Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (LEH)
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Eine starke Volkswirtschaft braucht einen starken Finanzsektor. Mit nicht nur zwei bis drei Großbanken.
Wie soll die Wirtschaft auch in Fahrt kommen bei diesem extrem zusammengestutzten Bankensektor, bei dem Hunderte Institute geschlossen worden sind?
Eine Wiederauferstehung der im Gläubigerschutz geparkten Finanzgiganten Lehman und WaMu würde eine Richtungsänderung vielleicht einleiten können.
Q
By Linda Sandler - Aug 6, 2011 5:18 PM GMT+0200 .
inShare.
More
NEWS VON HEUTE:
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), sued for $8.6 billion by bankrupt Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (LEHMQ), said the defunct firm’s common law claims against it must be decided by a U.S. district court judge rather than a bankruptcy judge.
In a court filing yesterday in Manhattan, the New York- based bank said the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the Anna Nicole Smith case limited the power of bankruptcy judges to rule on such claims.
To contact the reporter on this story: Linda Sandler in New York at lsandler@bloomberg.net
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-08-06/...t-jpmorgan-bank-says.html
http://www.ftd.de/politik/konjunktur/...ine-beleidigung/60088215.html
Aufrgund der hiesigen Nachrichtenlage bin ich immer wieder erstaunt was kurstechnisch scheinbar schon seit einigen Monaten so eingepreist ist? Langsam aber sicher bin auch ich beleidigt! Wenn es da drüben tatsächlich Gerechtigkeit gibt, ist LEHM und WAMU operativ tätig, JPM nur ein geldsaugender Obama-Sponsor in diesem korrupten System und wird demnächst zahlungsunfähig...
bei den offiziellen 227 Tonnen Uran gehts ja weniger um den marginalen verkaufserlös, sondern mehr um die tatsache dass eine INSOLVENTE US-BANK auf TONNEN URAN sitzt und die usa in der uran-kriegsführung ja bekanntlich geübt ist.
- lehman erhielt 1 monat vor der insolvenz die lizenz zum uran-handel. die usa wäre ja seit der insolvenz in der lage, unmerklich sich ein uran-imperium über lehman aufzubauen - und keiner würd es merken.
- bei extremen wirtschaftskrisen wie derzeit ist die wahrscheinlichkeit (historisch betrachtet) sehr hoch, dass es zu einem krieg kommen könnte. und die usa investiert soviel geld in die rüstungsindustrie wie alle anderen nationen zusammen...
- in der politik geschieht GRUNDSÄTZLICH nichts aus zufall - damit auch nicht die lehman-pleite.
dies ist keine theorie, schon gar nicht eine verschwörungstheorie, sondern lediglich eine these.
wie die im nachfolg. link erkennbare graphik aufzeigt, produziert die usa gerade mal 5% der weltproduktion an uran und der uranhandel verläuft dabei NICHT TRANSPARENT.
http://www.tagesschau.sf.tv/Nachrichten/Archiv/...t-im-Dunkeln-statt.
Schönen guten Morgen!
Mit o.a. Beitrag wird jetzt m.E. eine nicht nur nicht zielführende, sondern auch eine Konspirations-lastige Diskussion eröffnet.
Die USA besitzen offiziell um und bei 10 000 atomare Sprengköpfe, womit sie zusammen mit Russland das größte atomare Arsenal weltweit aufweisen. Erst im April letzten Jahres wurde endlich der Meilenstein erreicht, dass sich Russland und die USA geeinigt haben, ein neues START-Abkommen zur nuklearen Abrüstung zu unterschreiben. Ziel der Obama-Administration wird es nicht sein, diesen Fortschritt selbstverschuldet wieder rückgängig zu machen und atomar wieder aufzurüsten. Von der Sinnhaftigkeit einer solchen Maßnahme in wirtschaftlichen Krisenzeiten einmal abgesehen. Und von den Kosten auch einmal ganz zu schweigen.....
Kurzum: ich finde, hier sollte sich wieder auf das wirtschaftliche konzentriert werden.
Wünsche einen guten Start in den Tag.
Besten Dank für den Hinweis dass wir uns wieder auf das Wirtschaftliche konzentrieren sollten.
Wünsche einen guten Start in den Tag.
ist es dem so, daß am ende alle lehmQ-aktien wertlos ausgebucht werden oder nicht ?!
bist dato ist noch niemand auf dieses thema richtig und ausführlich eingegangen...
Tue Aug 9, 2011 1:39pm EDT
* Aims to make certain interim payouts by April 2012
* Says general creditors face "inevitable" shortfall
* Prepares for 2013 trial against European affiliate
By Nick Brown
NEW YORK, Aug 9 (Reuters) - The trustee winding down Lehman
Brothers Holdings Inc's (LEHMQ.PK) brokerage hopes to repay
customers in full, but expects a significant shortfall in
paying back $47.5 billion owed to general creditors.
