed to the risk that the settlement of a transaction which is due a customer will not be collected from the respective counterparty with which the transaction was offset. We continuously monitor the credit quality of our respective counterparties and mark our positions held with each counterparty to market on a daily basis.
During the three months ended December 31, 2011, the Company recorded bad debt expense, net of recoveries, of $0.1 million. During the three months ended December 31, 2010, the Company recorded bad debt expense, net of recoveries, of $2.4 million, including provision increases and direct write-offs of $4.2 million, offset by recoveries of $1.8 million. The provision increases during the quarter primarily related to a customer to whom the Company had consigned gold, in the C&RM segment, and a clearing customer deficit account in the CES segment. The recorded recoveries during the quarter included $1.3 million following a settlement relating to a disputed trade that was "given-up" to FCStone, LLC during the quarter ended June 30, 2010 by another futures commission merchant for a customer that held an account with FCStone, LLC.
Primary Sources and Uses of Cash
The Company’s assets and liabilities may vary significantly from period to period due to changing customer requirements, economic and market conditions and the growth of the Company. The Company’s total assets as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, were $2,414.8 million and $2,635.7 million, respectively. The Company’s operating activities generate or utilize cash as a result of net income or loss earned or incurred during each period and fluctuations in its assets and liabilities. The most significant fluctuations arise from changes in the level of customer activity, commodities prices and changes in the balances of financial instruments and commodities inventory. FCStone, LLC, our FCM subsidiary, occasionally uses its margin line credit facilities, on a short-term basis, to meet intraday settlements with the commodity exchanges prior to collecting margin funds from our customers.
The majority of the assets of FCStone, LLC are restricted from being transferred to its parent or other affiliates due to specific regulatory requirements. These restrictions have no impact on the ability of the Company to meet its cash obligations, and no impact is expected in the future.

42

Table of Contents

We have liquidity and funding policies and processes in place that are intended to maintain significant flexibility to address both company-specific and industry liquidity needs. The majority of our excess funds are held with high quality institutions, under highly-liquid reverse repurchase agreements, with a maturity of typically three days or less, U.S. government obligations and AA-rated money market investments. The Company does not hold any direct investments in the general obligations of a sovereign nation ("sovereign debt").
As of December 31, 2011, $98.6 million of cash, cash equivalent and available-for-sale investment securities was held by our foreign subsidiaries. If these funds are needed for operations in the United States, the Company would be required to accrue and pay U.S. taxes to repatriate these funds, up to the amount of undistributed foreign earnings of $97.0 million. However, our intent is to indefinitely reinvest these funds outside of the U.S., and our current plans do not demonstrate a need to repatriate them to fund our U.S. operations. 
As of December 31, 2011, approximately $6.9 million of the Company’s financial instruments owned and $13.3 million of financial instruments sold, not yet purchased, are exchangeable foreign equities and ADRs.
As of December 31, 2011, the Company had four committed bank credit facilities and an uncommitted forward contract for commodities agreement, totaling $375 million and $50 million, respectively, of which $115.9 million was outstanding. The credit facilities include:
A one-year revolving syndicated loan facility, committed until September 20, 2012, under which the Company’s subsidiary, INTL Commodities, Inc. ("INTL Commodities"), is entitled to borrow up to $140 million, subject to certain conditions. The loan proceeds are used to finance the activities of INTL Commodities.
A three-year syndicated loan facility, committed until October 1, 2013, under which INTL FCStone Inc. is entitled to borrow up to $85 million, subject to certain conditions. The loan proceeds are used to finance working capital needs of the Company and certain subsidiaries.
A one-year unsecured syndicated line of credit, committed until June 18, 2012, under which FCStone, LLC is entitled to borrow up to $75 million. This line of credit is intended to provide short-term funding of margin to commodity exchanges as necessary.
A one-year syndicated borrowing facility, committed until October 9, 2012, under which the Company’s subsidiary, FCStone Financial, Inc., is entitled to borrow up to $75 million, subject to certain conditions. The loan proceeds are used to finance traditional commodity financing arrangements or the purchase of eligible commodities from sellers who have agreed to sell and later repurchase such commodities from FCStone Financial, Inc.
An uncommitted forward contract for commodities agreement established on June 23, 2011, under which the Company’s subsidiary, FCStone Merchant Services, LLC ("FCStone Merchant Services"), is entitled to borrow up to $50 million to fund forward contracts on specified commodities. The forward contract commodity transactions include a simultaneous agreement from the lender to purchase specified commodities from FCStone Merchant Services and to sell the same specified commodities to FCStone Merchant Services on a forward sale basis.
The Company’s credit agreements contain certain financial covenants relating to financial measures on a consolidated basis, as well as on a certain stand-alone subsidiary basis, including minimum net worth, minimum working capital, minimum regulatory capital, minimum net unencumbered liquid assets, minimum equity, minimum interest coverage and leverage ratios and maximum net loss. Failure to comply with any such covenants could result in the debt becoming payable on demand. As of December 31, 2011, the Company and its subsidiaries were in compliance with all of its financial covenants under the outstanding facilities.
In November, 2011, the Company arranged with the administrator of MF Global's UK operations to hire more than 50 professional staff from MF Global's metals trading business based in London. The Company anticipates that a substantial number of the customers of this metals trading business will elect to become customers of the Company. The Company expects to allocate equity capital to integrate these brokers and their customers into the Company's operations, through a combination of increased regulatory capital to support the accounts of these customers and increased compensation and related personnel costs for the brokers. The amount of the required capital will primarily depend upon the number and balances of the new accounts.
The Company has contingent liabilities relating to several acquisitions it has completed since February 2008. See Note 11 to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information on these contingent liabilities. Under the terms of the purchase agreements, the Company has obligations to pay additional consideration if specific conditions and earnings targets are met. In accordance with the Business Combinations Topic of the ASC, the fair value of the additional consideration is recognized as a contingent liability as of the acquisition date. The acquisition date fair value of additional consideration is remeasured to its fair value each reporting period, with changes in fair value recorded in current earnings. The contingent liabilities for these estimated additional purchase price considerations total $22.9 million as of December 31, 2011, and are included within ‘accounts payable and other accrued liabilities’ in the condensed consolidated balance sheets. The Company

