
The final report is 10-20 times a typical company annual report or a central bank's stability report. Banks' regulatory reports are about 500 pages, banks' risk policies, and the governing regulatory laws and risk accounting standards several thousand pages more. Senator Chris Dodd's Bill is 1,300 pages. How much time do board members of banks spend reading all these essential weighty tomes, or do they rely on news-article or email-sized summaries? Such reports in corporate libraries and computer archive disks, they get laid down like fine wines in cellars. Regulatory law says that's not good enough, not legal; directors of banks should read and understand all of this. But they don't and case law jusgements will now test whether that is a plausible defence for character like Dick Fuld

Then, maybe too, “d’ye mind 18 months later, March 2010, just when we all thought it was safe to go back into the markets, Lehman brothers and Dick Fuld (pronounced 'fooled') was back in the news in stunning 3D, the Anton Valukas report?”


E&Y say they stand behind their accounting and approval for Lehman's internal accounting - at least insofar as what they could see? Reportedly, emails show that Fuld and his three successive CFOs did know about $30bn growing to $50bn being wrongly (illegally, fraudulently, certainly a breach of Sarbanes-Oxley) moved off balance sheet by redefining loans as asset sales. Regulators, especially the SEC are being satirised for blame alongside E&Y and Lehman's top managers 'cooking the books'.
Of course, Lehman's leverage was obvious even from the published accounts, and capital weakness, even without knowing that $50 billions had been three-card-tricked off the balance sheet.
(Latest news: Other Wall Street bulge bracketeers, Merril-Lynch warned The Fed and SEC months before September that Lehman's liquidity could not be genuine, just as Fuld & Co. claimed their liquidity reserve ratio the highest on Wall Street and M-L's clients were anxious that M-L's liquidity might be too low. The authorities were absorbed in other problems and probably concluded this was a case of bad-mouthing rivalry, pot calling a kettle black! It is not normally hard for banks to free up liquidity if they really have to. I therefore assume the M-L whistle-blowers had the benefit of a Lehman informer, though it is remotely possible that M-L could have calculated that Lehman's leveraging was so totally maxed-out that it must be counting pledged collateral in its liquidity accounting? Valukas confirms that Lehman did precisely that - count encumbered assets as if unencumbered and near-liquid!)
The Valukas report is a must-read for all risk and finance officers, as too for all bank boards and audit partners. NY Governor Erwin Spitzer has on MSNBC concluded it is time for handcuffs i.e. criminal charges, and he wants all emails released for public scrutiny. This is resisted by US treasury and Federal Reserve.
In the movie Casino Royale if Anton Valukas is Bond, Fuld is Le Chiffre, a name meaning number and cipher to hide the true meaning of numbers and text.

Valukas made it to court, put his case in a court filing that the report should be made public, and won! It is unquestionably in the public interest that he succeeded.
There have been other lesser reports uncovering scandal in both the USA and Europe, for example various enquiries into Fortis and the Irish Government's enquiry into Anglo-Irish Bank (for references see end of this essay). If there was an enquiry into Halifax Bank of Scotland, RBS and other banks the findings would in certain areas of property lending and structured products look very similar!
In the first section one statement stands out for me that Lehmans in going for 'aggressive growth' embarked on a 'counter-cyclical' strategy i.e. it decided to ignore macro-economics, which for me is a claim that can also be levelled at RBS in its takeover of ABN AMRO that involved buying that bank's structured product toxic assets - a counter-intuitive hubris on the model of King Canute! Some banks considered themselves above and bigger than the underlying wider economy!

