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Lehman Files Bankruptcy–Largest Bankruptcy Filing in US History

Today, WallStreet was devastated following reports that Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy early Monday morning and said it will slowly wind down its operations after being in business for 158 years. At $639 billion, Lehman’s is the largest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history–easily surpassing the Enron and WorldCom collapses combined. Lehman filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court of the Southern District of New York. The company’s broker-dealer subsidiary and other parts of Lehman were not in the bankruptcy filing. Shares of Lehman were down 90% to around 40 cents a share. According to the details of the bankruptcy filing, Lehman held consolidated assets totaling $639 billion and total liabilities of $613 billion. The largest creditor to Lehman Brothers is Citigroup (C: 15.34, -2.62, -14.58%), which has $139 billion in bond debt, followed by The Bank of New York Mellon (BK: 38.35, -1.60, -4.00%), which had a combined $17 billion in bond debts with Lehman. In other liabilities, Japanese bank AOZORA loaned Lehman $463 million, while Lehman also has an outstanding bank loan with Mizuho Corporate Bank worth $289 million.  For questions regarding bankruptcy, call the Fears | Nachawati Law Firm, Phone (214) 890-0711, 4925 Greenville Avenue, Suite 715, Dallas, Texas 75206.

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Bankruptcy Business Law

Lehman Files Bankruptcy–Largest Filing in US History