43

Table of Contents

estimates cash payments during the remainder of fiscal 2012, related to these contingent liabilities, to be $9.3 million.
The Company contributed $0.4 million to its defined benefit pension plans during the three months ended December 31, 2011, and expects to contribute $1.6 million to the plans during fiscal 2012, which represents the minimum funding requirement.
Other Capital Considerations
Our FCM subsidiary, FCStone, LLC, is subject to various regulations and capital adequacy requirements. Pursuant to the rules, regulations, and requirements of the CFTC and other self-regulatory organizations, FCStone, LLC is required to maintain certain minimum net capital as defined in such rules, regulations, and requirements. Net capital will fluctuate on a daily basis.
INTL Trading, one of our broker-dealer subsidiaries, is subject to the net capital requirements of the SEC relating to liquidity and net capital levels. The Company’s ability to receive distributions from INTL Trading is restricted by regulations of the SEC. The Company’s right to receive distributions from its subsidiaries is also subject to the rights of the subsidiaries’ creditors, including customers of INTL Trading.
FCStone Australia Pty, Ltd ("FCStone Australia") is regulated by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission and is subject to a surplus liquid funds requirement. FCStone Australia is also regulated by the New Zealand Clearing Limited, and is subject to a capital adequacy requirement.
FCC Investments, Inc., another broker-dealer subsidiary, is subject to the net capital requirements of the SEC relating to liquidity and net capital levels.
Risk Management Incorporated and Hencorp Futures are regulated by the CFTC and the National Futures Association and are both subject to a minimum capital requirement.
Certain other non-U.S. subsidiaries of the Company are also subject to capital adequacy requirements promulgated by authorities of the countries in which they operate.
The subsidiaries of the Company are in compliance with all of their capital regulatory requirements as of December 31, 2011. Additional information on these net capital and minimum net capital requirements can be found within Note 12 of the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
Cash Flows
The Company’s cash and cash equivalents increased from $220.6 million as of September 30, 2011 to $288.3 million as of December 31, 2011, a net increase of $67.7 million. Net cash of $33.1 million was provided by operating activities, $3.8 million was used in investing activities and net cash of $38.5 million was provided by financing activities, of which $38.5 million was borrowed from lines of credit and increased the amounts payable to lenders under loans and overdrafts. Fluctuations in exchange rates had no material effect on the Company’s cash and cash equivalents.
The Company is continuously evaluating opportunities to expand its business. For the year-to-date period through December 31, 2011, the Company paid $1.0 million, included in investing activities, for acquisitions, and $0.3 million in payments, included in financing activities, relating to earn-outs on acquisitions. See Note 14 to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information on acquisitions. Investing activities include $3.2 million in capital expenditures for property, plant and equipment in Q1 2012, compared to $1.3 million in Q1 2011. Continuing expansion of the Company’s activities will require funding and will have an effect on liquidity.
Apart from what has been disclosed above, there are no known trends, events or uncertainties that have had or are likely to have a material impact on the liquidity, financial condition and capital resources of the Company.
Commitments
Information about the Company’s commitments and contingent liabilities is contained in Note 11 of the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.

Off Balance Sheet Arrangements
The Company is party to certain financial instruments with off-balance sheet risk in the normal course of business as a registered securities broker-dealer and futures commission merchant and from its market-making and proprietary trading in the foreign exchange and commodities trading business. As part of these activities, the Company carries short positions. For example, it sells financial instruments that it does not own, borrows the financial instruments to make good delivery, and therefore is obliged to purchase such financial instruments at a future date in order to return the borrowed financial instruments. The Company has recorded these obligations in the condensed consolidated financial statements as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, at fair value of the related financial instruments, totaling $226.6 million and $390.9 million, respectively.

44

Table of Contents

These positions are held to offset the risks related to financial assets owned, and reported in the Company’s condensed consolidated balance sheets within ‘financial instruments owned, at fair value’, and ‘physical commodities inventory'. The Company will incur losses if the fair value of the financial instruments sold, not yet purchased, increases subsequent to December 31, 2011, which might be partially or wholly offset by gains in the value of assets held as of December 31, 2011. The total of $226.6 million and $390.9 million includes a net liability of $62.4 million and $122.9 million for derivatives, based on their fair value as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, respectively.
In the Company’s foreign exchange and commodities trading business segments, the Company will hold options and futures contracts resulting from market-making and proprietary trading activities in the Company’s foreign exchange/commodities trading business segment. The Company assists its customers in its commodities trading business to protect the value of their future production (precious or base metals) by selling them put options on an OTC basis. The Company also provides its commodities trading business customers with sophisticated option products, including combinations of buying and selling puts and calls. The Company mitigates its risk by effecting offsetting options with market counterparties or through the purchase or sale of exchange-traded commodities futures. The risk mitigation of offsetting options is not within the documented hedging designation requirements of the Derivatives and Hedging Topic of the ASC.
In the Company's C&RM segment, when transacting OTC and foreign exchange contracts with our customers, our OTC and foreign exchange trade desks will generally offset the customer's transaction simultaneously with one of our trading counterparties or will offset that transaction with a similar but not identical position on the exchange. These unmatched transactions are intended to be short-term in nature and are conducted to facilitate the most effective transaction for our customer.
Derivative contracts are traded along with cash transactions because of the integrated nature of the markets for such products. The Company manages the risks associated with derivatives on an aggregate basis along with the risks associated with its proprietary trading and market-making activities in cash instruments as part of its firm-wide risk management policies.
The Company is a member of various commodity exchanges and clearing organizations. Under the standard membership agreement, all members are required to guarantee the performance of other members and, accordingly, in the event another member is unable to satisfy its obligations to the exchange, may be required to fund a portion of the shortfall. Our liability under these arrangements is not quantifiable and could exceed the cash and securities we have posted as collateral at the exchanges. However, management believes that the potential for us to be required to make payments under these arrangements is remote. Accordingly, no contingent liability for these arrangements has been recorded in the condensed consolidated balance sheets as of December 31, 2011 and September 30, 2011, respectively.
Critical Accounting Policies
The preparation of condensed consolidated financial statements in conformity with U.S. GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, disclosure of contingent liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reported period. The accounting estimates and assumptions discussed in this section are those that the Company considers the most critical to the financial statements. The Company believes these estimates and assumptions can involve a high degree of judgment and complexity. Due to their nature, estimates involve judgment based upon available information. Actual results or amounts could differ from estimates and the difference could have a material impact on the financial statements. Therefore, understanding these policies is important in understanding the reported and potential future results of operations and the financial position of the Company.
Valuation of Financial Instruments and Foreign Currencies. Substantially all financial instruments are reflected in the condensed consolidated financial statements at fair value or amounts that approximate fair value. These financial instruments include: cash and cash equivalents; cash, securities and other assets segregated under federal and other regulations; financial instruments purchased under agreements to resell; deposits with clearing organizations; financial instruments owned; and financial instruments sold but not yet purchased. Unrealized gains and losses related to these financial instruments, which are not customer owned positions, are reflected in earnings. Where available, we use prices from independent sources such as listed market prices, or broker or dealer price quotations. Fair values for certain derivative contracts are derived from pricing models that consider current market and contractual prices for the underlying financial instruments or commodities, as well as time value and yield curve or volatility factors underlying the positions. In some cases, even though the value of a security is derived from an independent market price or broker or dealer quote, certain assumptions may be required to determine the fair value. However, these assumptions may be incorrect and the actual value realized upon disposition could be different from the current carrying value. The value of foreign currencies, including foreign currencies sold, not yet purchased, are converted into its U.S. dollar equivalents at the foreign exchange rates in effect at the close of business at the end of the accounting period. For foreign currency transactions completed during each reporting period, the foreign exchange rate in effect at the time of the transaction is used.
The application of the valuation process for financial instruments and foreign currencies is critical because these items

