Jan. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Standard & Poorâs and Moodyâs Corp. won dismissal of a lawsuit seeking to hold them responsible for defrauding investors who bought about $100 billion of mortgage- backed securities.
At a hearing today, U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan in New York said he would dismiss claims against the rating companies, according to a clerk for the judge. Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., which was alleged to have once owned the bonds that were sold, is bankrupt and not a defendant in the case.
âWe are pleased the judge granted our motion,â Chris Atkins, a spokesman for S&P, a unit of McGraw-Hill Cos., said in an interview. Michael Adler, a spokesman for New York-based Moodyâs, didnât immediately return a call.
Investors in the mortgage-backed securities claimed in their lawsuit that S&P and Moodyâs misled them by disregarding ratings guidelines, serving conflicting roles in evaluating and structuring the bonds, and sacrificing their independence.
The ruling in the mortgage case came after defense lawyers in other lawsuits related to Lehman Brothers sought dismissals. Those cases involve fraud claims against the underwriters of Lehmanâs debt and stock and against former directors and officers, including ex-Chief Executive Officer Richard Fuld.
Kaplan didnât rule in those lawsuits, which focus on hundreds of public offerings generating total proceeds of more than $47 billion. Kaplan said that he would issue a written opinion explaining his decision in the mortgage case and rendering an opinion in the other cases.
Max Berger, a lawyer for investors, didnât immediately return a call.
The cases are In Re Lehman Brothers Securities and ERISA Litigation, 09-md-2017, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan),
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aQRE2xtY3Q4A&pos=2
Nobody was misleading anybody and everybody is happy to have lost billions of USD.:eek:
At a hearing today, U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan in New York said he would dismiss claims against the rating companies, according to a clerk for the judge. Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., which was alleged to have once owned the bonds that were sold, is bankrupt and not a defendant in the case.
âWe are pleased the judge granted our motion,â Chris Atkins, a spokesman for S&P, a unit of McGraw-Hill Cos., said in an interview. Michael Adler, a spokesman for New York-based Moodyâs, didnât immediately return a call.
Investors in the mortgage-backed securities claimed in their lawsuit that S&P and Moodyâs misled them by disregarding ratings guidelines, serving conflicting roles in evaluating and structuring the bonds, and sacrificing their independence.
The ruling in the mortgage case came after defense lawyers in other lawsuits related to Lehman Brothers sought dismissals. Those cases involve fraud claims against the underwriters of Lehmanâs debt and stock and against former directors and officers, including ex-Chief Executive Officer Richard Fuld.
Kaplan didnât rule in those lawsuits, which focus on hundreds of public offerings generating total proceeds of more than $47 billion. Kaplan said that he would issue a written opinion explaining his decision in the mortgage case and rendering an opinion in the other cases.
Max Berger, a lawyer for investors, didnât immediately return a call.
The cases are In Re Lehman Brothers Securities and ERISA Litigation, 09-md-2017, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan),
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aQRE2xtY3Q4A&pos=2
Nobody was misleading anybody and everybody is happy to have lost billions of USD.:eek: