Lehman Brothers: financially and morally bankrupt
The lesson of Lehman Brothers' failures of fiduciary duty is that large-scale lending should not be entrusted to private banks
Richard Wolff
guardian.co.uk, Monday 12 December 2011 10.27 EST
Last week, federal court Judge James M Peck approved the final phase of the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy,
which began with the investment bank's collapse on 15 September 2008.
That bankruptcy, the largest in US history, precipitated the credit
markets' disintegration that cascaded into the global economic meltdown
that has deepened ever since. With roughly $450bn still owed by the
bank, Judge Peck approved that Lehman Brothers
has only $65bn left to settle creditors' claims. The latter must thus
accept just over 14 cents for every dollar Lehman Brothers owed them.
"Thieves," they are probably muttering.
Lehman Brothers'
bankruptcy has revealed multiple layers of ramifying corruption and
theft among global banks in the US and elsewhere, as well. Many juicy
details are covered in the nine-volume court examiner's report of 11 March 2010.
It documents the bank executives' mammoth misjudgments in their
investment decisions, including their repeated violations of the basic
banking principle not to borrow short-term and lend the proceeds
long-term. The bank examiner shows misleading statements made about
their activities and how they disguised Lehman's financial health and
credit-worthiness. It appears that various legal and semi-legal
mechanisms were used to manipulate their accounts, and otherwise violate
the spirit and letter of laws and regulations.
Monday, December 12, 2011
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment