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    Showing posts with label Lehman Monday. Show all posts
    Showing posts with label Lehman Monday. Show all posts

    Wednesday, October 29, 2008

    The 'betrayal' of London, unheard in New York

    As the world more than acquainted itself with Lehman Brothers Midtown Manhattan headquarters when news of the collapse of the financial giant started streaming in, it was easy to forget that Lehman Brothers had an overseas operation, and one that is more profitable.

    The top executives at Lehman Brothers in New York did not.

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    Around 1230 in the morning of 15th September, Lehman announced in a press release that the 158-year-old investment bank would file for bankruptcy protection. In the hours and days leading up to Lehman’s collapse and Chapter 11 filing, $8.07 billion was mysteriously transferred from Lehman’s London subsidiary at Canary Wharf to its Midtown headquarters in New York. Canary Wharf is where Lehman ran its operations in Europe employing around 4, 000 people.

    At the opening of Lehman’s new European headquarters in London on 5th April 2004, Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor told Lehman employees, “I would like to pay tribute to the contribution you and your company make to the prosperity of Britain. During its 150 year story, Lehman Brothers has always been an innovator, financing new ideas and inventions before many things even began to realize their potential.”

    On 20th September 2008, Gordon Brown stated its support to Lehman Europe’s claim that Lehman New York return its $8 billion.

    The British tabloids called this repatriation of $8 billion to New York as the “betrayal” of London. Times Online quoted one executive saying, “We were basically told ‘London, you’re on your own’.” Another E-Mail by an angry executive to Bart McDade, the President of Lehman, quoted by the newspaper read, “Come on guys. Show some respect for the rest of the world who carried your flag and believed in the ‘one firm’ culture. There is a thing called ‘appreciation and class’ even after the war is lost.” Lehman Europe and its employees in London were literally left in the lurch, under the administration of Price Waterhouse Coopers (PWC) that was called for the dissolution of Lehman Europe.

    All this as Lehman New York was raising a toast to Bob Diamond, the President of Barclays, on the orchestration of a $1.75 billion takeover of Lehman’s American investment-banking and capital-markets division, securing 10, 000 jobs and $2.5 billion in bonuses for the staff at the New York office.

    In the United States, one could have gone oblivious to this. The New York Times covered the story as reported by Julia Werdigier of The International Herald Tribune in DealBook, its daily filing of mergers, acquisitions and other market movers. Not exactly the headlines.

    Werdigier explicitly states “the money was moved to New York from London as part of the usual flow of the firm’s cash between the two financial centers just before the bank collapsed Monday morning.”

    Usual flow of money?

    Evening Standard ran a story by David Cohen on this “betrayal” of London. In this story, Robert Daniels, a director at Lehman’s Canary Wharf office, explains what this ‘usual’ flow of money was. On Fridays, Lehman London would transfer billions of dollars to the New York headquarters, and is given a portfolio of assets in return. On Mondays, this trade is reversed in what is a standard inter-bank transfer. But this transaction leading up to Lehman’s collapse was different.

    “The money was not returned to our bank account from the US and all we were left with was a bunch of useless assets. Nobody can tell us where it has gone. What we do know is that the money disappeared on Friday night and did not come back into our account on Monday morning. That is why the administrators came in on Monday and found no cash and said they probably can't pay our September salaries.”

    In the story that appeared in the New York Times, Werdigier goes on to discusses a beleaguered Gordon Brown and the criticism he faces from within and outside the Labour Party on his handling of the British economy amidst difficult times. Why would Werdigier do that? Is Werdigier implying in a very subtle way that it is just Brown trying to be seen as doing something?

    More so, it reports PWC sending a letter to Lehman New York “requesting that the money be returned to London, where it is needed to pay the bank’s creditors, employees, bills and some daily expenses.”

    On 19th September, PWC filed an 83-page motion disputing the $8.2 Billion taken from London.

    Was it the New York Times and the American media deliberately underplaying this story, or the British sensationalizing it too much?

    “It goes beyond who gets paid their September salaries. It could be a huge legal issue, setting Lehman London employees against their New York colleagues. This is billions we're talking about, billions that have been moved overnight out of the UK to the US to the detriment of the British economy” says Daniels.

    After Lehman’s collapse, much of the financial world continues to undergo an ugly restructuring in the last fortnight. But what hasn’t changed is this strange denial and ignorance of the new global reality the American media, at least in this financial crisis, seems to be catering to.

    Maybe the holding company is entitled to ring fence bonuses and ensure employment for its preferred employees when it negotiates takeover bids. It could be well within its right to talk about a unified corporate culture, and then leave your overseas divisions with literally empty vending machines and a lack of basic information that borders on complete apathy.

