An 84-year-old woman and her mentally ill son who bought derivatives linked to bankrupt US investment bank Lehman Brothers have reached an agreement with DBS on a partial refund, the woman's younger son said last night.
They are the first Hong Kong investors in Lehman-linked derivatives known to have reached a settlement with a bank.
'Of course we're very happy. It is a settlement that I think is reasonable,' said Chan Kam-wah, the woman's younger son.
The settlement could put pressure on more banks to offer refunds to investors in such products.
It is the first sign of a resolution of the row over Lehman Brothers derivatives, most of them so-called minibonds, sold to retail investors, and comes a day after Chief Executive Donald Tsang Yam-kuen demanded banks respond by today to the government's proposal that they buy back such investments.
The Hong Kong Association of Banks says it hopes to have a reply by today.