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German savers Lehman losers

Allan Hall, in Berlin
16 Oct 2008


German savers have been burned to the tune of €500 million (£391 million) by the collapse of Lehman Brothers after being persuaded to put their money into "safe" certificates.

Stock market-averse Germans were eager to buy up these securities, which were hawked aggressively by investment advisers as "solid investments in the retail derivative market".

The Berlin-based German Institute for Investor Protection said many investors were not clear where their money was going. Many thought they had bought a bond, others that they had invested in some complex financial machinery only their brokers knew about.

Essentially, they were bearer bonds invested in the derivatives market that depended on the creditworthiness of the issuer to return the investment.

As well as 60,000 Lehman investors in Germany, thousands of others have been hit in the certificate scandal, to a total of €1.3 billion.

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This is exactly what happened to me, my parents and at least 3 of their friends! 18 000 Euro- most of the money my parents had saved for me since childhood could well be gone, as well as another 20 000 of their own money. When I went to the Citibank to discuss selling the certificates in late June this year I made clear that I might need the money soon for buying property. I was advised to keep it in this 100% Capital-secure investment, the conversation is still ringing in my ears:
"So it is really 100% safe?"
"Yes, the worst that can happen is that you only get the amount back that you paid in, it is 100% Capital secure."
Sickening!

- Head-To-Toe, London, UK, 23/10/2008 13:55
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