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After 14 years, Lehman Brothers' brokerage ends liquidation process
The liquidation of Lehman Brothers' brokerage unit has ended, 14 years and 13 days after its parent's bankruptcy helped trigger a market freefall and global financial crisis
The liquidation of Lehman Brothers' brokerage unit has ended, 14 years and 13 days after its parent's bankruptcy helped trigger a market freefall and global financial crisis.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Shelley Chapman in Manhattan closed the brokerage's estate on Wednesday and awarded final payments to the trustee who oversaw its liquidation and his law firm.
More than $115 billion was paid out.
Lehman's 111,000 customers received all $106 billion they were owed, and secured creditors also received full payouts.
Unsecured creditors recovered $9.4 billion, or about 41 cents on the dollar. They were originally expected to recover about 20 cents on the dollar.
Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc, the brokerage's parent, had been Wall Street's fourth-largest investment bank before filing what remains by far the largest U.S. bankruptcy on Sept. 15, 2008.
Its collapse led to much debate over whether and in what circumstances companies should be allowed to fail.
Barclays Plc bought most of Lehman's U.S. brokerage assets early in the financial crisis. The parent's Chapter 11 bankruptcy plan was confirmed in 2011.
Lehman's demise taught that "a failure of a large financial institution should be avoided, but history tells us that it is inevitable," the brokerage's trustee James Giddens said in a statement.
Giddens' law firm Hughes Hubbard & Reed was awarded $424 million as final compensation for 14 years of work on the case.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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