Arbitration case costs Neuberger $4 million

Neuberger Berman Group LLC, a money manager that was part of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., was ordered by an industry regulator to pay about $4 million to three clients who bought structured notes backed by the failed investment bank
JUL 24, 2011
By  Bloomberg
Neuberger Berman Group LLC, a money manager that was part of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., was ordered by an industry regulator to pay about $4 million to three clients who bought structured notes backed by the failed investment bank. A Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. panel ruled July 15 that Neuberger Berman is responsible for the investors' initial investment, plus 3% annual interest, according to an arbitration ruling from the regulator. The so-called principal-protected notes were sold from June until August 2008, a month before Lehman filed for bankruptcy protection. “Our clients had all expressed an aversion to anything Lehman,” Alan Block, one of the claimant's lawyers, said in an interview. “The way the notes were sold, it wasn't clear that Lehman was the underwriter.” Rich Chimberg, a spokesman for Neuberger Berman, declined to comment. Lehman sold a majority stake in the company to employees in May 2009. Banks create structured products by bundling debt with derivatives and offering them to individual investors as an alternative to traditional investments. Derivatives are contracts whose value is derived from stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities.

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