45

Table of Contents

represent a significant portion of our total assets. Valuations for substantially all of the financial instruments held are available from independent publishers of market information. The valuation process may involve estimates and judgments in the case of certain financial instruments with limited liquidity and OTC derivatives. Given the wide availability of pricing information, the high degree of liquidity of the majority of our assets, and the relatively short periods for which they are typically held in inventory, there is insignificant sensitivity to changes in estimates and insignificant risk of changes in estimates having a material effect on our financial statements. The basis for estimating the valuation of any financial instruments has not undergone any change.
Revenue Recognition. A significant portion of our revenues are derived principally from realized and unrealized trading income in securities, derivative instruments, commodities and foreign currencies purchased or sold for our account. Realized and unrealized trading income is recorded on a trade date basis. Securities owned and securities sold, not yet purchased and foreign currencies sold, not yet purchased, are stated at fair value with related changes in unrealized appreciation or depreciation reflected within ‘trading gains’ in the condensed consolidated income statements. Fee and interest income are recorded on the accrual basis and dividend income is recognized on the ex-dividend date.
Revenue on commodities that are purchased for physical delivery to customers and that are not readily convertible into cash is recognized at the point in time when the commodity has been shipped, title and risk of loss has been transferred to the customer, and the following conditions have been met: persuasive evidence of an arrangement exists, the price is fixed and determinable, and collectability of the resulting receivable is reasonably assured.
The critical aspect of revenue recognition is recording all known transactions as of the trade date of each transaction for the financial period. We have developed systems for each of our businesses to capture all known transactions. Recording all known transactions involves reviewing trades that occur after the financial period that relate to the financial period. The accuracy of capturing this information is dependent upon the completeness and accuracy of data capture of the operations systems and our clearing firms.
Physical Commodities Inventory. Physical commodities inventory is stated at the lower of cost or fair value, determined using the weighted-average price method. We generally mitigate the price risk associated with physical commodities held in inventory through the use of derivatives. We do not elect hedge accounting under U.S. GAAP in accounting for this price mitigation. Any unrealized gains in physical commodities inventory are not recognized under U.S. GAAP, but unrealized gains and losses in related derivative positions are recognized under U.S. GAAP. As a result, our reported commodities trading earnings are subject to volatility.
Allowance for Doubtful Accounts. We maintain allowances for doubtful accounts for trade receivables and deficits on customer commodity accounts. The allowances for doubtful accounts are significant estimates, and are maintained at a level considered appropriate by our management based on reviews of historical agings of customer deficit accounts, receivables from customers, availability of capital and liquidity for specific accounts, historical trends of charge-offs and recoveries, and current and projected economic, market and other conditions. If we become aware of a customer’s inability to meet its financial obligations, we establish a specific allowance for a potential bad debt expense to reduce the net recognized receivable to the amount we reasonably believe will be collected. Additionally, different assumptions, changes in economic circumstances or the deterioration of the financial condition of our customers could result in additional provisions to the allowances for doubtful accounts and increased bad debt expense. The valuation of the allowances for doubtful accounts is performed on a quarterly basis.
Valuation of Goodwill and Intangible Assets. We record the excess of purchase price over the fair value of the tangible and identifiable intangible assets acquired as goodwill. Goodwill is tested for impairment annually, as well as when an event or change in circumstance indicates an impairment may have occurred. Goodwill is tested for impairment by comparing the fair value of our individual reporting units to their carrying amount to determine if there is a potential goodwill impairment. If the fair value of the reporting unit is less than its carrying value, an impairment loss is recorded to the extent that the implied fair value of the goodwill of the reporting unit is less than its carrying value.
For purposes of performing the impairment test for goodwill, our reporting units are primarily units that are one level below our reportable operating segments as defined within the Segment Reporting Topic of the ASC.  We estimate the fair value of these reporting units using a discounted cash flow analysis. Determining the fair value of a reporting unit is a matter of judgment and often involves the use of significant estimates and assumptions. Our estimate of the fair value of each of the reporting units were in excess of their respective carrying values at the time of their annual goodwill impairment tests for 2011.
Intangible assets are reviewed for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying value may not be recoverable. In reviewing for impairment, the carrying value of such assets is compared to the estimated undiscounted future cash flows expected from the use of the assets and their eventual disposition. If such cash flows are not sufficient to support the asset's recorded value, an impairment charge is recognized to reduce the carrying value of the intangible asset to its estimated fair value. The determination of future cash flows as well as the estimated fair value of long-lived assets involves significant estimates on the part of management. If there is a material change in economic conditions or

