- “The disease that left [Lehman] vulnerable was a mad embracing of risk, the excess use of leverage, an extensive exposure to mortgage and real estate, and the enormous usage of derivatives — concurrent with a lack of intelligent risk management,” Barry Ritholtz writes. Citi and JPM merely made matters worse when Lehman’s “immune system was compromised.”
- Tapping Janet Yellen as Fed vice chairman is a good choice. “She’s open-minded, a good counterweight to the inflation hawks who think that any day now we’ll be partying like it’s 1979,” Paul Krugman says. “She’ll provide exactly the kind of intellectual flexibility the Fed needs.”
- Interesting to note the examiner’s scathing report on who should be held accountable for Lehman’s collapse doesn’t mention short sellers, Jeff Matthews points out on his blog. Instead blame falls on “a lot of really bad management by people desperate to keep a sinking ship afloat any way they could, including ‘accounting maneuvers.’”
- Is it surprising that allegations surrounding Tim Geithner and the NY Fed surfaced in the examiner’s report on Lehman’s collapse? Yves Smith weighs in.
- “All in all, the entire system failed,” Barry Ritholtz bluntly states. “The situation is utterly disgusting, and if the investing public pulls its money out of the completely corrupt public markets for a generation or more, it would not surprise me.”
- They can’t be too happy at Ernst & Young today. “Enron brought down Arthur Andersen,” Felix Salmon says. “Will Lehman do the same for Ernst & Young?”
- Takeover talks swarm the rumor mill this week. “I don’t know if this would be considered a sign of a healthy market or an ailing one, but we can’t ignore the presence of so many takeover rumors, specifically those concerning high profile retailers,” Joshua Brown writes at The Reformed Broker.
- Fallout from Lehman raises some troubling questions. There’s a “seminal” question, blogger Karl Denninger says at the Market Ticker, “that is, whether the asset class at the core of the original problem, the banking system, now has clean balance sheets and it can be reasonably assumed that what is reported in terms of assets, liabilities and earnings is in fact real.”
- US-subsidized mortgage modifications rise 6% from a month earlier to one million, Treasury says.
- Economy’s in the midst of a “sham recovery,” former labor secretary Robert Reich writes. Big companies, Wall Street and high-income Americans are doing better, but Main Street, small businesses as well as middle and low-income Americans face a much gloomier outlook.