Lehman did not disclose the cash borrowing from the Repo 105s, although it had actually borrowed tens of billions of dollars, hence did not disclose the obligation to repay the debt. The ‘cash’ from the Repo 105s balanced or paid down other liabilities, reducing both total liabilities and total assets.
A few days after the new quarter began, Lehman would borrow the necessary funds to repay the cash borrowing plus interest, repurchase the securities, and restore the assets to its balance sheet. Reportedly, the accounting treatment via Lehman London was approved by the UK lawyers, Linklaters, and by Ernst & Young, Lehman’s independent outside auditor, perhaps with provisos, we don't know yet, but the dialogue between bankers and lawyers, as between traders and risk officers, is often fraught by "I'm the client; you're my servant" presumptions, and by language difficulties, not as merely like different common tongues, more like different species trying to communicate, or not?



Repo 105 was part of an effort to scrape together as much firepower as possible to buy high coupon asset backed securities when they suddenly became cheap in 2007. It was for a very aggressive bank with vaulting ambition to rival Goldman Sachs itchingly achingly tempting in the midst of a financial crisis to buy distressed ABS CDOs cheap for bumper 40% yields - over 35% above what were already high coupons to face value on supposedly highly rated bonds whose cash-flows were supposedly ensured by insurance and standby capital enhancements. This ran into deouble-default risk i.e. the outcome of systemic domino effect crisis that this and other banks totally under-estimated.
Lehman had a history of counter-intuitive bets - who didn't. Lehman bet that securitized bonds were only temporarily cheap. Other banks such as UBS, ABN AMRO, Fortis and RBS, even BarCap except it was lucky in not closing take-over ambitions for ABN AMRO, UBS or Lehman Brothers in its entirety; all made the same mis-judgement and all under-estimated how destructive the mark-to-market writedowns would be to their capital reserve ratios, cash-flow and bottom line.
Leverage had by late 2007 become a focus of the ratings agencies as an indicator of bank risk, which meant Lehman had to focus on reducing its publicly known leverage to avoid credit rating downgrade, a bank with $700bn in tangible balance sheet assets (excluding $900bn derivatives) supported by only $23bn equity of which only $7.3bn was cash or near-cash. This chart shows quarterly leverage trends up to Lehman's collapse.

CMBS and RMBS containing large amounts of subprime loans continued falling in asset values even when the underlying cash-flows remained relatively firm. They became almost totally illiquid in the secondary market because too many holders could not refinance their short term borrowings used to buy these long term assets; too many players had to sell i.e. they couldn’t find ready buyers without the price falling catastrophically. Hedge Funds were even hanging back waiting for discounts of 70%, and only when the ensuing recession looked like touching bottom before they'd pounce!
Lehman could not shrink its balance sheet by selling its structured product assets without incurring large 'realised' losses that would hit not only its p/l but negatively expose the bulk of its remaining assets. Recognising this, eventually, the bank knew (like RBS also recognised in the hardest way) that it had instead to find a buyer for the whole bank - even then it found that no one wanted to buy the bank except without its distressed assets, its massive property and property-related portfolios - a problem Bear Stearns had spectacularly encountered in late 2007 and first quarter 2008 - everyone knew they were selling anything they could in private deals at 20c in the $. Was it too late for the others to learn the clear lessons?
It is genuinely hard for banks (most banks) to wake up to a changed world and see themselves reflected as others now see them; their subjectively imagined beautiful brands now so distorted by how the markets and short sellers (especially their erstwhile hedge fund compadres) were reflecting back another image, a suddenly entirely negative one that just looked like errant distortion of fundamental 'hold to maturity' values?

Repo 105 that the bank increasingly used in 2007 and 2008 even breached its own internal cap on Repo exposure (about $22bn as of summer 2006), which from a regulatory perspective is an illegal failure of governance, given that limits are reported to, and approved by, the regulator, in Lehman’s case the SEC.
Valukas's findings are designed to help the court and the bank's trustees establish what legal grounds exist for future claims. The explosive report highlights:
- Use of accounting tactics designed to move $50bn off Lehman's balance sheet;
- Work of auditor Ernst & Young;
- Barclays' subsequent purchase of Lehman's US assets; and
- Evidence to "support the existence of a . . .[valid] claim that JP Morgan breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing by making excessive collateral requests to Lehman. "The demands for collateral by Lehman's lenders had direct impact on Lehman's liquidity pool."
- None of Lehman's directors breached their fiduciary duties in the run-up to Lehman's downfall, but they should have exercised greater caution in decisions taken, but did not cross the line into "gross negligence".
The mis-application as assets that were really encumbered as repo collateral is not a practise that was exclusive to Lehman Brothers, but practised, according to insiders, by other prime brokers - related to the practise of 'rehypothecation', a term that should now attain star-billing alongside 'sub-prime' and 'toxic assets'?



Was Lehman murdered or is it a clear case of suicide?

Valukas also found that the two Wall Street banks, JPM and Citi, demanded significant amounts of capital and extra guarantees from Lehman (collateral margin calls - how Citicorp also sank Bear Stearns 6-9 months earlier!) in the run-up to Lehman's downfall. JP Morgan Chase requesting $5bn (£3.3bn) just three days before Lehman's bankruptcy filing.
Ironically, neither bank (others too) has in the 18 months since Lehman's fall been able to calculate exactly their assets and liabilities with Lehmans outstanding at the time of its bankruptcy, possibly also because they didn't wish to just then, and not so long as quarterly results remained highly market sensitive, and not so long as banks were turning to toast.


There were fire-sales, but Buiter's fair value of ABS at 90% discount to face value of the underlying assets was an absurdly low estimate - anything below 40-70% discount was absurd.
But, the floodgates opened anyway; credit crunch worsened again after Lehman went into Chapter 11, with an immediate vertigo-making credit default swap spike and then fell more gradually, but remained high for 7 months. Near-normal interbank lending rates have not yet returned a year and a half year after Lehmans was left to collapse. Lehman was not however a wound that could be cauterized by bankruptcy as the 'moral harzardists' wishfully imagined - massive bleeding continued, spurting red ink - it was explosive.







Lehman directors, including chairman Dick Fuld and former finance director Erin Callan, failed to disclose key practices. They had certified misleading statements. The claims are in a 2,200-page, nine-volume report by Anton Valukas that Judge James Peck said read "like a best seller". We knew some of this already, for example that its prime brokerage mis-applied collateral. Lehmans was one of 3-4 prime brokers that dominated 50% of the prime brokerage market that lent money to hedge funds (leveraged on hedge fund pledged collateral) and that transacted hedge fund market trades, which could be 30-50% of all exchange volume. Lehmans used the collateral to trade on its own account. What we now learn is that it mis-accounted for the collateral. Such collateral with prime brokers was large-scale.


Hedge funds were very happy to be leveraged up to the hilt and didn't care what prime brokers did with their assets because they didn't think a big bank could collapse. Now they worried about collateral damage, not just to their own collateral pledged assets but to their own solvency.

As The Independent wrote last Autumn, “Funds have found that assets such as equities whose recovery from the prime brokerage division should have been straightforward are in doubt because of “rehypothecation”. The small print of the contracts said that Lehman could use the securities itself, including lending them out to short sellers. This meant the assets were reclassified as unsecured, putting them further down the queue for repayment and raising the prospect of big losses. Hedge funds may have up to $70bn in Lehman prime brokerage accounts, with the value of rehypothecated non-cash assets estimated at $22bn.” Therefore, if re-hypo 'ization contracted for then rehypothecation itself was appropriately contracted for, it was not illegal? But, divorcing assets from liabilities in the balance sheet and hiding the difference is illegal! In mid to late '08 Repo business by primary dealers fell of the cliff.



The Valukas Report, on the collateral provided for repo swaps, shows that this was accounted for as if the collateral assets had been bought and loans fully granted as if unsecured. This is a clear example of risk taking and fraudulent accounting treatment that would have been outlawed and clearly seen by regulators if Lehmans had been a deposit-taking bank regulated by The Fed under Basel II, and not an investment bank only regulated by the SEC. At the time of its collapse it was reported that the bank collapsed under $60bn of toxic debts. There were other large accounting transfers between balance sheet headings.