46

Table of Contents

other circumstances influencing the estimate of future cash flows or fair value, we could be required to recognize impairment charges in the future. We evaluate the remaining useful lives of our intangible assets on a periodic basis to determine whether events and circumstances warrant a revision to the remaining estimated amortization period.
Loss Contingencies. We are currently involved in various claims and legal proceedings. Quarterly, we review the status of each significant matter and assesses its potential financial exposure. If the potential loss from any claim or legal proceeding is considered probable and the amount can be reasonably estimated, we accrue a liability for the estimated loss. Significant judgment is required in both the determination of probability and the determination as to whether an exposure is reasonably estimable. Because of uncertainties related to these matters, accruals are based only on the best information available at the time. As additional information becomes available we reassess the potential liability related to our pending claims and litigation and may revise our estimates.
Income Taxes. We are subject to income taxes in the U.S. and numerous foreign jurisdictions. Significant judgment is required in determining the consolidated provision for income taxes and in evaluating tax positions, including evaluating uncertainties. As a result, the company recognizes tax liabilities based on estimates of whether additional taxes and interest will be due. These tax liabilities are recognized when despite our belief that our tax return positions are supportable, we believe that certain positions may not be fully sustained upon review by the relevant tax authorities.
Income taxes are accounted for under the asset and liability method. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized for the estimated future tax consequences attributable to differences between the financial statement carrying amounts of existing assets and liabilities and their respective tax bases. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using enacted tax rates in effect for the year in which those temporary differences are expected to be recovered or settled. The effect on deferred tax assets and liabilities of a change in tax rates is recognized in income in the period that includes the enactment date. Significant judgment is also required in determining any valuation allowance recorded against deferred tax assets. In assessing the need for a valuation allowance, management considers all available evidence for each jurisdiction including past operating results, estimates of future taxable income, and the feasibility of ongoing tax planning strategies. In the event that we changes our determination as to the amount of deferred tax assets that can be realized, we will adjust our valuation allowance with a corresponding impact to income tax expense in the period in which such determination is made.
We believe that our accruals for tax liabilities are adequate for all open audit years based on our assessment of many factors including past experience and interpretations of tax law. This assessment relies on estimates and assumptions and may involve series of complex judgments about future events. To the extent that new information becomes available which causes us to change our judgment regarding the adequacy of existing tax liabilities, such changes to tax liabilities will impact income tax expense in the period in which such determination is made. The consolidated provision for income taxes will change period to period based on non-recurring events, such as the settlement of income tax audits and changes in tax law, as well as recurring factors including the geographic mix of income before taxes, state and local taxes, and the effects of various global income tax strategies.
Effects of Inflation
Because the Company’s assets are, to a large extent, liquid in nature, they are not significantly affected by inflation. Increases in the Company’s expenses, such as compensation and benefits, clearing and related expenses, occupancy and equipment rental, due to inflation, may not be readily recoverable from increasing the prices of services offered by the Company. In addition, to the extent that inflation results in rising interest rates or has other adverse effects on the financial markets and on the value of the financial instruments held in inventory, it may adversely affect the Company’s financial position and results of operations.
Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk
See also Note 5 to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements, ‘Financial Instruments with Off-Balance Sheet Risk and Concentrations of Credit Risk’.
Market Risk
The Company conducts its market-making and trading activities predominantly as a principal, which subjects its capital to significant risks. These risks include, but are not limited to, absolute and relative price movements, price volatility and changes in liquidity, over which the Company has virtually no control. The Company’s exposure to market risk varies in accordance with the volume of client-driven market-making transactions, the size of the proprietary positions and the volatility of the financial instruments traded.
The Company seeks to mitigate exposure to market risk by utilizing a variety of qualitative and quantitative techniques:
Diversification of business activities and instruments;
Limitations on positions;

