Lehman's Golden Parachutes Were Being Secured While Execs Were Pleading For Federal Rescue

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JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS | October 6, 2008 10:44 PM EST | AP

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Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Chief Executive Richard S. Fuld Jr., wearing tie, is heckled by protesters as he leaves Capitol Hill in Washington after testify before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Monday, Oct. 6, 2008, on the collapse of Lehman Brothers. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

WASHINGTON — The now-bankrupt investment bank Lehman Brothers arranged millions in bonuses for fired executives as it pleaded for a federal lifeline, lawmakers learned Monday, as Congress began investigating what went so wrong on Wall Street to prompt a $700 billion government bailout.

The first in a series of congressional hearings on the roots of the financial meltdown yielded few major revelations about Lehman's collapse, and none about why government officials, as they scrambled to avert economic catastrophe, declined to rescue the flagging company while injecting tens of billions of dollars into others.

But it allowed lawmakers still smarting from a politically painful vote Friday for the largest federal market rescue in history to put a face on their outrage at corporate chieftains who took home hundreds of millions of dollars while betting on risky mortgage-backed investments that ultimately brought the financial system to its knees.

That face was Richard S. Fuld Jr., the Lehman chief executive who sat for a two-hour-plus grilling before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee as the panel combed through his pay history, management practices and financial strategies.

"You made all this money by taking risks with other people's money," Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., the panel's chairman, said. "The system worked for you, but it didn't seem to work for the rest of the country and the taxpayers, who now have to pay $700 billion to bail out our economy."

A subdued Fuld opened his testimony declaring, "I take full responsibility for the decisions that I made and for the actions that I took," but he conceded no errors or misjudgments in the chaotic period that led to the firm's bankruptcy.

And he said a compensation system that he estimated paid him about $350 million between 2000 and 2007 even as the company headed for disaster was appropriate.

"We had a compensation committee that spent a tremendous amount of time making sure that the interests of the executives and the employees were aligned with shareholders," Fuld said.

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That wasn't good enough for some lawmakers who decried what they called a culture of entitlement at Lehman even as the company's performance nosedived.

The panel unearthed internal documents showing that on Sept. 11, Lehman planned to approve "special payments" worth $18.2 million for two executives who were terminated involuntarily, and another $5 million for one who was leaving on his own.

That was just four days before the government let Lehman go under, touching off a cascading series of financial shocks and failures that put Washington on track for the multibillion-dollar rescue the Bush administration urgently requested from Congress at the end of that week.

On Wall Street, uncertainty Monday about the effectiveness of the rescue sent the Dow Jones industrials sinking below 10,000 for the first time in four years. Investors fear the crisis will weigh down the global economy and the bailout won't work quickly to loosen credit markets.

The bailout, now law, was so rushed that the usual congressional scrutiny is only coming now, after the fact.

"Although it comes too late to help Lehman Brothers, the so-called bailout program will have to make wrenching choices, picking winners and losers from a shattered and fragile economic landscape," said Rep. Tom Davis of Virginia, the committee's senior Republican.

Fuld said Lehman did everything it could to limit its risks and save itself. It failed, he said, because of a "crisis in confidence" on Wall Street, market manipulation in which investors preyed on distressed financial players by betting on their demise, and would-be buyers who waited for the government to step in to help fund a sale.

"In the end, despite all of our efforts, we were overwhelmed," Fuld said, looking uncomfortable seated by himself at a witness table where he fiddled with a pencil and removed and donned his glasses habitually as he fielded at-times angry questions.

"Do you think it's fair?" Waxman demanded of Fuld as he outlined his exorbitant pay packages and noted that shareholders ended up with nothing.

Fuld said he is haunted nightly wondering what he might have done to avert Lehman's bankruptcy, the largest in U.S. history.

"This is a pain that will stay with me for the rest of my life," he said.

Also haunting him, Fuld said, is the question of why Lehman didn't get a federal rescue while others did: Bear Stearns, the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and insurance giant American International Group Inc.

"Until the day they put me in the ground, I will wonder," Fuld told the committee.

But the committee's investigation painted Fuld as anything but a victim.

