After that, I crossed to the other side of the dock at Canary Wharf, for lunch at Lehman Brothers. Over a silver-service meal that would have done a Michelin inspector proud, my companion expressed their pity for the regulator; how the people working there were not paid enough; how Northern Rock, which was a particularly aggressive extender of credit, was a risky business model.
As the liveried waiters poured the most expensive wines, all seemed well and content in Lehman land. A few weeks later, Lehman went bust, and we were treated to those pictures of employees carrying out their boxes of personal belongings as the world juddered on its axis. The point of me relaying this now is that it was no coincidence. A rise in US interest rates accompanied by defaults on sub-prime loans had caused the wholesale credit market to go into spasm. Northern Rock was caught; but so, then, was Lehman.
This weekend, we've had a rude reminder of those days, with the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (or SVB) in the US. Suddenly, the word that reared its head back then and was the link between Northern Rock, with its customer base in the northeast of England, and the imperious Wall Street giant, Lehman, was being used again: "contagion".
This story is from the March 14, 2023 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the March 14, 2023 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Independent helps raise £90,000 to return medieval Bible to Salisbury Cathedral
A rare 13th-century Bible will return to its ancestral home in Salisbury Cathedral more than 700 years after it was written, thanks to the help of The Independent.
Avanti managers turn down £250 offer for working day off as new year strike looms
Train managers at Avanti West Coast have turned down an offer worth £250 for working on a day off – or £300 at weekends.
How will water firms rinse the taxpayer even further?
It was probably not the best day for the water industry regulator to announce that average bills in England and Wales will increase by 36 per cent over the next five years.
Starmer under fire after £100m hospices boost
Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of giving with one hand and taking with the other” amid fears a 100m boost for hospices in England will be wiped out by Rachel Reeves’s national insurance hike.
PM hits out at 'dangers' of tariffs in warning to Trump
Sir Keir Starmer has hit out at the “dangers” of tariffs, putting the prime minister on a collision course with incoming US president Donald Trump.
Mandelson set to be named UK ambassador to the US
Lord Peter Mandelson is expected to be announced as UK ambassador to the United States as Sir Keir Starmer prepares for a Donald Trump presidency.
Trump? No, Pelicot has to be the Person of the Year
The woman at the centre of France's mass rape trial should be celebrated for her sacrifice and courage, says Laura Bates
How Gisele Pelicot's rape trial shamed 'Mr Everyman'
Pelicot’s message – that she and other victims of sexual abuse have no reason to feel ashamed – has reverberated beyond France, writes Crime Correspondent Amy-Clare Martin
Hague demands 'force for democracy' be released
Tory peer among former foreign secretaries backing jailed Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi despite her pariah status
England's selection issues in a defining year for Stokes
England’s busiest year of Test cricket finished with a bang. Just not the type they were after.