47

Table of Contents

Allocation of capital and limits based on estimated weighted risks; and
Daily monitoring of positions and mark-to-market profitability.
The Company utilizes derivative products in a trading capacity as a dealer to satisfy client needs and mitigate risk. The Company manages risks from both derivatives and non-derivative cash instruments on a consolidated basis. The risks of derivatives should not be viewed in isolation, but in aggregate with the Company’s other trading activities.
Management believes that the volatility of revenues is a key indicator of the effectiveness of its risk management techniques. The graph below summarizes volatility of the Company’s daily revenue, determined on a marked-to-market basis, during the three months ended December 31, 2011.
In the Company’s securities market-making and trading activities, the Company maintains inventories of equity and debt securities. In the Company’s commodities market-making and trading activities, the Company’s positions include physical inventories, forwards, futures and options. The Company’s commodity trading activities are managed as one consolidated book for each commodity encompassing both cash positions and derivative instruments. The Company monitors the aggregate position for each commodity in equivalent physical ounces or metric tons.
Interest Rate Risk
In the ordinary course of our operations, we have interest rate risk from the possibility that changes in interest rates will affect the values of financial instruments and impact interest income earned. We generate interest income from the positive spread earned on customer deposits. We typically invest in U.S. Treasury bills and obligations issued by government sponsored entities, reverse repurchase agreements involving U.S. Treasury bills and government obligations or AA rated money market funds. We have an investment policy which establishes acceptable standards of credit quality and limits the amount of funds that can be invested within a particular fund and institution.
We continue to employ an interest rate risk management strategy, implemented in April 2010, that uses derivative financial instruments in the form of interest rate swaps to manage a portion of our aggregate interest rate position. Our objective is to

48

Table of Contents

invest the majority of customer segregated deposits in high quality, short-term investments and swap the resulting variable interest earnings into the medium-term interest stream, by using a strip of interest rate swaps that mature every quarter, and enable us to achieve the two year moving average of the two year swap rate. In Q1 2012, operating revenues include realized gains of $1.0 million and unrealized losses of $2.0 million on interest rate swap derivative contracts used to manage a portion of our aggregate interest rate position. In Q1 2011, operating revenues included realized gains of $0.7 million and unrealized losses of $1.1 million, respectively, on interest rate swap derivative contracts. These interest rate swaps are not designated for hedge accounting treatment, and changes in the marked-to-market valuations of these interest rate swaps, which are volatile and can fluctuate from period to period, are recorded in earnings on a quarterly basis. As of December 31, 2011, approximately $965 million in notional principal of interest rate swaps were outstanding with a weighted-average life of 12 months.
We manage interest expense using floating rate debt and periodically through interest rate swap transactions. The debt instruments are carried at their unpaid principal balance which approximates fair value. All of the Company's outstanding debt as of December 31, 2011, has a variable interest rate.
Item 4. Controls and Procedures
In connection with the filing of this Form 10-Q, the Company's management, including the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, evaluated the effectiveness of the Company's disclosure controls and procedures as of December 31, 2011. The Company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer have concluded that the Company's disclosure controls and procedures were effective as of December 31, 2011.
There are limitations inherent in any internal control, such as the possibility of human error and the circumvention or overriding of controls. A control system, no matter how well conceived and operated, can provide only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the objectives of the control system are met. As a result, there can be no assurance that a control system will succeed in preventing all possible instances of error and fraud. The Company's disclosure controls and procedures are designed to provide reasonable assurance of achieving their objectives, and the conclusions of the Company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer are made at the "reasonable assurance" level.
There were no changes in the Company’s internal controls over financial reporting during the quarter ended December 31, 2011 that materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

