A brochure pitching $1.84 million of Lehman Brothers Principal Protected Noes sold in August 20078, a month before the firm failed, promised "100 percent principal protection."
Buyers had "uncapped appreciation potential" pegged to gains in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index, the brochure said. In the worst case, they would get back their $1,000-per-note investment in three years. Only the last in a list of 15 risk factors mentioned the biggest danger: "An investment in the notes will be subject to the credit risk of Lehman Brothers."
Lehman's Sept. 15 bankruptcy leaves holders of the notes waiting in line with other unsecured creditors for what's left of their money. The collapse has rattled Wall Street's $114 billion structured-notes business, which Lehman, Merrill Lynch & Co., Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., all based in New York, used to raise cheaper funding as the credit crisis drove bond yields higher. About three-fifths of the $68.1 billion sold this year were bought by individual investors, according to data compiled by mtn-i, a London-based firm that tracks the market.
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