3).
At first "Lehman managed to avoid the fate of Bear Stearns, the other of Wall Street's small fry, which was bought by JP Morgan Chase at a bargain basement price under the threat of bankruptcy in March 2008. But by summer of 2008 the rollercoaster ride started to have more downs than ups. A series of write-offs was accompanied by new offerings to seek capital to bolster its finances," all of which failed (Lehman Brothers Holdings, INC, 2009, Times Topics). After the government announced its takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Lehman's stock plunged as the investors thought that a bail-out of so many major institutions in such rapid succession would be unlikely. Lehman Brothers was not deemed as important to the economy as Bear Sterns (Ledbetter & Martins 2008). When the Department Treasury confirmed the rumors that there would be no bailout of Lehman and Barclays and Bank of America refused to buy the company. Lehman was forced to file for bankruptcy. "Lehman's Chapter 11 filing was the biggest in history, as measured by the firm's reported assets at the time" (Examiner Named in Lehman Bankruptcy, 2009, Dealbook).
The financial fallout that occurred after the bankruptcy caused many to criticize then-Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. And the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben S. Bernanke. Banks refused to lend, causing a credit crisis and panic of global proportion. Lehman was not, unlike Bear Sterns, even 'too big to fail,' yet its failure had seismic implications. The failure of Lehman revealed the lack of transparency in the banking industry, and the degree to which individuals were exposed to risk through apparently safe mutual funds and bank stocks. Some argue the fallout would have come anyway, however, as more and more banks revealed the extent to which their mortgages had defaulted (Sorkin 2008).
Lehman Brother's decline, and its effects on the world markets is proof that merely because a company is generous towards the community it is not...
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"And, then, all of a sudden, the bottom fell out of these companies. it's a reckoning." The question becomes: are there any honest and ethical business executives anywhere? Let's take a look. Former corporate CEOs like Richard Fuld of Lehman Brothers, faced down questions and cameras on Capitol Hill; former executives of the insurance giant AIG were also questioned. One topic of discussion: the fancy retreat hosted by AIG after an
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