49

Table of Contents

PART II
Item 1. Legal Proceedings
Certain conditions may exist as of the date that the financial statements are issued, which may result in a loss to the Company but which will only be resolved when one or more future events occur or fail to occur. We assess such contingent liabilities, and such assessment inherently involves an exercise of judgment. In assessing loss contingencies related to legal proceedings that are pending against the Company or unasserted claims that may result in such proceedings, our legal counsel evaluates the perceived merits of any legal proceedings or unasserted claims as well as the perceived merits of the amount of relief sought or expected to be sought therein.
If the assessment of a contingency indicates that it is probable that a material loss had been incurred at the date of the financial statements and the amount of the liability can be estimated, then the estimated liability would be accrued in the Company's financial statements. If the assessment indicates that a potentially material loss contingency is not probable, but is reasonably possible, or is probable but cannot be estimated, then the nature of the contingent liability, together with an estimate of the range of possible loss if determinable and material, would be disclosed. Neither accrual nor disclosure is required for loss contingencies that are deemed remote. We accrue legal fees related to contingent liabilities as they are incurred.
In addition to the matters discussed below, from time to time and in the ordinary course of business, we are involved in various legal actions and proceedings, including tort claims, contractual disputes, employment matters, workers' compensation claims and collections. We carry insurance that provides protection against certain types of claims, up to the policy limits of our insurance. As of December 31, 2011, the condensed consolidated balance sheet includes loss contingency accruals, recorded in fiscal 2011, which are not material. In the opinion of management, possible exposure in these matters in excess of the amounts accrued, is not material to the Company's earnings, financial position, or liquidity.
The following is a summary of significant legal matters involving the Company.
Securities Litigation
FCStone and certain officers of FCStone were named as defendants in an action filed in the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri on July 15, 2008. A consolidated amended complaint ("CAC") was subsequently filed on September 25, 2009. As alleged in the CAC, the action purports to be brought as a class action on behalf of purchasers of FCStone common stock between November 15, 2007 and February 24, 2009. The CAC seeks to hold defendants liable under Section 10(b) and Section 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and concerns disclosures included in FCStone's fiscal year 2008 public filings. Specifically, the CAC relates to FCStone's public disclosures regarding an interest rate hedge, a bad debt expense arising from unprecedented events in the cotton trading market, and certain disclosures beginning on November 3, 2008 related to losses it expected to incur arising primarily from a customer energy trading account. FCStone and the named officers moved to dismiss the action. Although the court denied that motion on November 16, 2010, it limited the action to the public disclosures made on November 3, 2008 and November 4, 2008 related to the energy trading account. The parties have completed briefing of lead plaintiffs' motion to certify a class on behalf of purchasers of FCStone stock between April 14, 2008 and February 24, 2009, and that motion is pending the court's ruling. Discovery has commenced and is continuing. The Company and the FCStone defendants continue to believe the action is meritless, and intend to defend the action vigorously.
In August 2008, a shareholder derivative action was filed against FCStone and certain directors of FCStone in the Circuit Court of Platte County, Missouri, alleging breaches of fiduciary duties, waste of corporate assets and unjust enrichment. An amended complaint was subsequently filed in May, 2009 to add claims based upon the losses sustained by FCStone arising out of a customer's energy trading account. On July 7, 2009, the same plaintiff filed a motion for leave to amend the existing case to add a purported class action claim on behalf of the holders of FCStone common stock.
On July 8, 2009, a purported shareholder class action complaint was filed against FCStone and its directors, as well as the Company in the Circuit Court of Clay County, Missouri. The complaint alleged that FCStone and its directors breached their fiduciary duties by failing to maximize stockholder value in connection with the contemplated acquisition of FCStone by the Company. This complaint was subsequently consolidated with the complaint filed in the Circuit Court of Platte County, Missouri. The plaintiffs subsequently filed an amended consolidated complaint which does not assert any claims against the Company. This complaint purports to be filed derivatively on FCStone and the Company's behalf and against certain of FCStone's current and former directors and officers and directly against the same individuals. The Company, FCStone, and the defendants filed motions to dismiss on multiple grounds. That motion is fully briefed and pending decision.
The staff of the Fort Worth Regional Office of the SEC is conducting a formal investigation of FCStone's disclosures and accounting for losses associated with the energy trading account, which occurred prior to the Company's acquisition of FCStone on September 30, 2009. During the quarters ended March 31, 2011 and June 30, 2011, certain employees of the Company testified before the SEC in connection with this investigation. The Company is cooperating fully with the SEC staff in its investigation, but cannot predict the scope, duration or outcome of the matter, including monetary penalties or fines, if