Waxman released e-mail correspondence from June 2008 in which Fuld dismissed the suggestion from executives at a Lehman subsidiary that the company's top people forgo bonuses to "send a strong message to both employees and investors that management is not shirking accountability for recent performance."

Fuld wrote, "Don't worry _ they are only people who think about their own pockets."

The suggestion came from executives at Lehman's money management subsidiary, Neuberger Berman, who also were recommending that Lehman spin off its business to insulate its employees _ and their bonuses _ from Lehman's sagging stock price and from "management mistakes."

George H. Walker, President Bush's cousin and a member of Lehman's executive committee, breezily shot down the ideas, according to the e-mails.

"Sorry team. I am not sure what's in the water at" Neuberger Berman, Walker wrote to the rest of the executive committee. "I'm embarrassed and I apologize."

Republicans dismissed the hearing as little more than a political stunt given that it failed to probe the role of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac _ huge players in the mortgage market _ in the financial meltdown.

"If you haven't discovered your role today, you're the villain, so you have to act like the villain," Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., told Fuld facetiously, earning a tight smile.

In a statement, Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, the House minority leader, accused Waxman of refusing to investigate the mortgage giants "solely to shield his fellow Democrats politically," and said it "cheats the American people of key facts that could help all of us learn how we got here _ and what we must do to make certain this situation never repeats itself."

WASHINGTON — The now-bankrupt investment bank Lehman Brothers arranged millions in bonuses for fired executives as it pleaded for a federal lifeline, lawmakers learned Monday, as Congress began ...
WASHINGTON — The now-bankrupt investment bank Lehman Brothers arranged millions in bonuses for fired executives as it pleaded for a federal lifeline, lawmakers learned Monday, as Congress began ...
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- sak I'm a Fan of sak 26 fans permalink

I sometimes wonder about the intelligence of those in charge - supposedly. Did it not occur to anyone that the executives of these failing companies would secure their goodies? The deal should have been this. We will give you the money AFTER to reduce your salary, AFTER the golden parachute disappears, AFTER the bonuses are eliminated, and we do not care what your contracts say. Times are different now. You used to be a private entity. Now you are supported by the taxpayers of this country who do not spend $450,000 for a weekend of indulgence!

Please, someone wake up. Will everyone also be surprised when the new president takes over and discovers that all records have been destroyed?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 PM on 10/08/2008
- gala1 I'm a Fan of gala1 46 fans permalink

The panel unearthed internal documents showing that on Sept. 11, Lehman planned to approve "special payments" worth $18.2 million for two executives who were terminated involuntarily, and another $5 million for one who was leaving on his own.

How fitting tha tit should be Sept. 11. On Wall Street, yet.

Fuld is every bit as culpable as Bin Laden for the deleterious impact of what he has actually done to this country.

We can't seem to find Bin Laden, but Connecticut is just a commuter train away.

We need to start letting those who have damaged us face their responsibility. Instead of individually walking off with enough of an amount to bail out the mortgages of, oh, maybe all of Upstate NY.
Just Imagine that. Teh money that Fuld took for just himself, and that's just the money we know about, is enough to pay for all the homes of small cities.

-gala1

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 PM on 10/08/2008
- hollybork I'm a Fan of hollybork 65 fans permalink

Well said, gala1. The bankruptcy code has provisions to get back payment made out of an insolvent debtor. Perhaps that should be pursued against the Lehman executives going back at least a year. CB

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 PM on 10/08/2008

And Gala 1,

I didn't have space in my earlier response to add this comment, as I wanted to:

In regard to Lieberman? As a former long-term CT Resident, I SAY,

LIBERMAN..­. A 'POLITICIA­N... WHO PUT HIS OWN SELFISH AMBITION BEFORE PRINCIPLE, DISAVOWING HIS OWN PARTY, TO ALIGN HIMSELF WITH BUCHCO? FIRST OFF, NOT TO BE TRUSTED; AND 2ND, NOT TO BE TAKEN SERIOUSLY!

That's what I have to say about THE SAD ZION BEFORE TRUTH SABRE RATTLER AND PALIN COACH EXTRAORDINAIRE!