    But there is a slight alteration to the narrative now. It is the British financial services provider, Barclays, that has taken over Lehman’s profitable American assets. And if ever things go down, they might not have to hesitate to play it dirty.

    Lehman: You are on your own, London, Danny Fortson, Times Online- 09/21
    Lehmans’ $5 Bn ‘betrayal’ of London, David Cohen, Evening Standard- 09/17
    Fury at $2.5 Bn Lehman Bonus, John Waples, Times Online- 09/21
    UK’s Brown wants Lehman Cash returned, Julia Werdigier, NYTimes- 09/22

    Tuesday, September 30, 2008

    The world as we knew it

    Somehow this haunts me. Here are some relics of the past, two of which have been obliterated into the past amidst the financial turmoil of the past two weeks. Hear top executives talk about how Lehman succeeds, with its four pillars stratgey.



    Here is a Merrill recruitment video. I just could not embed it, so you will have to follow the link.

    We have lost a bit in the past three weeks. And a lot of the world as we knew it.

    Saturday, September 20, 2008

    Lehman: Another Enron in the making?

    It is easy to forget with the American media that there about 5, 000 people in Lehman's overseas operations. Easy to forget that there is a world outside New York, and one that is more profitable.

    People in Lehman New York did not.

    [Picture Courtesy: www.mirror.co.uk]
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    Apparently, $ 8.07 Billion was transferred from Lehman's European operations at Canary Wharf in London to Lehman's UK operation hours before Lehman filed Chapter 11. Times Online (UK) quotes Tony Lomas of Price Waterhouse Coopers (PWC), the administrator of Lehman's European operations, as he makes parallels with Enron:

    "Both in terms of the impact of the loss of confidence and the complexity of the trading transactions, the interdependencies of the group companies, and the sweeping of cash into a holding company account, leaving subsidiary companies empty of cash at the point of collapse"


    New York employees have been called for work, and about $2.5 Billion in bonuses has been ring-fenced as part of the Barclays deal. Bonuses? Well, for the first nine months when Lehman reported profits. Times Online further quotes a London- based Lehman employee:

    “It’s an absolute scandal. I will never work for an American firm again. It looks like they are prepared to cut you off at the knees. Nobody from America has been in touch since we went into administration on Monday.”


    Sources:
    Lehman: You are on your own, London [Times Online, UK]
    Fury at $2.5 bn Lehman bonus [Times Online, UK]
    The "betrayal" of London [Evening Standard, UK]
    My week of hell at Canary Wharf [Times Online, UK]


    After $700 Billion, dandy times in Wall Street

    I might have to take my words back. With rumours of a Fed bailout, the stock markets had their biggest rally in years the last two days of the week. Merril Lynch shot up 33.73%, or +7.44 points on Friday itself.

    It looks like Bank of America and Kenneth D. Lewis were not that dumb after all. But would Merril Lynch, now with better valuations and the bailout which Fed estimates to be at $700 billion, now want to sell itself? At Antifits, we always have our noses out for more drama. What a wonderful world it would be if John Thain addressed the press somthing like this:

    "I don't know where Kenneth, or the punters get their ideas from. If we mislead someone into wrong ideas, we apologize. But Merril needs nobody."

    But the crisis now is almost over after warranting the greatest intervention of the government in years. $700 Billion is a lot of money, and more so, if it ends up doing what it intends to do. Peter S. Goodman in the New York Times explains:

    "If the plan works, it will attack the central cause of American economic distress — the continued plunge in housing prices. If banks resumed lending more liberally, mortgages would become more readily available. That would give more people the wherewithal to buy homes, lifting housing prices or at least preventing them from falling further. This would prevent more mortgage-linked investments from going bad, further easing the strain on banks. As a result, the current downward spiral would end and start heading up."


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    You better brush up on the past week though. Because in 25 years, if somebody asks you what Lehman was, you better say something, give names and quote numbers. It makes you sound intelligent.

    And it has also costed you $2000. I will let that sink in.

    Diamond and Kashyap explain it all [Freakonomics]
    What happened in Lehman in 30 sconds, or less [Chris DesBarres- NYMag]
    AIG in 30, more like 45, seconds [Chris DesBarres- NYMag]
    The story of the men in the middle of it all [NYTimes]
    And the men who seem to be sorting it out [NYTimes]
    Hard Truths about the Bailout [NYTimes- Editorial]
    But will it work? [NYTimes]

    Friday, September 19, 2008

    Something's wrong? And not just on Wall Street.

    There is something wrong with me.

    I am actually deriving this perverse pleasure seeing the financial world collapse. And not because I resent it in any way.