The case opens on April 26. Anton Valukas

Repo 105 masked the size of Lehman's balance sheet as the pressure grew for investment banks to reduce their leverage in late 2007. If Repo 105 wasn't lethal it was certainly poisonous, according to the FT; Lehman had been abusing it as far back as 2001, using repo agreements to finance assets but, unlike with typical repo transactions, treating them for accounting purposes as sold. This let Lehman cover up its true leverage, making it seem lower. Lehman used its overseas subsidiary (London) to make that work, sometimes. Bart McDade, the Lehman executive in charge of shrinking the balance sheet has referred to Repo 105 as "another drug we ran on" - sounds like a breach of fiduciary duty - although Valukas doubts it.

Whether or not Fuld and his associates end up on trial, Valukas has at least drafted a fantastic management guide. It's the best document yet from this crisis on how to prevent future failures. It should be mandatory reading for current and would-be bank chiefs - and their regulators.".



LEHMAN BROTHERS COLLAPSE
In 2008, it appeared that Lehman's problems were its unprecedented losses due to the continuing subprime mortgage crisis, from having held on to large positions in subprime and other lower-rated mortgage tranches when it securitized the underlying mortgages. Lehman had projected itself as having the world's best pricing and risk analysis of asset backed securities! Whether Lehman voluntarily invested (like RBS, especially when buying ABN AMRO's investment bank) or was simply unable to sell on the bonds was unclear. In Q2 '08 Lehman reported losses of $2.8bn and sold $6bn in assets. In H1 '08, Lehman stock fell 73%. In August '08, Lehman reported it would lose 6% (1,500) of its staff, just ahead of Q3 reporting in September. In late August shares in Lehman rose 16% when state-controlled Korea Development Bank looked to buy it, then fell 45% on 9th September when KDB faced objections from regulators and could not attract backers for the deal and the S&P 500 fell 3.4%. The Valukas report says, "As late as September 10, 2008, Lehman publicly announced that its liquidity pool was approximately $40 billion; but a substantial portion of that total was in fact encumbered or otherwise illiquid." In its accounts to end of 2007, lehmans reported the following substantial liquidity pool reserves. We can now question whether these numbers were faked?

Consider how $billions of bonus payments square with inadequate capital. $23bn of equity was not enough to be carrying $700bn assets and liabilities plus a $trillion of derivatives positions. The leverage was 30 times gross, 16 times net.

On September 10, 2008, Lehman had announced a loss of $3.9bn and intent to sell a majority stake in its investment-management business, mainly Neuberger Berman. The stock slid 7% that day. On September 13, 2008, Tim Geithner, then president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York called a meeting on Lehman, which included possible emergency liquidation of its assets. Its empty liquid reserves may have emerged then? Lehman initiated talks with Bank of America and Barclays. On the 12th or 13th bank of America backed off and on Sunday 14th agreed to buy Merril-Lynch for $50bn which saved it (3 times bigger than Lehmans) from the worst of the crisis. It appeared by early September 14 that a deal was reached with Barclays to buy and save Lehman from collapse. There were conditions: no CMBS, asset management or property portfolio, only the core investment banking, plus access to the Fed Prime Broker credit facility, discount on net asset value, financial support of The Fed and confirmation of Lehman's liquidity so that Barclays could calculate the impact on its own capital ratios.

