Excel error wreaks havoc on Lehman sale

Barclays ends up with more assets than it wanted.

A reformatting error in an Excel spreadsheet has turned out to have huge consequences for Barclays Capital - it has ended up buying more assets of bust Lehman Brothers than it meant to.

The law firm representing Barclays filed the motion on Friday in US Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York, seeking to exclude 179 Lehman contracts that it said were mistakenly included in the asset purchase agreement.

The firm - Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP - said in the motion that one of its first-year law associates had unknowingly added the contracts when reformatting a spreadsheet in Excel.

At the time when the error occurred, Cleary Gottlieb was working under a tight deadline put in place by the bankruptcy court to submit the purchase offer from Barclays, according to the motion. The mistake was discovered October 1 and was first reported by Above the Law, a legal news website.

A representative of the law firm declined to comment about the matter on Wednesday.
Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy on Sept. 15, in the first of a series of blows to the financial sector that quickly led to the meltdown of stock markets worldwide. Three days later, Barclays agreed to acquire some of the US assets of the financially strapped investment bank.

"This court has previously recognised the exigent circumstances surrounding the sale order and the harm to the financial markets that would have resulted had this deal not been completed quickly," Cleary Gottlieb said in Friday's motion.

It added that the parties to the deal "were working literally around the clock on an extremely compressed schedule." In light of those circumstances, the law firm asked the bankruptcy court to "correct the record to accurately reflect" the list of Lehman contracts that Barclays meant to include in the deal.

According to the motion, Barclays sent the spreadsheet containing the list of contracts to Cleary Gottlieb at 7:48 p.m. EDT on Sept. 18. The spreadsheet - which contained almost 1,000 rows of data with a total of more than 24,000 individual cells - needed to be reformatted and converted into a PDF file so it could be posted on the bankruptcy court's website before midnight. At 11:37 p.m., Cleary Gottlieb sent the converted file to the court, the motion said.

However, contracts that had been marked as "hidden" in the spreadsheet when it was received by the law firm were added to the purchase offer during the reformatting process, according to the motion. Those contracts were not supposed to be part of the deal; they also were marked with an "N" for "No" in the original version of the spreadsheet, Cleary Gottlieb said in the motion.

A hearing on the motion has been scheduled for Nov. 5.


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theref | Published: 19:40 GMT, 20 October 2008

I cannot duplicate this. What versions of Word and Adobe were used? What does "reformat" mean?

Dante | Published: 22:02 GMT, 15 October 2008

I hope that 1st year law associate didn't become the scapegoat. What kind of idiot "hides" rows in a spreadsheet to be used for legal document? Hidden rows are considered part of a filing if the spreadsheet itself is filed, since it is part of the file.

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