The day of the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers – level 3

15-09-2008

Lehman Brothers was one of the biggest banks in the United States. It invested heavily into the mortgage market. The bank had assets of 680 billion dollars which were supported only by 22 billion dollars of firm capital. It was a very risky situation because just a four-percent decline in house values would wipe out all capital.

In 2008, the housing market collapsed and the bank’s shares lost 50% of their value. The management asked the government for help but the government refused to help.

On September 15, 2008, Lehman Brothers filed bankruptcy. It was the biggest bankruptcy in the history of the United States.

Difficult words: mortgage (a contract by which a bank gives you money to buy a house), assets (things which have value and which a company owns), firm capital (the actual money a company has), decline (a moment when something goes down), share (a part of a company which you can own), file bankruptcy (to ask to be officially bankrupt).

What strategies could Lehman Brothers have employed to reduce their risk in the mortgage market and potentially avoid bankruptcy?

LEARN 3000 WORDS with DAYS IN LEVELS

Days in Levels is designed to teach you 3000 words in English. Please follow the instructions
below.

How to improve your English with Days in Levels: 

Test

  1. Do the test at Test Languages.
  2. Go to your level. Go to Level 1 if you know 1-1000 words. Go to Level 2 if you know 1000-2000 words. Go to Level 3 if you know 2000-3000 words.

Reading

  1. Read two new articles article at Days in Levels every day.
  2. Read one previous article too and check if you remember all new words.

Listening

  1. Listen to the new article and read the text at the same time.
  2. Listen to the new article without reading the text.

Writing

  1. Answer the question under the new article and write your answer in the comments.

Speaking

  1. Choose one person from the Skype section.
  2. Talk with this person. You can answer questions from Speak in Levels.