The FSA also requested a formal proposal for it to approve that included support from The Fed or it could not approve the impact on Barclay's capital ratio or waive the legal requirement for the deal to be put to Barclays shareholders for their approval. That was Saturday 13th. On Sunday, capital impact and liquidity were still unknown, and unless 3rd parties, The Fed, guaranteed Lehman's immediate financial obligations, there could be no waiving of the prior need for shareholder approval - which would take weeks including producing and publishing detailed financial statements - no one would believe a statement that Lehman Brothers' last set of interim (unaudited) accounts could be accepted as materially unchanged.
Lehman was deluding itself when it thought it could find a quick-footed opportunistic buyer such as state-owned KFD, Bank of America, or Barclays Bank, without first producing forensically reliable accounts and allowing some form of comprehensive due diligence. In the case of BoA and Barclays it was of course expecting a deal similar to Bear Stearns six months earlier where the Federal Reserve would strong-arm the deal and provide substantial (undisclosed) financial support. Once bitten, twice shy?
No one, not The Fed, could accept Lehman's $40-60bn tangible assets as collateral in exchange for Treasury Bills, not since Lehman had maxed out on that to the extent of hiding $50bn of effective borrowings, and certainly not before TARP funds were authorised by The Senate, which did not vote TARP through until October 6th. If The Fed risked an unquantifiable massive band-aid guarantee to Lehmans that looked like golden parachutes for a buyer of the distressed bank, would that have lost the long delayed and now acrimonious TARP vote in The Senate. The Fed balance had not yet ballooned. Hank Paulson at this time still considered aid to banks as an on-budget, on-balance-sheet matter, hence the TARP proposal to ask Congress to vote $700 billions. He later regretted that approach once he recognised how the balance sheet could be grown by swapping bills for banks' assets at a big discount giving The Fed plenty of room on the liabilities side to grow the bank's assets without seeking federal Budget support. That began after Lehman's bankruptcy.


Where were the Lehman Board non-execs, carrying the fate of world finance on their agendas for the previous 18 months - 9 were retired, 4 over 75 years old, 1 a theatre producer, 1 construction magnate, another a former Navy admiral, only 2 with direct experience in the financial-services industry, one of whom was former US Bancorp chief Jerry Grundhofer, and another Henry Kaufman. (see Comment 3 below), one of the most famous economist statesmen of his day, close friend of Paul Volcker, head of Henry Kaufman & Co., ex-Salomons chief economist, famously bearish on interest rates and bonds, and someone who was invested heavily for years with SEC god Bernie Madoff; could even he be conned by improbable sets of accounts? He said very sensibly in 2006 on the eve of the calamity, "Some investment banks are beginning to look more like hedge funds than investment banks. That’s an enormous departure from the past. The dilemma is that we know less about the financial system today than we did 20 or 30 years ago. So much occurs beyond the balance sheet? The build-up of derivatives is extraordinary.” - 'Exactimundo!', as Tarantino might script it in gangster rap.

The name of Bear Stearns must have come up time and again in every Lehman's crisis meeting? But how Bear was resolved was not a game-line or play-rules that The Fed could or would play again, not for Dick Fuld and his fictitious liquidity reserves. How could Hank Paulson (soon to be outgoing Treasury Secretary, brother to the head of a major short-selling hedge fund) and Ben Bernanke (with his contract renewal coming up subject to Congressional and Senate Committee votes) have played the politics of bailing out Lehman?
It was obvious to all except perhaps Fuld that this was too hard a sell, and wise heads such as Kaufman and Grundhofer on the board and Tim Geithner at NY Fed knew this. Lehman had assets and collateral lying in several places, but what were they worth? When JP Morgan settled its cash and securities collateral at Lehman, which took until February 2010 to achieve. Lehman owed JPM $557m for which it had pledged collateral originally with a face value of $8.57bn, later discounted 9% to $7.58bn that it is hoped may recover a bit more in time!

On September 13 and 14, there continued to be insufficient information available to formally structure or restructure a deal that could be put before the Barclays Board and the FSA, but the deal really died on the 13th. Lehman decided in the evening of the 14th that it would file for Chapter 11. This was confirmed by the NY Fed which agreed to provide financing to keep the bank afloat. That evening The Fed was also organising a special OTC derivatives operation to protect Lehman counterparty creditors i.e. to net off Lehman's derivatives exposures. On Monday morning, the 15th, as the Japanese markets opened, at 1:45 a.m., 7:56am London time, LBHI filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.


