about this blog
Alexis Glick is an anchor for FOX Business Network. Prior to joining FOX, Glick served as a correspondent for the Today Show and co-anchored the third hour of that program. Before her stint at NBC News, she was the senior trading correspondent for CNBC and reported from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
most popular posts
-
- There are no viewed posts at this time.
DanW
I am not an investor by trade, just an ordinary citizen and I did my own research on this subject to find that it was a multi faceted demise over several years. In short what I uncovered, and it may only be part of the story, is that the investment banks on Wall Street disregarded the risk of the sub prime mortgage assets that some unscrupulous lenders made. This paper was bundled in an attempt to spread the risk and presented as a viable investment option. Moody’s and other credit ranking firms simply applied the credit risk rating of the institution presenting the bundle, so investors had no real idea how bad the risk was. This fact was hidden by greed on Wall Street and perpetuated into the massive scale we have seen unfold. Even AIG, who wrote most of the insurance against this paper, did not seem to really understand the associated risks. I am not a proponent of rescuing companies that stretched and manipulated the rules for the sole purpose of greed. As a tax payer, I do not want to rescue these institutions, however, because this was let to spread to financial institutions around the world, I understand the need for the Fed to do something. I also applaud the bi-partisan congress actually trying to do the right thing. So the silver lining in this cloud of doom is one; Wall Street has been put on notice and two; our government may actually start working for the people again!
lehman dependent
precisely. perhaps some of the knee jerk posters of crowing invective against the deposed employees of lehman might reconsider their targets. as the fat cat hedge fund guys sip their bollinger maybe the rank and file should spare a thought for the average joe employees of lehman who worked their health and happiness into the ground just to buy a moderate level of comfort for their families who are now facing personal bankruptcy. the sacrificial lamb of wall street hides many a tale of personal pain.
Jeff Priore
Lives were affected, jobs were lost and more tales will be told but the top managers at Lehman Brothers will still be wearing $1,000 suits, driving $200,000 cars and snacking on caviar. The rich will still be rich even though we're asked to pine for their suffering. The poor employed by Lehman Brothers cleaning their offices and holding their doors open? They'll find other minimum wage jobs for other fancy people. had Lehman Brothers been propped up by Uncle Sam the taxpayers (which does not include the rich and famous) would have shelled out the billions to keep the excess going.
grwe
The Fed. assisted in getting a deal done for Bear Stearns. It then bailed out Fannie/Freddie. It came time for Lehman and they just let them fail. Days later, they are devising a plan to help out everyone else. I don't understand this. I believe Dick Fuld was trying to save his company, but it was out of his hands. Panic, short seller, rating agencies, I think, had more control over his company than he did. Most I. Banks and many C. Banks are in the same position that Lehman was in, in that they have these bad assets too, yet, Lehman was left to fail. Lehman just filed on Monday and they are now going to help. How is this fair? Could Lehman not have been saved had they thought about this last Friday?
LarryS
There is an interesting side note that no one seems to be talking about when it comes to Lehman Brothers. 30% of the company was owned by its employees. I am former employee whose role was providing administrative support. At year end EVERYONE received a performance bonus, that included secretarys, and clerical workers, and they were pretty generous as a percentage of one's salary. If one received a bonus of $10,000 or more (and many many did) your bonus included a percentage of restricted stock (restricted in that you could not sell it for three years), and the bigger your bonus the more of it was paid in restricted stock. (I believe that top bonuses were paid with 60% restricted stock) Now I am not saying that there were not excesses and greed in the running of Lehman. But I just wonder why the only financial institution that was allowed to fail was the one that had significant employee ownership.
bbbeauti
I think the fed. should not have helped one company (the deal with bears sterns) and not helped anyone else. but then if you look at the top management of Lehman and what they received as bonuses last year, that in itself would have been enough to keep the company going for a bit more. and when it states "bonuses for the employees" like one article said I saw, I can guarantee you very, very, very! little if NONE made it down to the real employees below upper management level. We keep blaming the sup-prime market, and yes that is a big factor and the brokers who qualified these poor suckers with the first payments and not the increased ARM payments are the biggest instigators...but there are other factors like multi billion dollar bonuses in times where no bonus should be given.
Walter
One can not help but ask "Would Lehman still be around if todays Fed annoucement would've been made 1 week ago ?? Would Merrill still be independent ??" Why was Lehman the scape goat as opposed to the other candidates ?? I don't have any idea. Seems that most of the investment banks had risky assets that they probably shouldn't of had. I am happy that "shorting" is being evaluated. I find it a very dangerous practice, and many of the Wall Street firms that employ the strategy to make money are now getting burned by it. Perhaps its poetic justice ?? I would like to see shorting banned altogether. It is not fair that only the financial companies get this protection. What happens if "shorters" start targeting high tech companies ?? Would we sit there and watch the shorters drive them out of business. Will the Treasury and Fed be there to bail them out ?? We need to get back to a long term investing mentality. If you believe a company is poorly run, don't buy the stock, or sell the stock you have, or if you own the stock simply buy some puts as downside protection. The whole idea of making a quick buck is damaging our financial system. Lets get back to the basics of building good strong companies with a financial marketplace that wants to support them
Richard Korsgren
No one seems to understand what is happening. The taxpayer will not bail out this bailout and this not good. We should be paying for our debts as we go. This 1-2 trillon bailout money will go onto our national debt, which is now running wild. One day, the rest of the world will lose faith in the US Government (because of this huge debt) and not buy this debt. Inflow of money will slow and stop. We have abused our financial system and now we are trying to buy our way out with money we do not have. We will be sorry one day but who really cares? Actually, I have heard no one this day even discussing it. We just do not get it! Richard Korsgren M
Lehman's foreign victim
I agree with grwe and LarryS. Why the Fed had such an unfair treament to Lehman? Only two real reasons I can think of. One, Dick Fuld had alienated himself with the Fed in whatever the issues before. Two, Lehman has most of his bundled portfolio sold to other developing countries (I know many in Aisa), so the Fed doesn't care. A lot of people in developing countries, they poured in all their savings, retirment money to buy just "American" products thinking these are from the most powerful country where if anything goes wrong, the U.S. government will protect their rights. Now their money with Lehman is forzen for 120 days without knowing how small the percentage of their money can be returned to them. Many livies will be affected there too, not just the employee of Lehman (who have been in the top of the pyramid for all these years, so I don't too worry about them). What role the USA going to play in the world going forward? I can only see the super power world police fighting human rights role is quickly fading away! Fed, please save Lehman (with tear)!
Dave, TX
Alexis I appreciate your reporting. I have a question and possible indication of what has happened. I would appreciate your response. I was a Real Estate Broker for three years and I got out of the business three years ago because I saw this coming. What did I see? I saw the typical home buyer trying to get a mortgage for their dream home. Realtors and Mortgage Brokers encouraged homebuyers to buy as much home as they could possibly afford. Was that a hard sale? No. The typical scenario was a homeowner who had credit card debt and needed to sell their current home to pay off their credit cards. By eliminating the credit card payments they could qualify for a larger mortgage. Millions of home owners have been doing this for years and years. Then a few years ago President Bush signed into law the new law that prohibited bankrupting on credit card companies and allowed the credi card companies to raise the minimum payment from 2% to 4%. I believe that law created a minefield in the housing market. Some home owners would be able to manuver through the minefield but many would not be so lucky. So how did we get to the place where there is hundreds of thousands of forclosures? Yes, the mortgage industry made many bad loans. But in my opinion, the new credit card law changed thousands of marginal home loans into bad home loans. More and more homebuyers failed to qualify for a loan and the law of supply and demand simply operated as usual. Fewer homebuyers - housing prices drop. Housing prices dropped and homeowners were pushed over the edge by their credit card debt and unable to bankrupt against the credit card companies. Thousands of homeowners are left with no other choice but to let their homes fall into forclosure. When will we learn that credit is not an asset? I think everybody is going to reap what we have sowed over the years. Dave
Cal
I'm sorry, but most of America will not feel sorry for any of these guys or gals. Aren't they supposed to be the smartest people in the room with their Ivy League educations? What, now their kids won't be able to go Upper East Side private schools or they can't afford their second or third homes? Or move to Scarsdale or Greenwich? Heads should roll. There had better not be any mention of bonuses in the next couple of months. I want to hear Blankfein's and Mack's compensation. It should be $1. They sold crap, they knew it was crap. And we go on and on to other countries about "free-market capitalism". What a joke! And the funny thing is this stuff crops every ten years. The crash of '87, LTCM in '98 and now the credit debacle of '07/'08. This better be fixed. I'd hate to see another Civil War in this country. I don't trust this rally. If it peters out, what is next? They have already thrown the kitchen sink at it.
Credit rating victim
When Lehman filed for Chapter 11 on Sunday,September 14, the long-term Lehman bonds in my portfolio had A+ credit rating issued all the rating agencies that are out there. Why? When was the last time a bank at the edge of collapse was allowed to carry an A+ (long term) and AA (short term) credit quality? Arent't rating agencies supposed to inform the investors with CORRECT credit quality of a bond issuer in order to give investors opportunity to flee or stay invested? As for my Lehman bonds : They bit the dust on Monday, September 15, just 7 days before the annual interest pay day (22 Sept.). Alive for 51 weeks, then dead on the final, 52nd week. Thank you! Thanks to FED, Fuld, Fitch, Moody's, S&P's, the US Treasury, BOfA, the system, thanks to you all. Now I know you better!
Jonathan
Great article, Alexis. I agree with most of what you have written, however, i don't quite understand what you mean when you say "this is how far we have allowed traders and short sellers to unwind our markets". Really? So it is the fault of the traders for the demise of these companies. Really? These companies were buying and selling junk, and they knew it. These CEO's are just upset that traders (and yes i am one) knew it all along as well. It is not the fault of the traders that these CEO's cannot understand or execute simple math skills. They screwed up their own balance sheets, not us. Lehman and the rest of them are just upset because we made money off of them when they could no longer continue. They did the same thing to their counterparties for years. By the way, traders who make money are efficient in risk management, so perhaps the highly compensated CEO's could learn a little from us. Don't feel sorry for them, they would break any trader to earn a dollar. As usual, always the fault of the traders. Funny thing is, knowone complains when traders drive up the equity. The investment banks all love that. I don't like to see anyone lose their job, but nobody guarentees a traders employment either. We are in the results business, and Lehman and the others cannot gain the results. They got exactly what they asked for at Lehman when they levered themselves into the red.
Andy
Welcome to the United Socialist States of America. Blatant manipulation in the markets, before a very important election in the country..hmmm
Veronica M Reimann
Why do we have to pay for Illegal aliens who have bought homes here they should not have been allowed morgages.