BlueBirdy

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 10/08/2008
- onenvrnos I'm a Fan of onenvrnos 29 fans permalink
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I am sending the following letter to Pelosi and to my state senators/r­epresentat­ives. We need to bombard their offices with a demand for justice:

I really want justice served in regard to the individuals / corporations who stole from the American taxpayer. Corporate executives who received "golden parachutes" should be prosecuted.

The American public will NOT trust their government at all if those people who contributed to the demise of our economy are not held accountable for their actions. That includes post-impeachment proceedings against President Bush, Vice-President Cheney, and their co-horts (including Haliburton). The American taxpayer has been ripped off since the inception of the Bush Administration. This is why the economy continues to slip into oblivion--people no longer trust anything their government has to say because we have been lied to and robbed until there is nothing left in the coffers.

The American people want justice. Until that is achieved, the American people will have only one sentiment toward our governing body: that they are dictated by greed and judgments based upon accruing wealth at the taxpayers' expense and security.

Thank you for your attention to this matter.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:36 AM on 10/08/2008

Whatever happened to a good old tar and feather and run out of town on a rail?To allow these despicable men to keep one cent in their names after what they've done is beyond belief.Sur­e they say they're just a cog in the gears,but if they're getting such enormous amounts of money for their "financial wisdom",why didn't they speak up years ago?These "golden parachutes" that were finagled at the last moment are nothing more than corporate theft and should be prosecuted as such.To say this is business as usual is probably appropriate in the rarified air these creatures are allowed to exist.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:33 AM on 10/08/2008
- tmo7734 I'm a Fan of tmo7734 17 fans permalink
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God bless Henry Waxman. He's always a pit bull at pursuing the truth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:19 AM on 10/08/2008

A blind, conflicted pit bull. To not have Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac represented in this inquiry is akin to a congressional hearing on the failures of the Bush administration without calling on President Bush to testify. This is political cover at its worst. We need to demand more from our politicians. This is a real crisis.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 AM on 10/08/2008
- shela88 I'm a Fan of shela88 13 fans permalink
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Henry Waxman shows up at all these hearings and does zip about punishing those who have plunged innocent people into financial ruin. Next time call Central Casting..t­he results will be the same.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 PM on 10/08/2008
- TeriLyn I'm a Fan of TeriLyn 4 fans permalink

If this had happened in Japan, the guilty parties would have committed honorable suicide. I'm not advocating for that to happen here by any means. All I'm saying is that there appears to be more honor amongst guilty CEO's in Japan than here in America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:45 PM on 10/07/2008

I was against deregulation before I was for it.

Todd Palin is a man on a mission. Hear Todd's opinions and insights at www.dearfirstdude.blogspot.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 10/07/2008

It's "Enron Revisited.­" Overcompensating the top few who ruin the company. They cash out. Everyone else loses. I'm sick of everyone else paying for the irresponsibility and greed of a few. We need to re-regulate and get the CEO Administration out of Washington. This is nauseating.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:47 PM on 10/07/2008
- charon I'm a Fan of charon 19 fans permalink

All the big players should be arrested for fraud, fined to recover the millions they got by deceit, and put in jail for 20 years for grand theft. They sold the securities knowing they were flawed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 AM on 10/08/2008
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Is this or government "OF THE PEOPLE" does our voice mean nothing? "You betcha!"
Does a convicted bank robber get set free to spend his ill-gotten gain? And why have the people not demanded impeachment long ago.

Is the press complicit?

I for one want "That one" in the Whitehouse and for the citizens of this nation to hold his feet to the fire on change.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 PM on 10/08/2008
- hollybork I'm a Fan of hollybork 65 fans permalink

Agreed. The amount of "bonuses" paid out in 2007 in the financial industry was $200 billion. That is also, as it turns out, the amount that the Treasury secretary thinks the credit bailout will end up costing after we take over, rehabilitate and liquidate all the assets the US government is buying. It is nauseating indeed. I am an investor in publically traded corporations and I have thought so for years. So now it has come to this. CB

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:39 PM on 10/08/2008

Too bad it wasn't Tony Soprano's money.
He'd have taken them sky diving.
Golden parachute?
fuggitaboudit

www.WilyTrax.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 PM on 10/07/2008