Like sharks need to keep swimming, banks need to maintain a flow of liquid business, or they die. All Wall Street bankers and brokers became concerned about their own viability. The fates of Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers appeared linked; Merrill had the USA’s largest brokerage force while Lehman’s main customers were big institutions. But in the credit boom both firms, like Bear Stearns too, had piled into real estate and land, also inadvertently due to foreclosures on large property development deals, and were thereby weakened with inadequate capital and writedowns.

The major sticking point was no financial protection guarantees from The Federal Reserve, which was arguably callous given the speed at which Barclays had to decide to take the risk to buy Lehmans or not, subject to FSA approval. What did the Fed know about Lehman's liquidity position when it first refused support for the Barclays deal and then had to provide some when lehman went into bankruptcy administration? It may have been backed in a corner too, as blind to the true accounts as Lehman itself appeared to be uncertain about? Or was it also really a case of let the bank go under as shock discipline for the other banks, as was later suggested to be the concluding view of Hank Paulson, US Treasury Secretary, and as punishment for the 100 hedge funds that used Lehmans as their prime broker and could now lose tens of $billions?

IMMEDIATE AFTERMATH
Hedge fund losses were not clear but could be gauged somewhat by large withdrawels from money marlet funds. Lehman's collapse precipitated a $550bn run on money market funds on Thursday, September 18. This was dire news that Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson presented to Congress behind closed doors, prompting Congressional approval of Paulson’s $700bn TARP fund, despite many legislators' deep misgivings. It was a shock or a “shock therapy”. Why did the money market wait until September 18th to register its shock? A report ofy the Joint Economic Committee pointed out that the $62bn Reserve Primary Fund had “broken the buck” (fallen below $1 per share) due to its Lehman investments lost on September 15, and the fund had to suspend redemptions for a week. What dire event happened on September 17th? The SEC has reported that it was a record day for illegal naked short selling. Failed trades climbed to 49.7m – 23% of Lehman trades. A few banks round the world reported loss exposures to Lehmans of about $5bn, but that could only be the iceberg's tip. Hedge Funds may have lost $10-20bn, but we don't know? Banks may have lost a similar amount - but it seems that not only do we not know, they don't yet either?
Neuberger Berman asset management was sold for $2.6bn. Nomura created a $1bn bonus pool to secure it staff in the shell of Lehman's European and Asian operations which it bought for $225m. Barclays paid $1.75bn to buy Lehman's US shell. At the time some creditors' lawyers said they'd sue Fuld for return of his salary, which was over $100m for the previous 2 years, $300m over 8 years. For all other banks round the world, credit default spreads on loans to banks spiked very sharply upwards endangering many from being able to refinance their funding gaps. Banks sold assets at discounts, shrank their balance sheets and several were nationalised. The Credit crunch had a new pull like hanging nooses round the necks of hundreds of banks. Lehmans is often described as the world's largest bankruptcy, but Fortis Bank could be calculated to be in the same ballpark. One result afterwards, as central banks had to massively weigh in with liquidity and capital for banks, was that regulators and governments did not want to risk another credit shock to interbank lending and became determined not to let another major bank crash and burn.
My view then seems borne out by Alvarez and Marshall's report on their mammoth task published in December 2009. Had say Barclays taken on this Herculean job with Federal Reserve support, as part of a deal to buy Lehman Brothers as an ongoing concern, then my guess is that it could have been more easily sorted out in negotiated fashion with the creditor banks. $824bn in claims is a big number of systemic proportions by any measure, supported by less than $16bn in cash and tangible investments (remaining at 30 Sept.2009). Maybe the job might have overwhelmed even BarCap and The fed, but actually I doubt that. The big post-Lehman realisation dawned that now no governments were going to let any major bank again go into uncontrolled bankruptcy. So the Too-Big-To-Fail bank issue became centre stage in regulators' mind leading to what we are now seeing - Liquidity Reserve Funds, Counterparty risk funds, higher economic capital buffers, living wills, Volcker Rule (Dodds' Bill before Congress, now 85% agreed), a cap on market size of banks, cap on % share of national deposits, and increasingly likely break-up of the biggest banks. When all that feeds through, we have to ask how much worse could banks' deleveraging and balance sheet shrinkage get such that economic recovery double-dips or is otherwise postponed for a year or two longer than expected?

