This week, TheStreet and RealMoney will be exploring the aftermath of Lehman Brothers' bankruptcy filing and the ensuing market chaos it brought to a head almost a year ago. Read all of our One Year Later coverage.
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Lehman Brothers' collapse a year ago was supposed to mark the death of the investment bank and the superiority of deposit-taking commercial banks. Big leveraged trading bets and thin capital cushions ultimately led Lehman to bankruptcy and Bear Stearns and Merrill Lynch into distressed sales, feeding the conventional wisdom that the era of dominance for big Wall Street banks had come to a close. But the troubles of Citigroup (C Quote) and soon Bank of America (BAC Quote) showed that having a large deposit base didn't preclude big problems. And, conversely, the quick rebounds of Goldman Sachs (GS Quote), a former investment bank, and JPMorgan Chase (JPM Quote), which has a big retail banking business, suggests a simple lesson to take away from the past year: Good managers and well-run companies are more important to a company's success than its business model alone.![]() |
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| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,405.83 | 1,102.35 | 2,190.86 | 34.82 |
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