Why Lehman and Merrill fell IT all began with the sub-prime crisis.
2001-2005: House prices in the US begin to rise rapidly. Banks lend aggressively and create a sub prime industry. Sub-prime lending refers to lending (at slightly higher interest rates) to people who may not be eligible for a loan under normal circumstances. Maybe they don’t have a regular job or income, or have defaulted in the past.
2005: The booming housing market halted abruptly in many parts of the US. 2006: Prices are flat, home sales fall. February 2007: Sub-prime industry collapses in the US; more than 25 sub-prime lenders declare bankruptcy, announce significant losses, or put themselves up for sale.
August 2007: Many leading mortgage lenders in the US filed for bankruptcy March 2008: Bear Sterns falls. September 2008: Lehman Brothers file for bankruptcy. Merrill Lynch sells off to Bank of America.
In simple terms it means that the mortgage banks borrowed money against the mortgages on the condition that they would repay to lenders as soon as they recovered their mortgages. The lenders in this case were financial institutions (like Bear Sterns, Lehman and Merril Lynch) who in turn sold retail bonds to individuals.
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