Everyone under-estimated the wider impact of Lehman's bankruptcy. This is akin to not foreseeing the credit crunch, but worse for the fact that the credit crunch was not yet over, not by a long way. There appeared to be an immediate profound wide economic cost of September '08.

AFTERMATH 18 MONTHS LATER
Despite, or because of, letting Lehman Brothers crash and burn, central banks in USA and Europe had to up their game massively. Markets touched bottom in April 2009. Bond values recovered in the fourth quarter 2009, by which time USA and UK were now out of technical recession. But, the ratings agencies were fairly merciless in continuing to keep many banks teetering on down-grade and now also government sovereign debts. Calls persist for letting banks go under, using the moral hazard argument. This has turned into arguments for breaking up big banks, for not letting them become so large again to be Too Big To Fail! This is somewhat daft because while break-up of at least some of the very biggest banks is now inevitable, the failure of any one bank of any significance has detrimental effects on the integrity of any country's financial sector and will always be economically significant. The Volcker Rule has firm traction, to force banks to concentrate more on traditional or narrow banking and cut back on proprietary trading, or even split investment banking from commercial banking to return to some form of Glass-Steagal.


Ratings Agencies have an interest in fanning flames of anxiety when they are in line for court actions and regulators' severe attentions! Will we see new credit insurance instruments called Riot Default Speads? Signalling that a fiscal crisis remains a possibility for a leading economy, Moody's said that 2010 would be a “tumultuous year for sovereign debt issuers”, and lo, hedge funds took up the clarion call and staked out Greece, Spain and others, including the UK, but not the USA - Buiter so far wrong again? Moody's, perhaps recognising the value of red rags in election years, added that the sheer quantity of debt to be raised by UK and other leading nations would increase the risk of investor fright. This is plain ignorance and shows it own failures to examine banks capital and regulatory change which is creating more than enough enforced demand on banks to buy all of the new government bond issues.
Strikingly, however, it added that even if countries reached agreement on the depth of the cuts necessary to budgets, they could face difficulties in carrying out the cuts. This is novel commentary by financial analysts? The report said: “In those countries whose debt has increased significantly, and especially those whose debt has become unaffordable, the need to rein in deficits will test social cohesiveness. The test will be starker as growth disappoints and interest rates rise."
This is entirely subjective since there is no metric for showing when any OECD country's debt becomes unaffordable! The sovereign debt crisis is being given disproportionate attention, almost as if many (not all) politicians are only too happy to return to the pre-credit crunch politics they feel comfortable with while the problems of global banking are too much of a headache; hard to align with values of die-hard support for enterprising capitalism. For a problem that has consigned forests of newsprint and $billions of broadcast and Internet time, the general understanding of the financial crisis remains foggy at best. This is banking's age-old defence, to be impenetrable behind its armour of knotty jargon.


