financearmageddon.blogspot.com
When Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy ten years ago on Friday, the
question on everyone’s minds was simple: “Who’s next?” If a pillar of
Wall Street worth hundreds of billions of dollars just months before
couldn’t be trusted with the public's money, then nowhere was safe.
Panicked investors rushed for the door, banks refused to lend to each
other, and money market funds began to collapse.
“I describe it as an
economic Pearl Harbor,” Warren Buffett, the legendary investor of
Berkshire Hathaway, told VICE News. “It was something we hadn’t seen
before. Even the 1929 panic was nothing like this. I mean, the system
stopped.“ Buffett had a front row seat to the global crisis even before
the Bush Administration took up the struggle. He had been approached by
Lehman’s CEO Dick Fuld for emergency capital earlier in the summer, and
after it failed, he found himself courted by other teetering investment
banks desperate for capital. His $5 billion investment in Goldman Sachs
saved the firm, and netted him billions. He credits the Bush
administration, led by Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, with helping to
prevent a second Great Depression.
“When they realized the gravity of
what was happening, we were having a run on the United States, maybe a
run on the world, they stepped up,” Buffett said. He’s not convinced,
however, that the financial community's takeaway from its brush with
financial Armageddon will prevent future disaster. “Humans will continue
to behave foolishly and sometimes en masse. And that doesn’t change. We
get smarter but we don’t get wiser," Buffett said.
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