Someone had to be thrown to the "publicity wolves" and Fuld was it. Not that he has no guilt, just that there are LOT of others involved whose names won't surface anywhere near as publically. There is a lot of 'smoke and mirrors' in all of this and we will never be told the truth. And, ultimately, what can we poor schmucks do about it? Elect more of the same to Congress and the Presidency? And hold them accountabl­e... how? No re-elect them? Limit CEO/Board/Exec pay to - what? - 1000% of the lowest company pay? Do you think the people who did this (or their replacements) give a furry rat's butt about who they screw over? After all - it wasn't them, it was the corporation. I don't feel sorry for Fuld. And I sure don't trust anyone in government to fix this. I wish we could get a true outside agency to investigate this and follow the money, though that won't get it back. Yes, this is a crime. And it's legislated crime. It was legal. Who's responsible for that? We are. And we need to wake up and make those changes in corporate law that allow this kind of thievery. Of course, that means we'd have to have some sort of influence. And I don't think we do at this point.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:57 PM on 10/07/2008
- shela88 I'm a Fan of shela88 13 fans permalink
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I watched the hearings..­.Tom Davis said he is upset with the GOP..Henry Waxman looked grim..The scurrilous activities of those fat cats came to light..and­..then what? Those thieves left the hearing, scurried past the Press and into their waiting stretch limmos, and went home to their mansions.

Supermarkets have been known to send old ladies and teenagers out of the store in handcuffs and into a patrol car, for shoplifting food..(I have seen this happen)..W­hat is wrong with our system and why do real criminals go unpunished?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:46 PM on 10/07/2008
- hollybork I'm a Fan of hollybork 65 fans permalink

JP Morgan's "margin" call on Lehman's for $8 billion dollars three weeks ago, which brought down the giant and rippled through the markets, couldn't be met and started Lehman's bankruptcy and shoved the world markets into a credit disaster. Here is the hidden side. According to testimony before the House Subcommittee yesterday, Fuld and the Bd of Directors paid out $9 billion in bonuses last winter. Don't you know, that bonus pool was enough to have saved the company this October? And Republicans don't think it is "american" to put limits upon the greed of corporate executives of publicly traded companies? They took it, they got away with it, we are now left with a global financial meltdown, and we must elect a new group of watchdogs who are not part of the old "go along to get along" crowd, and to whom equity and financial justice means this must no longer be merely negligent but legal. It must be illegal and criminal in the future. Let's call it what it is. Financial piracy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 10/07/2008
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I simply can't believe that no one saw this coming, that their packaging and cutting of mortgages, then buying credit default swaps, to insure that whomever ends up holding the bag will get paid for the bad paper, was just a creative way to make more money. All these companies are sitting on all this money collected from upstanding citizens who are saving for their retirement. I think we'll find that peoples retirement savings went to the derivatives market, those top 1% played with future retiree's to just make more money. I would be interested to know what percentage of their savings have been lost in this downturn. Are the top 1% losing the same percentage in their portfolios as the rest of the 99%? Wall Street paid salaries, enormous salaries, where did that money come from, the war chests of peoples retirement funds. Wall Street has misused peoples retirement funds in the same manner that the government misuses our taxes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:36 PM on 10/07/2008

These CEO's need to be prosecuted. Not negotiable.

AND, every politician should be out of a job next election. They had the ability and obligation to us, to make sure things didn't end up like this. Shame on them all.

We need to never forget, and hold all their feet to the fire.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 10/07/2008
- research I'm a Fan of research 267 fans permalink

The half of the House dems around Kucinich are worth keeping.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:50 PM on 10/07/2008
- kean I'm a Fan of kean permalink

I agree with you 100%.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:47 PM on 10/07/2008
- timezone I'm a Fan of timezone 10 fans permalink

The rich get richer and the middle class and the poor gets poorer....­.there oughta be a law, oh wait, there is....thos­e most responsible for this economic debacle shouldn't be charged with theft or fraud, but treason.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 10/07/2008
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Who do you consider responsible?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:26 PM on 10/07/2008
- timezone I'm a Fan of timezone 10 fans permalink

The government has said there will be an investigation. Those proven of wrong doing should be held responsible. As I was not an insider, I don't know how far this will go, I don't think anyone does. If you have inside info, I would certainly be interested in hearing it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 10/07/2008
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