The bulk of brokerage Lehman Brothers Inc's $20.6 billion
in assets will probably go to customers, James Kobak, a lawyer
for trustee James Giddens, said on Tuesday.
Customers have asserted $12 billion in allowed claims and
another $43 billion in unresolved claims, Kobak said at the
trustee's "State of the Estate" address in U.S. Bankruptcy
Court in Manhattan. Giddens has said he believes the bulk of
the unresolved amount will be found invalid.
The unresolved customer claims are largely from Lehman
affiliates, including $17 billion from broker-dealer Lehman
Brothers International Europe and $8 billion from the parent
Lehman company.
Giddens told the court he hoped to make at least partial
payouts to net equity customers by March or April, adding that
key customer claims disputes will be hashed out in court soon.
But the dispute with the European broker-dealer, slated for
trial in early 2013, is the "elephant in the room," the judge
presiding over Lehman's bankruptcy said on Tuesday.
Judge James Peck said such a timeframe could hamper the
estate's ability to pay creditors. He called for a quick
resolution by all parties, including the Securities Investor
Protection Corp, which is charged with protecting investors of
failed broker-dealers.
EUROPEAN BROKER-DEALER CLAIM
The key area of dispute is Lehman Brothers International
Europe's $8.3 billion "house" claim over money the brokerage
holds on its behalf.
At issue is whether money held on behalf of foreign
affiliates can be considered customer money. If allowed, the
claim could eat up a significant portion of the brokerage's
resources for paying back its customers.
Regardless of the outcome, however, the brokerage will not
be able to make significant payouts on the $47.5 billion in
general creditor claims, which face an "inevitable" shortfall,
Kobak said.
A spokeswoman for Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc declined to
comment after the hearing.
Lehman filed for bankruptcy on Sept. 15, 2008, with $639
billion in assets. The filing was six times larger than any
previous U.S. bankruptcy and was considered to be a key
catalyst to the financial crisis.
The parent company plans on Aug. 30 to ask Peck for
authority to hold an official creditor vote on a plan to let it
emerge from bankruptcy late this year or early in 2012 and to
repay creditors about $65 billion soon afterward.
The case is In re Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc, U.S.
Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 08-13555.
(Reporting by Nick Brown; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/09/...amp;feedName=marketsNews
AUGUST 9, 2011, 3:23 P.M. ET.
Lehman Brokerage, Beset by Litigation, Wants Payback to Start Soon
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100....ru=yahoo&mod=yahoo_hs
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/8ae16878-....eabdc0.html#ixzz1UZsIzpsS
August 9, 2011 9:43 pm
Lehman estate eyes disposal of Archstone
By Helen Thomas and Telis Demos in New York
Possible buyers include EQR and AvalonBay, the publicly listed property companies, as well as Blackstone and Brookfield Asset Management, they said.
Blackstone, EQR, AvalonBay and Brookfield declined to comment, as did Archstone’s owners and JPMorgan.
*
*
*
While the Lehman estate is focused on maximising value regardless of timing, say people familiar with the matter, Barclays and BofA are leaning towards a faster solution, suggesting a sale rather than a lengthy IPO process.
Blackstone also has a history of large property transactions. The private equity firm made a string of profitable sales after its $36bn buy-out of Equity Office Properties in 2007.
EQR and Avalon Bay are residential-focused real estate investment trusts, with market values of about $16bn and $10.7bn respectively.
Das sehe ich eher als negativ für uns an. Ich lese daraus, dass diese firmen lieber eine schnelle auszahlung (abwicklung) wünschen, als eine consolidierung unserer lehmänner. meiner ansicht nach verständlich, da sie eher nicht daran interessiert sind, dass lehman wieder auf die beine kommt. oder habe ich da etwas falsch interpretiert?
meinungen?
* Aims to make certain interim payouts by April 2012
* Says general creditors face "inevitable" shortfall
* Prepares for 2013 trial against European affiliate
By Nick Brown
NEW YORK, Aug 9 (Reuters) - The trustee winding down Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc's brokerage hopes to repay customers in full, but expects a significant shortfall in paying back $47.5 billion owed to general creditors.
The bulk of brokerage Lehman Brothers Inc's $20.6 billion in assets will probably go to customers, James Kobak, a lawyer for trustee James Giddens, said on Tuesday.
Customers have asserted $12 billion in allowed claims and another $43 billion in unresolved claims, Kobak said at the trustee's "State of the Estate" address in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan. Giddens has said he believes the bulk of the unresolved amount will be found invalid.
