Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Don't Forget Lehman Bros.










Just as California's State Compensation Insurance Fund was rebounding from the Unicover induced crisis in the workers' compensation market, which forced SCIF to protect more than 50% of the market by year 2000, the monolithic carrier succumbed to enticing bond purchases that was part of the precipitous mortgage backed securities debacle that plunged the country into the worst recession in history by 2008.

Insurance companies routinely invest in bonds because they are relatively safe investments and not generally subject to the vagaries of the market - they are fixed income securities upon which an investor can usually expect the represented return of both interest and the underlying capital.

SCIF alleged in a 2011 federal lawsuit that financial services giant Lehman Brothers misrepresented the risk associated with more than $85 million in investment bonds the Fund purchased between 2004 and 2008.

Those bonds, which were to mature between 2010 and 2014, were allegedly sold in 2009 for $19 million.

The carrier just recently dismissed from that lawsuit three Lehman executives it alleged steered the brokerage into selling these misguided investments all the while misrepresenting to customers, SCIF and others, the true extent of the firm's financial degradation and concealing the worthlessness of the mortgages underlying the purchased bonds.

WorkCompCentral's Mike Whiteley reports this morning that a joint stipulation filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York June 3 dismisses former Lehman Brothers Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Richard S. Fuld Jr., former Chief Financial Officer and former Global Chief Risk Officer Christopher M. O'Meara and former Chief Financial Officer Erin Callahan as the three "officer defendants" in the lawsuit.

The joint stipulation cites a confidential, $1 million settlement agreed to by Fuld, O'Meara, Callan and SCIF last October. As part of the settlement, which was later filed in district court, the officers admitted no wrongdoing and denied any wrongdoing by Lehman Brothers.

The lawsuit originally named as defendants the three executives, nine former directors of Lehman Brothers and 19 firms that underwrote the Lehman Brothers bonds. Cabrera Capital Markets, Citigroup Global Markets, Mellon Financial Markets, and Wells Fargo Securities were among the underwriters named in the lawsuit.

The only remaining defendant now is Lehman's auditors, Ernst & Young, which was added to the case in a Jan. 5, 2012, amended complaint. That filing alleges the auditor was intimately familiar with Lehman's operations but turned a "blind eye" to Lehman's shenanigans.

Ernst & Young had previously agreed to pay $99 million to Lehman Brothers investors to settle a class-action case alleging Lehman Brothers understated its risk in the commercial real estate mortgage market and overestimated its financial solvency.

When Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, it listed $619 billion in debt and $639 billion in assets. The company was liquidated in 2011 and had distributed about $56 billion to outside creditors by last month.

The case is illustrative of the deep ties that workers' compensation has to the overall economy besides just providing a risk distribution system against work place injuries.

It is also a microcosmic look at how even the most sophisticated investors can get duped.

But it is also demonstrates the risks involved in providing insurance - for a smaller carrier a net $66 million loss in the value of an investment is disastrous. SCIF has the financial muscle to absorb that loss, but losses like this eventually make the way down to the policy holder.

SCIF has done a remarkable job diversifying its portfolio and keeping expenses low for such a large institution, albeit many disagree with its current course of financial restructuring.

Nevertheless, it's easy to see the lingering effects of the mortgage based securities meltdown that put the world's financial systems to their knees.

By the way, the lawsuit states that Lehman CEO Fuld received $111.8 million in salary, bonuses and restricted stock unit awards between fiscal year 2003 and 2007.

Just saying...

2 comments:

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  2. I love your last line.....he he he Were starting to hear that line from lots of folks, lately. After they have pulled back the veil and exposed the truth as to what is really going on in our world today. It's a lot like the 7 stages of grief we all go through I think? Once we come to the realization that things in our world are not as just and as fair as we always thought they were, or have been led and taught to believe they were all our lives. Once we see past the facade, we all start speaking out, about the truth we have found, in a society that seems blind to it all. Thus many folks are ending their essays stories rants ect....... with our stated facts, and the phrase,"Just saying" I see a bumper sticker in the Works here? Ah, oh I better not get to entrepernueral or my Workers comp manger might get upset with me.... Hmm?And, we actual have a great working relationship, despite our legal limbo battle with each other, and the system. Peace and thanks for all the great reporting and digging on the facts for both sides of the story. I thought you were a little biased at first but you really turned out to be impartial....... SAY would you like to be an ADMIN judge in WA State, were looking for a few more good "impartial ones" HE he he Just saying... peace. And for the record I agree, with your Pop, on the hocus pocus needle and pins health care. Just saying again I guess. Ok Thanks as always, for more great info. keep it coming. From The Crazy One, who ya know, the work comp system as is, help to make that way... wow. Peace

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