A head shot of Kerviel cut from a trading Web site showed an earnest-looking young man. When his iden y was revealed in the afternoon, he had 11 friends listed on the facebook.com social Web site. That number later dropped to four. Kerviel was not available for comment.
"He is not running away. He is at the disposal of the police," said Elisabeth Meyer, a woman who claimed to be his lawyer, on French TV.
The loss ranks as the biggest caused by a single trader, dwarfing the $1.4 billion loss by trader Nick Leeson that broke British bank Barings, and the $2.6 billion Sumitomo Corp lost in rogue copper trades in the 1990s.
It also eclipses a $6 billion-plus loss racked up by hedge fund Amaranth trader Brian Hunter and his team ahead of the fund's collapse in 2006.
A SHOCKER
News of the fraud hit the company's Manhattan office like a bombs , said a SocGen banker who didn't want his name used.
"It makes us look incompetent, which isn't the case," the banker told Reuters. "We're all wondering if this fraud will wreck the company."
Societe Generale Chairman Daniel Bouton offered to resign but was asked to stay on by the board.
Shares in SocGen, which has a market capitalization of about 36 billion euros, fell more than 4 percent to 75.81 euros.

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