| Click for the Finfacts Ireland Portal Homepage |

Finfacts Business News Centre

   
Home 
 
 News
 Irish
 European
 International
 
 Analysis/Comment

RSS FEED


How to use our RSS feed

 
Web Finfacts

See Search Box lower down this column for searches of Finfacts news pages. Where there may be the odd special character missing from an older page, it's a problem that developed when Interactive Tools upgraded to a new content management system.

Welcome

Finfacts is Ireland's leading business information site and you are in its business news section.

We provide access to live business television and business related videos from: Bloomberg TV; The Wall Street Journal; CNBC and the Financial Times. Click image:

Links

Finfacts Homepage

Irish Share Prices

Euribor Daily Rates

Irish Economy

Global Income Per Capita

Global Cost of Living

Irish Tax 2008

Climate Change Reports

Global News

Bloomberg News

CNN Money

Cnet Tech News

Newspapers

Irish Independent

Irish Times

Irish Examiner

New York Times

Financial Times

Technology News

 

Feedback

 

Content Management by interactivetools.com.

News : International Last Updated: Oct 21, 2009 - 6:11:09 AM


Big 4 accounting firm PwC says first year fees for winding up Lehman Brothers Europe total £266 million
By Finfacts Team
Oct 20, 2009 - 5:47:09 AM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

Richard S. Fuld Jr, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Lehman Brothers, captured during the session Myths and Realities of Sovereign Wealth Funds at the Annual Meeting 2008 of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, January 24, 2008.
Big 4 accounting firm PwC (Pricewaterhouse Coopers) has said that its first year of working as administrators in winding up Lehman Brothers Europe, the European unit of the collapsed US investment banking giant, has earned it £154 million and £112 million has been paid in legal fees binging the total to £266 million.

Lehman collapsed on September 15, 2008 and the fees are to September 14, 2009.

A report prepared for creditors says PwC is preparing a claim of $90bn against the US parent, which will raise the value of claims by the European unit against other Lehman companies, to $208bn.

The administrators say: "At this stage, there is no visibility on the level of recoveries."

PwC says:

  • Of the $35.2bn held in client inventory at 15 Sept 2008 for 553 clients
  • $13.3bn has been returned to 51 clients

The firm also says creditors with a value of $7bn in the Statement of Affairs that was prepared by PwC, have submitted claims with a value of $21bn.

 
The history of Lehman Brothers parallels the growth of the United States. The firm began as a general store in the American South. Henry Lehman, who came from  Germany, opened a shop in  Montgomery, Alabama in 1844. In 1850, he was joined by brothers Emanuel and Mayer, and they named the business Lehman Brothers. Cotton was the cash crop of the day and the Lehmans accepted it from farmers as currency to settle accounts. The firm  traded the cotton for cash or merchandise, becoming brokers of the crop. In 1858, they opened an office in New York, which was the commodity trading center of the country.

Over 840,000 pending or failed trades existed at collapse date and 158,700 over-the-counter derivatives.

PwC said in the half-year to September 2009, the average hourly charge was £302 compared with £329 in the previous six months.

It doesn't imply that PwC cut its charges and reflects a higher level of donkey-work charges in the most recent period.

Partners' average charge per hour was £636.

The chargeout rate for the juniors was £141.

PwC's second progress report dated.

The Economist reported last month that US law firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges, the lead law firm in the clean-up at Lehman Brothers, had requested more than $100m of fees in the case so far.

It said Weil’s lawyers worked 86,000 hours on Lehman, with the most senior partners getting around $1,000 per hour. They spent an estimated $692,000 on computer research and $224,000 on photocopies.

When all is done, the Economist said lawyers, financial advisers, restructuring experts and others could bag close to $1 billion in court-awarded fees from Lehman in the US, well above the $757m they received after Enron’s demise, the record for a bankruptcy case.

SEE: Finfacts article Sept 09, 2009: Boom or bust - - Big accounting firms still in the money but should they be trusted?

Related Articles


© Copyright 2007 by Finfacts.com

Top of Page

International
Latest Headlines
Markets News Monday: Morgan Stanley economist say sharp appreciation of China's currency would be disastrous for the United States
Obama in stunning health reform victory; House backs historic change; Senate approval expected
Monday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - March 22, 2010
European Union-wide authority to deal with failed banks needed says IMF chief; "Pretense of progress" not sufficient
Markets News Friday: Media report in China says Google may announce pullout next week; Seán FitzPatrick kept in Garda custody overnight
Obama signs jobs support bill; US labour market will recover at a “lackluster” pace
Friday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - March 19, 2010
The “Great Risk Shift” - - why it may be time to re-think the developed/ emerging-markets distinction
South China's industrial heartland of Guangdong to raise minimum wage by average of 21% to range of $96 to $150 a month
Worldwide fish production at 160 million tons - - eight times as much as in 1950
Markets News Afternoon: Irish Services Producer Prices down 4.1% in 2009; EU trade deficit up; Initial weekly jobless benefit claims fall 5,000 in US
US Leading Economic Index increased 0.1% in February indicating slow economic recovery
US current-account deficit fell to $419.9 billion in 2009 - - the smallest deficit since 2001 and down from $706.1 billion in 2008
Markets News Thursday: Former Anglo Irish Bank chief Seán FitzPatrick under arrest; China carrying out yuan stress tests on 12 industries
Thursday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - March 18, 2010
World Bank says China’s growth momentum has continued in the first months of 2010
Fund managers shifting their equity focus away from Europe to US and Japan; European equity markets seen as “cheap” by one-third of polled managers
US housing starts and permits fell in February because of severe weather
Markets News Tuesday: Shares rise in Europe and Asia; Investors in Japan expect central bank to extend lending support
Lehman ousted whistleblower in 2008 who had raised red flags with Big 4 accounting firm Ernst & Young on $50bn scam; Box-ticking auditors in frame