The unresolved customer claims are largely from Lehman affiliates, including $17 billion from broker-dealer Lehman Brothers International Europe and $8 billion from the parent Lehman company.
Giddens told the court he hoped to make at least partial payouts to net equity customers by March or April, adding that key customer claims disputes will be hashed out in court soon.
But the dispute with the European broker-dealer, slated for trial in early 2013, is the "elephant in the room," the judge presiding over Lehman's bankruptcy said on Tuesday.
Judge James Peck said such a timeframe could hamper the estate's ability to pay creditors. He called for a quick resolution by all parties, including the Securities Investor Protection Corp, which is charged with protecting investors of failed broker-dealers.
EUROPEAN BROKER-DEALER CLAIM
The key area of dispute is Lehman Brothers International Europe's $8.3 billion "house" claim over money the brokerage holds on its behalf.
At issue is whether money held on behalf of foreign affiliates can be considered customer money. If allowed, the claim could eat up a significant portion of the brokerage's resources for paying back its customers.
Regardless of the outcome, however, the brokerage will not be able to make significant payouts on the $47.5 billion in general creditor claims, which face an "inevitable" shortfall, Kobak said.
A spokeswoman for Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc declined to comment after the hearing.
Lehman filed for bankruptcy on Sept. 15, 2008, with $639 billion in assets. The filing was six times larger than any previous U.S. bankruptcy and was considered to be a key catalyst to the financial crisis.
The parent company plans on Aug. 30 to ask Peck for authority to hold an official creditor vote on a plan to let it emerge from bankruptcy late this year or early in 2012 and to repay creditors about $65 billion soon afterward.
The case is In re Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 08-13555.
http://af.reuters.com/article/drcNews/idAFN1E7780NX20110809
Wirds wieder heiß hier? Das sind sensationelle NEWS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Hedge Funds wittern wohl das grosse Geld und streuben sich gegen den Insolvenzplan!!!!
Hedge fund objects to Lehman deal
Specialist in distressed assets Mason Capital is set to file its own objections to the settlement agreed in the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy - Aug-11
www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/...11e0-8d51-00144feabdc0,Authorised=false.html
11 Aug 2011 2:11am
Hedge fund objects to Lehman deal
By Telis Demos and Dan McCrum in New York
Another hedge fund, Mason Capital, is set to file an objection to the settlement agreed in the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy, potentially adding additional pressure to scupper the plan to begin pay-outs to creditors by early next year.
The settlement, which was announced by Lehman and many of its largest creditors in June, including banks such as Goldman Sachs and hedge funds such as Paulson & Co, would see its $60bn in assets spread out among the some $325bn in claims against the estate.
But distressed debt hedge funds, such as Centerbridge Partners, have already filed court papers saying they would object to the settlement plan, arguing that it is too generous to “vocal objectors” and would end up “siphoning value away from other creditors”.
Mason, which is a creditor to Lehman Brothers Treasury, a Netherlands-based entity that sold structured notes to retail investors primarily in Europe, is set to file such papers, according to people familiar with the matter.
A spokesman for the fund would not confirm its plans. Lehman declined to comment on the potential objections.
Mason is a hedge fund specialising in distressed assets globally, and has offices in both New York and London.
The current settlement was already the subject of contentious negotiations and threatened litigation between bondholders such as Paulson, the California retirement fund Calpers, and Pimco, the world’s largest bond fund, which had lent to Lehman or acquired its bonds, and banks such as Goldman and Deutsche Bank which had been derivatives counterparties.
The compromise uses some of the funds that were guaranteed to creditors of subsidiaries such as the derivatives unit by the holding company to pay holding company creditors, the largest single creditor group.
The plan also shifted pay-outs away from creditors such as foreign affiliates. Some affiliates, such as Germany’s Bankhaus and Lehman’s Hong Kong unit, have agreed to settlements. Others, such as Lehman’s London-based European trading group, known as LBIE, have yet to support the plan.
US bankruptcy law says that within each class of creditors, more than 50 per cent of claimants, representing at least two-thirds of the total value of the claims, must approve the pay-out plan.
Lehman has previously said that negotiations with all creditors are ongoing, with the necessary level of participation achievable. It is not yet known if many groups which have not expressed specific complaints will also object.
The bankruptcy court has discretion to reject the plan before it is voted on if it finds the objections compelling. Judge James Peck of New York’s southern district has a hearing set for later this month.
http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2011/08/10/649441/twisting-the-twist/
http://www.ariva.de/..._Holdings_Inc_LEH_t344623?page=329#jumppos8245
mal im ernst ... wird die aktie wieder auferstehen ? sagen wir so über 1€ zum beispiel ? :) wohl kaum oder? dann wären ja tausende leute aufmal reich ... hmm wär aber mal echt der hammer ...