
Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. stopped covering Japan's consumer lenders and retracted past research on the industry after Aiful Corp. threatened to sue over a report by analyst Walter Altherr that said it was "arguably insolvent". "All previous ratings and forecasts should no longer be relied upon," Keiko Sugai, a Tokyo-based spokeswoman for Lehman, said in a phone interview, declining to comment on the reason. Aiful, Japan's biggest consumer finance company by assets, has fallen 35 percent, closing at a record low today, since Altherr said June 23 that the lender is "arguably insolvent" on a parent basis. Credit-default swaps on the lender, which increase as investor perceptions of credit quality deteriorate, rose to a three-month high after the report...Akio Katsuragi, president of Lehman Brothers Japan Inc., told Aiful director Tsuneo Sakai on Aug. 1 that Altherr would no longer cover the company and that Lehman would retract all reports he wrote on Aiful and delete them from its Web site, Hirofumi Haruguchi, an Aiful spokesman in Tokyo, said in a telephone interview. Still Considering Lawsuit "We consider the action positively," Haruguchi said. "That's what we've been demanding of Lehman." Aiful is still considering whether to file a lawsuit against Lehman over the report, Haruguchi said...In addition to Aiful, Lehman will also drop coverage of Acom Co., Takefuji Corp. and Promise Co., Sugai said...more...
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