Whither Bear Stearns?

jwmorrice

Gentleman by Profession
Jun 30, 2003
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In the laboratory.
A nice little article with a bit of gallows humour!

jwm

With high risk and cheap stock, will Bear be sold?
REUTERS
By Jessica HallFri Mar 14, 8:45 PM ET


The emergency rescue of Bear Stearns Co Inc (BSC.N) on Friday left observers from all quarters wondering who would be the last man standing at the Wall Street bank.

When a Bear Stearns analyst moved to ask a question at a biotechnology investor meeting, Genentech Chief Executive Arthur Levinson quipped, "There's still somebody here from Bear? Let's give him a hand."

"I'm still here," said Bear Stearns analyst Mark Schoenebaum. But pointing to a JPMorgan analyst, he said, "I think I work for Geoff Meacham now."

The rescue by JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) and the Federal Reserve Bank after Bear said its cash position had deteriorated sharply put the word takeover on the tip of tongues all over Wall Street, with JPMorgan seen as a leading contender to buy out Bear Stearns.

But while Bear's cheap stock price could attract some suitors keen to buy its mortgage finance and trading assets, its liquidity problems may prevent a deal from being consummated, analysts and bankers said.

Shares of Bear Stearns, the fifth largest U.S. investment bank which has been hard-hit by its heavy exposure to the faltering U.S. mortgage market, fell 45 percent, reducing its market value by $3.2 billion to $3.64 billion.

Bear Stearns Chief Executive Alan Schwartz said the company is working with Lazard Ltd. (LAZ.N) to examine its alternatives, but it will focus on protecting customers and "maximizing shareholder value."

He said Bear's first-quarter earnings would meet Wall Street expectations.

CNBC reported that Bear Stearns "is actively being shopped." While JPMorgan is "the most likely suspect," CNBC said it was not the only company to receive a pitch to buy the company.

"Our view is it would not be a surprise to see a merger announced over the weekend," said Andrew Brenner, senior vice president of MF Global in New York.

A person familiar with JPMorgan said the bank, which has previously expressed interest in expanding its prime brokerage business, is interested, at the right price, in buying the Bear division that provides loans and handles trades for hedge funds.

The concern for any buyer would be whether Bear Stearns has fully exposed all of its problems or if there is another debacle in the offing.

"Looking from the outside you have to ask, Are they at the end of their troubles? That's a very difficult question," said Anthony Sabino, professor of law and business at St. John's University, in New York.

Bankers and analysts rattled off a list of potential suitors but suggested them with caution, saying it's unclear why any company would buy Bear Stearns when they could pursue stronger assets at other banks.

"The question someone would ask if they were in a potential M&A position would be, Shouldn't we just go after the people? Bring the people in rather than by the firm," said Michael Holland, chairman of private investment firm Holland & Co.

In addition to JP Morgan, potential buyers include Merrill Lynch & Co Inc (MER.N) and foreign companies such as HSBC Holdings Plc (HSBA.L), Barclays Plc (BARC.L) and Royal Bank of Scotland Plc (RBS.L), some bankers and analysts said.

"If you think about a company like Bear, they don't have hard assets, just computers, office space and people, and one would imagine that people at Bear are polishing up their resumes," said James Ellman, portfolio manager at Seacliff Capital in San Francisco.

"That's how Wall Street works -- when a firm is in trouble, clients leave and your best employees leave. We've seen this story many times before," Ellman said.

Bear Stearns currently trades at 4.9-times fiscal 2008 earnings estimates, compared with the sector average of 18.5-times earnings.

In addition, foreign banks could face some regulatory problems that would add headaches to the purchase of an already ailing company, analysts said. And U.S. banks could try to buy the bank in pieces instead of as a whole, analysts said.

"As far as who in the U.S. would look to take them over -- there are possibilities but I think every American outfit would say, 'We've got our own headaches'," Sabino said.

Bear Stearns' problems emerged because it has more exposure to the U.S. bond markets than its competitors and has a large mortgage-backed securities business.

It's unclear whether Bear Stearns will be able to survive the "run on the bank" that Schwartz described if customers continue to flee and its businesses deteriorate further.

"JPMorgan might buy it for a dollar. I mean you're going to get a good price. Ultimately you have to ascertain if the assets are worth more than the liabilities," Barish said.

Bears' cheap stock price might entice some suitors to take a risk in buying the firm, some investment bankers said. "Just because someone wasn't interested at $120 might doesn't mean they wouldn't be interested at $34," said one head of investment banking at a U.S. brokerage firm. "Bear Stearns now is under pressure to preserve what assets they have, protect their people, protect their clients.

"They might be forced to sell at a price that would have been unthinkable before."
 

Rockslinger

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Apr 24, 2005
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Any bank would be in trouble if all their customers demanded their money back at the same time. Imagine if all your creditors (credit cards, mortgage, car loan, student loan, father-in-law loan, etc.) all call you at the same time demanding their money back.
 