The original role of banks serving trade finance, managing money transaction services, and the transmission mechanism of rouing savings to productive industry has become a backwater, relatively trivial in the banks' balance sheets compared to financial engineering derivatives, and far smaller than mortgage and financial structured product lending for mergers and acquisitions mainly to the biggest corporations who can look to banks like just another form of financial services enterprise, in the cosseted world of High Finance, overwhelmingly only going where the numbers and bonuses are biggest.
BANKS' DELEVERAGING
Commercial banks are forced by narrow circumstances to shrink their balance sheets and narrow their funding gaps, with the determination of a military campaign, and net off their derivatives exposures.
In 2009, U.S. banks posted a 7.5% fall in total loans outstanding, the steepest percentage drop since 1942, according to the FDIC. The drop in the UK is also about 8%. It may smack of vengefulness, voluntary or involuntary, in severely cutting households and businesses' credit - enough to almost negate governments' attempts to reflate economies through deficit spending, and which makes quantitative easing especially important as an additional spur to the rump of the economy.
By continuing to act as a drag on the real economy's recovery our big banks are playing with a fire, a fire that may consume them politically and even economically as assuredly as they consumed each other in the credit crunch? The banks have still not yet woken up to appreciate and respect their collective role in, and dependence on, the total economy. Their counter-arguments that loans have fallen because customers are demanding less credit is demonstrably false. Surveys continue to show that credit conditions, access to bank loans, continue to be the single biggest factor in business confidence. 90% of cross-border trade and much of domestic trade relies on trade finance from banks. Banks have tightened credit conditions, cuts overdrafts to businesses and households, refused small firms and SME loan requests as a matter of policy to narrow funding gaps rather than because of borrowers' quality i.e. taking the short term view, being subjective about margins and self-obsessed at the expense of customer loyalty, basically calling governments' bluff in the face of governments' requests to maintain or raise loan levels to small business especially. Retail banks continue to operate credit scoring systems that tell them not to lend to customers with irregular cash-flows for example, the very customers they make 80% of their retail branch net interest and bank charges profits from?

Few, only 2 out of the additional 12, appear to have 'offed' themselves for the unbearable shame of losing clients' money, not because they lost their own money? These are the homourable ones - many in Main Street may wonder why there have not been more bankers feeling terminal shame?
And, by the way, I am not recommending that anyone should do away with themselves!
But, who these days remembers Charles Barney of Knickerbocker Bank, a glorious building on the corner of 5th Ave and 34th street who honourably shot himself in 1907?
Yet, the vry next year his bank re-opened and all creditors were paid in full.

Even before the crisis, surveys found that 85% of customers mistrusted and hated their banks, and feared them. What other sectors other than attorneys, politicians, and second hand car salesmen have long survived drenched in such dislike and disrespect? Today, bank customers despise and satirize their bankers.
Bankers are very slow in waking up to what this means and longer still before determining that something has to be done to change how for too long banks have grossly under-valued customer loyalty, and, as many will also now conclude, been lying when claiming 'shareholder value' as their no.1 priority.
In its self-promotion, Lehman's advertising strapline was "Lehman Brothers: Where Vision Gets Built" - as the Valukas report shows us may now be a vision likened to several of Dante's 'circles of hell' applied to financial markets:-
SEE ALSO
Lehmans
(15 sept. '08) http://bankingeconomics.blogspot.com/2008/09/lehman-brothers-bankruptcy.html
(17 Sept.'08) http://bankingeconomics.blogspot.com/2008/09/lehman-bros-administration-scenario.html
http://www.qfinance.com/blogs/ian-fraser/2010/03/18/time-for-sarbox-to-be-rethought-post-valukas
FSA statement to the enquiry into Lehmans: http://www.fsa.gov.uk/pubs/other/lehman.pdf
RBS: http://lloydsbankgroup.blogspot.com/2009/03/rbs-citizens-bank-and-greensandwich.html
On Anglo-Irish Bank: http://lloydsbankgroup.blogspot.com/2009/03/basket-case-of-basking-shark-anglo.html)
http://lloydsbankgroup.blogspot.com/2008/12/banks-property-losses-next-year-so-last.html
Comprehensive site on Lehman Brothers fallout and for Valukas Report, see
http://lehmanlotto.blogspot.com/2010/03/report-of-anton-r-valukas-examiner.html