Banking Crisis
UBS Advisors In Lawyers’ Sights Over Lehman Notes

Lawyers in the US are making cases against
UBS advisors for allegedly selling conservative clients into
more than $1 billion of
Lehman Brothers structured notes that are now almost
worthless.
James Sallah, a partner with Florida-based attorney, Sallah &
Cox, said he has taken calls from more than 40 clients who were
sold Lehman structured notes this year but claimed they were not
adequately warned of the risks.
“These are clients that were conservative investors put into
these investments because they believed they were less risky,” Mr
Sallah said.
Mr Sallah said he intended to initiate an arbitration process
between his clients and UBS in an effort to get his clients’
money back.
Mr Sallah isn’t the only attorney in the US representing clients
who claim to have been sold into the “less risky” investments by
UBS advisors – news service Bloomberg quoted six
separate law firms in New York, Miami and Florida saying they are
taking calls from disaffected UBS clients.
A UBS spokesman said in a statement that UBS has been in
communication with clients outlining potential alternatives while
the insolvency of Lehman continues to be worked out.
“UBS properly sold these investments to its clients. The
offering materials clearly identified Lehman as the issuer and
discussed all the relevant risks and features of the product,"
the bank said in a statement.
The amount of UBS client money invested in the Lehman structured
notes is believed to be in excess of $1 billion.
“The more financial issues the firm [Lehman] had towards the end,
the more debt it was raising and the more notes it was issuing,”
noted Mr Sallah.
Structured notes are generally constructed from a combination of
bonds, stocks, commodities, currencies and derivatives and sold
to retail clients by financial firms to raise funds.
Bloomberg said US state regulators are fielding so many
calls about Lehman's notes they're considering a task force to
investigate the sales, citing Rex Staples, general counsel for
the North American Securities Administrators Association.
Lehman filed for bankruptcy on 15 September leaving holders of
the notes waiting in line with other senior unsecured creditors
for what's left of their money, reported Bloomberg. The newswire
quoted SecondMarket saying the notes with full principal
protection are trading at 10 cents to 14 cents on the dollar.