By Joseph Checkler 
   Of DOW JONES DAILY BANKRUPTCY REVIEW 
 

The Securities and Exchange Commission has weighed in on a dispute between Barclays PLC (BCS) and the trustee unwinding Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s (LEHMQ) brokerage, saying a bankruptcy judge was correct in allowing the brokerage to keep more than $1.3 billion if that money is needed to pay customers back.

In a filing last week in Manhattan federal court, the SEC said a rule that protects brokerage customers was properly honored by the judge and that a decision allowing the money to unconditionally go to Barclays would have violated rules. Lehman's bankruptcy judge has said some money can "conditionally" go to Barclays, but the trustee said because of a shortfall, it would need the money so it could pay back customers.

The $3 billion dispute between Barclays and the trustee, James W. Giddens, stems from the less-followed portion of a February 2011 decision by Judge James Peck of U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan in what came to be known as Lehman's "secret discount" lawsuit.

In the more widely followed portion of the February ruling, Peck rejected most of the Lehman parent company's claims of Barclays reaping a secret windfall when it bought Lehman's broker-dealer unit in September 2008.

During the trial, the trustee separately argued that some of the money that went to Barclays at the time of the transaction should have actually been given to brokerage customers. Peck agreed, ordering the British bank to pay $2.054 billion to the trustee, a decision Barclays is appealing. In yet another part of the decision, Barclays is said to be entitled to an additional $869 million in so-called "clearance box" assets. Giddens is appealing that part of the ruling, saying that also belongs to customers.

Essentially, the $2.054 billion is from accounts that the trustee considers "cash," which it was explicitly said wouldn't be transferred to Barclays during the tumultuous days of September 2008.

Lehman last year sued Barclays for billions, accusing the British bank of negotiating a discount not adequately disclosed to the court when it bought Lehman's broker-dealer unit in 2008. Barclays argued in the months-long trial that both sides negotiated in good faith, and the deal, approved by Peck just days after the investment bank collapsed into bankruptcy, was Lehman's best option.

Lehman pressed its case that in September 2008, when Barclays was finalizing its purchase of Lehman's brokerage, Barclays scrambled for more assets and negotiated with some Lehman executives a $5 billion discount. Lehman said its bankruptcy attorney, Weil, Gotshal & Manges partner Harvey Miller, and other Lehman representatives weren't informed of the discount and neither was Peck. Lehman sought to recover what it called more than $11 billion in ill-gotten gains by Barclays.

In his ruling, Peck wrote at several points about the so-called "clarification letter" that became a focal point of the case, a letter Peck agreed on at the time of the sale should be drafted to address several complications and list some assets moving over from Lehman to Barclays. On several occasions throughout Lehman's bankruptcy and the Barclays trial, Peck emphasized he had never approved the actual letter.

But in the ruling, Peck agreed with a key Barclays argument about the letter, saying, "While not expressly approved in so many words, the clarification letter is deemed approved" by the fact that it was known that it would be drafted, and that no party objected to it in court.

Earlier this month, Peck signed off on Lehman's $65 billion creditor-payback plan, which should be put in motion in the coming few months.

Giddens, the trustee, is winding down Lehman's broker-dealer business under the authority of the Securities Investor Protection Corp., which governs the liquidation of failed brokerage firms. Giddens is also the trustee in charge of unwinding MF Global Holdings Ltd.'s (MFGLQ) brokerage.

His team quickly transferred some 110,000 brokerage accounts with a value of more than $92 billion out of Lehman Brothers following the investment bank's collapse in 2008. The bulk of the Lehman customer accounts, with assets of more than $40 billion, have been transferred to Barclays.

(Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review covers news about distressed companies and those under bankruptcy protection.)

-By Joseph Checkler, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2152; joseph.checkler@dowjones.com

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