50

Table of Contents

any.
The Company has also received a request from the CFTC for certain information relating to the energy trading account matter. The Company is cooperating fully with the staff of the CFTC, and cannot predict the scope, duration or outcome of the CFTC's review, including monetary penalties or fines, if any.
In February 2011, the Company's Board of Directors formed a special committee to conduct an independent investigation of FCStone's disclosures and accounting for losses associated with the energy trading account. The Board of Directors determined that it would be appropriate and consistent with its governance and oversight responsibilities to form the special committee to investigate these matters as they pertain to the private litigation and the SEC investigation described above. The special committee, which is comprised solely of independent directors of the Company who were not formerly directors of FCStone, retained an independent law firm to represent and assist it in its investigation.
Convertible Note Holder Litigation
In November 2009, an investor in a principal amount of $3.7 million of the Company’s senior subordinated convertible notes due 2011 (the “Notes”) filed a notice of motion for summary judgment on the Company, claiming that the FCStone transaction resulted in a change of control as defined in the Notes; and that, as a result, the Company should have afforded the investor the opportunity to have the Notes redeemed at a 15% premium. The investor also claimed default interest at the rate of 15% per annum established in the Notes. The investor's motion was denied in March, 2010, and the investor filed an amended complaint in April, 2010. The remaining three holders of the Notes, holding Notes in an aggregate amount of $13.0 million, filed a similar lawsuit on the Company on October 20, 2010.
During the year ended September 30, 2011, the holders of the Notes converted the principal amount and accrued interest into shares of common stock of the Company.Subsequent to conversion, two holders of the Notes, each a holder of $4.0 million in principal amount of the convertible notes as of September 30, 2009, persisted in their claim against the Company. Subsequent to the quarter ended December 31, 2011, the Company entered into a settlement agreement with the two holders of the Notes, pursuant to which the Company paid the plaintiffs the amount of $0.2 million in settlement of all claims.
Sentinel Litigation
In August 2008, the bankruptcy trustee of Sentinel Management Group, Inc. ("Sentinel") filed adversary proceedings against one of the Company's subsidiaries, FCStone, LLC, and a number of other FCMs in the Bankruptcy Courtfor the Northern District of Illinois. The case was subsequently reassigned to the United States District Court, for the Northern District of Illinois. The trustee is seeking avoidance of alleged transfers or withdrawals of funds received by the Company and other FCMs within 90 days prior to the filing of the Sentinel bankruptcy petition, as well as avoidance of post-petition distributions and disallowance of the proof of claim filed by FCStone, LLC. The trustee seeks recovery of pre- and post-petition transfers totaling approximately $15.5 million. In April 2009, the trustee filed an amended complaint adding a claim for unjust enrichment. FCStone, LLC answered the complaints and all parties entered into the discovery phase of the litigation. On January 21, 2011 the trustee filed a motion for summary judgment against FCStone, LLC on various counts in the adversary proceedings filed in August 2008 against FCStone, LLC and a number of other FCMs. The motion has since been fully briefed, and is pending before the court awaiting decision. On January 13, 2012, the Company filed a motion for summary judgment in its favor with respect to the transfer of approximately $1.1 million to its customer segregated account on August 17, 2007, pursuant to the "safe harbor" provisions of Section 546(e) of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. The court has not set a deadline for ruling on any pending motions, and has not set a trial date. FCStone, LLC intends to defend the matter vigorously, and to coordinate its defense with the other FCMs.
Item 1A. Risk Factors
In addition to the other information set forth in this report, information regarding risks affecting the Company appears in Part I, Item 1A of the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2011. These are not the only risks facing the Company. Additional risks and uncertainties not currently known to us or that management currently considers to be non-material may in the future adversely affect the Company’s business, financial condition and operating results. There have been no material changes to our risk factors since the filing of the Company’s Form 10-K.



51

Table of Contents

Item 6. Exhibits
31.1
 
Certification of Chief Executive Officer, pursuant to Rule 13a—14(a).
 
 
 
31.2
 
Certification of Chief Financial Officer, pursuant to Rule 13a—14(a).
 
 
 
32.1
 
32.1 Certification of Chief Executive Officer, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
 
 
 
32.2
 
32.2 Certification of Chief Financial Officer, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.


52

Table of Contents

Signatures
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
INTL FCStone Inc.
 
Date:
February 8, 2012
 
/s/ Sean M. O'Connor
 
 
 
 
Sean M. O'Connor
 
 
 
 
Chief Executive Officer
 
 
 
 
 
 
Date:
February 8, 2012
 
/s/ William J. Dunaway
 
 
 
 
William J. Dunaway
 
 
 
 
Chief Financial Officer
 


53