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WRAPUP 3-Crisis panel chair: Politics may have doomed Lehman

Stocks

   

Wed Sep 1, 2010 3:45pm EDT

* Angelides: Politics may have blocked Lehman rescue

* Cites emails, letters

* Fuld reiterates view that govt could have helped Lehman

* "Too big to fail" subject of 2-day crisis panel hearing (New throughout with comments from Lehman Brothers panel)

By David Lawder and Dave Clarke

WASHINGTON, Sept 1 (Reuters) - U.S. officials appeared to have made a policy decision not to bail out Lehman Brothers, the head of a panel investigating the financial crisis said on Wednesday, challenging the view of regulators that they had no legal authority to help.

The comments lent support to former Lehman Chairman Richard Fuld's contention that the Federal Reserve and Treasury could have done more to prevent his firm's 2008 bankruptcy, which hastened the worst global recession since World War Two.

"It seems to me that over a period of months what ends up being made is a conscious policy decision not to rescue the entity," said Phil Angelides, chairman of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission.

"It also looks like there are political considerations at play," Angelides said, citing emails and letters.

The commission is holding a two-day session focused on what to do about firms deemed too big to fail.

It released 322 pages of documents and timelines detailing regulators' discussions starting with the March 2008 near-collapse of Bear Stearns through the September 2008 Lehman Brothers bankruptcy. (link.reuters.com/geq78n)

"I just can't stomach us bailing out lehman," Jim Wilkinson, who was then Treasury chief of staff, wrote in an internal email dated Sept. 9, 2008, days before Lehman's bankruptcy. "Will be horrible in the press don't u think?"

In another email, Wilkinson wrote that the White House had ruled out any government money to back a Lehman rescue, adding there was "no way in hell (Treasury Secretary Henry) paulson could blink now."

Fuld told the commission he did not know why the Fed declined to open its lending window to Lehman on the same basis as other firms. "What I was told was that the Fed said, yes we are expanding the window... but not for you Lehman Brothers."

The financial crisis, which began with defaults on U.S. home mortgages, led to the collapse, bailout or government-brokered sale of major financial firms including Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, Washington Mutual, Citigroup and Wachovia in 2008.

The 10-member, congressionally-appointed commission will hear from Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp Chairman Sheila Bair on Thursday, and is due to issue its report on the causes of the crisis by Dec. 15.

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Comments (1)
Larry2012 wrote:

Gee, they couldn’t have failed so miserably because they were crooks. Maybe they annoyed Bernanke, or Dodd, or Geithner, or that other idiot, Barney Frank. Whatever the reason, they deserved it. I’m just sorry for all the little people that got screwed.

Sep 01, 2010 12:44pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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