S.C. Joe

Client # 13
Nov 2, 2007
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Its more to it than just that....After days of denials that it had liquidity problems, Bear was forced into a JPMorgan-led, government-backed bailout on Friday. The arrangement, the first of its kind since the 1930s,

..it sounds very bad, they are trying to sell the company before the markets open for the week, otherwise more panic selling is going to happen

http://customwire.ap.org/dynamic/st...ME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2008-03-16-17-33-21

NEW YORK (AP) -- Bear Stearns and JPMorgan Chase & Co. were close to an emergency buyout deal Sunday night aimed at averting further panic in the financial markets, media reports said.

The Wall Street Journal reported JPMorgan would buy Bear Stearns for a per share price that is likely to be "considerably less" than the $30 the stock closed at Friday.

The Journal and the Financial Times both reported the sides were in a rush to complete a deal before financial markets opened in Asia for Monday morning trading, amid fears that a crisis of confidence could roil the system further.

The government, led by the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve, was reported to be closely monitoring the talks.

After days of denials that it had liquidity problems, Bear was forced into a JPMorgan-led, government-backed bailout on Friday. The arrangement, the first of its kind since the 1930s, resulted in Bear getting a 28-day loan from JPMorgan with the government's guarantee that JPMorgan would not suffer any losses on the deal.

Among the Wall Street investment banks, Bear Stearns was the most closely exposed to the mortgage crisis. The collapse of two of its hedge funds last summer was seen by many as one of the triggers of the current credit crisis.

"The Journal also reported that were a deal with JPMorgan to fall apart, Bear could conceivably file for bankruptcy late Sunday before Asian financial markets opened."
 

petitelover

International User
Jan 14, 2003
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JP Morgan Chase cages the Bear for only $2 per share in stock. WOW!

"JPMorgan Chase will exchange 0.05473 shares of JPMorgan Chase common stock per one share of Bear Stearns stock. Based on the closing price of March 15, 2008, the transaction would have a value of approximately $2 per share."

I wonder who is next?
 

S.C. Joe

Client # 13
Nov 2, 2007
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No, are you sure :confused:

If so then BSC was in really bad shape,
 

WinterHawk

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Jan 18, 2004
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I wonder how much "senior" management get's out of the deal? I'm betting the little guy in the cubical who just did his job will be soon out on the street and part of the restructuring that gonna happen.

The boys on the executive floors will retire or go into consulting telling others how not to do what they did.
 

Serpent

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Jan 1, 2006
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This is really, really scary. $2/share for something that was $90 a month ago.

What's to happen to Citi, ML and other troubled institutions?
 

petitelover

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Jan 14, 2003
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WinterHawk said:
I wonder how much "senior" management get's out of the deal? I'm betting the little guy in the cubical who just did his job will be soon out on the street and part of the restructuring that gonna happen.

The boys on the executive floors will retire or go into consulting telling others how not to do what they did.
Based on only $2 per share - how much could the higher up's get?
 

S.C. Joe

Client # 13
Nov 2, 2007
7,138
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Serpent said:
What's to happen to Citi, ML and other troubled institutions?

As of right now it looks like they are going lower still in price tomorrow.
 

dcbogey

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Sep 29, 2004
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Rockslinger said:
Any bank would be in trouble if all their customers demanded their money back at the same time. Imagine if all your creditors (credit cards, mortgage, car loan, student loan, father-in-law loan, etc.) all call you at the same time demanding their money back.
If you carefully read your account agreements with the Canadian banks you will notice that they can require a notice for a withdrawl. Normally they don't care about the smaller withdrawls but just try to walk in and get $10K - most of the time they will give you some but not all.
 

dcbogey

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Sep 29, 2004
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The $2 price is a "discount" of 93% from the Friday close, 98.8% from the Feb 29 close. I suspect Monday might be an ugly day.
 

Rockslinger

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Apr 24, 2005
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smiley27 said:
How did they get into trouble: greed! Stupid schemes (sub-prime) that can work only in their wild dreams.
My very best friend, Crazy Bull, said: "Lending money to poor people is the fast track to the poor house." There is a reason why poor people are poor and lending money to them is the same as throwing your money down a sewer. Apologies for being so politically incorrect.
 

cypherpunk

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Mar 10, 2004
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jwmorrice said:
When a Bear Stearns analyst moved to ask a question at a biotechnology investor meeting, Genentech Chief Executive Arthur Levinson quipped, "There's still somebody here from Bear? Let's give him a hand."
This may be my favorite off the cuff remark of the year.
 

S.C. Joe

Client # 13
Nov 2, 2007
7,138
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Detroit, USA
BSC @ $10 a share :eek: Thats where its called to open today.
 
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