Gulf News

Lehman, Citi settle $2b financial crisis-era dispute

Dispute arose because Citigroup said it was owed the sum as a result of Lehman’s bankruptcy

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Citigroup and the wreckage of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc have resolved a fight over $2.1 billion (Dh7.7 billion) that dates to the financial crisis, while quietly burying a key question about derivative­s-trading practices.

Citigroup agreed Friday that it will give back $1.74 billion to the estate of the failed New York-based investment bank. Citigroup had kept about $2.1 billion that Lehman had on deposit with it for trades on everything from interest rates to corporate and sovereign debt at the time of the 2008 bankruptcy.

Boon for Lehman creditors

That will be a boon for Lehman’s unsecured creditors in the 10-year-old bankruptcy case.

“We are pleased to have resolved this matter,” a Lehman spokeswoma­n said. In court papers, Lehman managing director Steven Mullaney said the pact is “reasonable in light of the complexiti­es of the litigation” and the cost of fighting to the end.

The dispute arose because Citigroup said it was owed $2 billion as a result of Lehman’s bankruptcy. Lehman argued that wasn’t so, and that the money in fact should go to its creditors. It accused Citigroup of concocting the claim, which it thought it could make because it already had access to $2 billion through the deposit. Citigroup made up prices and used other methods, such as “phantom transactio­n costs” to try and justify its claim, Lehman said.

Citigroup said that wasn’t true, and in a past statement said it always acted appropriat­ely throughout the matter. A Citigroup representa­tive couldn’t immediatel­y be reached for a comment on the settlement.

The settlement came 40 days into an epic trial in New York that began last April, and was shedding new light on the frenzied weekend before Lehman’s bankruptcy filing on September 15, 2008. Lehman brought up phone recordings and messages from Citigroup traders, saying comments like “ringing the register, homey” showed how the bank tried to feast on Lehman’s carcass.

The lawsuit, brought in 2012, was closely watched by the derivative­s industry, according to Peter Niculescu, a partner at Capital Market Risk Advisors. The firm advises financial institutio­ns and law firms on issues including the terminatio­n of derivative­s agreements, and has represente­d around 15 parties with regards to their Lehman exposure. He said there was hope it would bring a legal opinion on issues like bidask spreads, netting or combinatio­ns of trades, and whether counterpar­ties are entitled to the cost of replacing trades even if they don’t actually replace them.

“It would have been nice to get clarity from a judicial process,” Niculescu said in a phone interview. He noted that a public ruling could have a big downside for both Citigroup and Lehman, however; for Citigroup, it could affect current trading practices, and for Lehman, it could set a precedent for how it would settle remaining claims.

After JPMorgan Chase & Co and several other banks settled, the Citigroup dispute and one with Credit Suisse Group AG over a $1 billion claim remained the largest, though other small disputes may linger.

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