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    Matter of fact, it is quite the contrary. I believe if you can make a living selling paper for paper, taking long and short positions on them, calling them something fancy like a derivative, good on you. I believe in Wall Street. I don't necessarily agree with the backlash against, say, short selling. And I would have markets deregulated than the other way round. The more cushion the Fed gives, the better it is. And I literally cannot stand John McCain or Barack Obama be so shallow on the campaign trail as they talk about greed, and the how apparently how Main Street has been sold short by Wall Street, as paychecks for CEO's have gone fatter. All while Joe Bloggs works three shifts to afford healthcare for his ailing mom.

    But why this urge to check on Nikkei 225 before I sleep? Read Floyd Norris in the New York Times, browse the new Journal, get the European view in something like FT, and then look at slideshows of Wall Street bankers with sullen faces and hot bodies outside, say Lehman, in the Daily Intel? Why would I look down upon you if you did not know who Chris DesBarres was? Why does it get my tongue wagging when on Bloomberg, they literally put "the worst since the Great Depression.." on repeat. All day long.

    Ken calls it the quarter- life crisis.

    I reckon it is a sitcom like sitcoms dream to be, with each character with a story, and each story with a lot of such characters. Give me Henry Paulson, Ben Bernanke, Bob Diamond, Blankfein and a certain W., who realizes rather Fed's billions of dollars than a speech that lasts more than a 120 seconds to cuddle a country in distress, over say, Blake Lively, Leighton Meester, Penn Badgely or a Chace Crawford. Or just that I am about twenty blocks, or two stops on the Pelham Express (4,5) to the Financial District in a city called New York.

    Or maybe it is the quarter- life crisis. Because it is a Thursdsay night, but I am sitting with a Walgreens pint of orange juice, still not over Floyd Norris's post on short selling, and there is no place I rather be.

    I might want to get better orange juice though.

    Or maybe because I had no idea who Blake Lively, Leighton Meester, Penn Badgely or a Chace Crawford were till I looked Gossip Girls on IMDb.

    Tuesday, September 16, 2008

    The Wall Street we did not know.

    Now, come on. A stiff upper lip would not get AIG or Washington Mutual sorted out. So why don't we have a sense of humor about it.

    New York Magazine's Daily Intel looks at the other side of Wall Street.

    "Did anybody else notice that, in all of the endless photographs and clips of disheartened bankers exiting the offices of Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers yesterday, a surprising number of them were ladies? And since it wasn't exactly an official workday, and many employees were just told to show up with boxes, lots of them showed up in casual clothes, like ponytails, gym shorts, tank tops, and the like — and they were actually kind of, well, hot? Finance hot, but still."

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    Catch the slideshow here. Read the captions. An Antifits recommendation. I don't care whether Sarah Palin of the "Walmart mom" pulls me up for sexism.

    Hey, mind what you do though. My sister works for Goldman,

    Monday, September 15, 2008

    Bank of America: The next Sarah Palin?

    Floyd Norris did live blogging today on his New York Times financial blog Notions on High and Low Finance.

    At 1115 AM, he blogged:
    Merrill is trading, as I write this, at $21.47 per share. That is a 14 percent discount to the value of the Bank of America stock that is being offered. Each Merrill share will be exchanged for 0.8595 shares of B of A, now trading at $29.01 and putting the value of the offer at $24.93 per share.

    Merrill Lynch closed at $ 17.01. Why would you agree to pay 24.93 for something that is by the dumps and available at 17.01.

    Expect that story to flare up. I don't understand much of the financial world, but I am definitely curious about Bank of America doing that. Or has it decided that Sarah Palin has too long been the headlines.

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    Lew from UK on the website commented:

    "Forgive me for being a bit slow on this (I’m an engineer rather than an accountant), but - I read somewhere in all the stuff published today, that the Merril Lynch deal (I can already see the headline “Lynch mobbed”) would mean that BoA would would wind up “technically” under-capitalised. Is this true ? And if so, doesn’t that mean that either (a) they will need to embark on some sort of fire-sale / fundraising enterprise to bring things back into balance, or (b) that they’d be risking (and they’d need government complicity to achieve this) a new, bigger game of chicken where BoA tests the limits of “too big to fail” ?"

    Something is clearly happening. And as I am writing this Nikkei just opened. Eight minutes ago. And it is 344.92 points down, or 2.82 %.

    With the failing U.S economy and Wall Street banks, finally are we seeing the end of our fling with Sarah Palin? Call it the upside of the downside in the economy!
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    Update- 09/16/2008
    - Pictures really are worth a million words. Here is what sums up Lehmann Monday. Click on the sideshow. Courtesy The Wall Street Journal. See it. Come on, for once let us love our bankers.