For Lehman employees, the collapse is personal

In the last few days, employees of Lehman Brothers have wrung their hands as the value of their stock evaporated before their eyes. Now, many fear losing their jobs, too.

In scenes eerily reminiscent of the final days of Bear Stearns, the megawatt energy within Lehman Brothers has dimmed to a hum as employees focus on the fate of the firm and what it might mean to them. To make matters worse, pink slips for previously announced layoffs were being handed out this week.

“Everyone is walking around like they have just been Tasered,” said one Lehman employee, who, like many interviewed for this article, declined to be named because he was not authorized to talk publicly. “Everyone was always hoping we would pull through. Now, that is not really an option.”

On Lehman’s third- and fourth-floor trading floors overlooking Broadway’s lights in Midtown Manhattan, traders continued working at their terminals, or at least were giving the appearance of doing so. At the same time, many polished their résumés and contacted recruiters.

Read it all.

print

Posted in * Economics, Politics, Economy, Stock Market

2 comments on “For Lehman employees, the collapse is personal

  1. RazorbackPadre says:

    These people knew they were pulling shady deals and cooking the books to cover it all up while still taking their bonuses. So I’m confused. Are we supposed to feel sorry for them?

  2. Chazaq says:

    Looks like the Large Hadron Collider successfully zapped Lehman Brothers. I love modern physics when it works.