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Re: [RT] Bear Stearns was Racing Sunday afternoon Toward Selling Itself to JPMorgan


  • To: Deosaran Bisnath <realtraders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Subject: Re: [RT] Bear Stearns was Racing Sunday afternoon Toward Selling Itself to JPMorgan
  • From: Code 2 <Code2@xxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sun, 16 Mar 2008 16:33:14 -0700

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Stunning news:

"JPMorgan Chase said Sunday it will acquire rival Bear Stearns in a
deal valued at $236.2-million (U.S.), a stunning collapse for one of
the world's largest and most venerable investment banks. 

JPMorgan Chase & Co.  said the $2 a share, all-stock deal has received
the required approvals from the federal government and the Federal
Reserve.  Bear Stearns shares close Friday at $30 a share."

That's a 98% drop in just two weeks!


From: Deosaran Bisnath <deobisnath@xxxxxxxxx>
To: realtraders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: Sunday, March 16, 2008, 3:49:42 PM
Subject: [RT] Bear Stearns was Racing Sunday afternoon Toward Selling Itself to JPMorgan

Bear Stearns Racing Toward Selling Itself to JPMorgan 
 
By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN and LANDON THOMAS Jr.
Published: March 16, 2008
Bear Stearns was racing Sunday afternoon to sell itself to JPMorgan Chase for more than $2 billion, according to people involved in the talks. Meanwhile, Bear Stearns, whose solvency is in question, was also making preparations to file for bankruptcy protection as a backup plan should a deal not be reached, these people said.
Skip to next paragraph 
  
Mark Lennihan/Associated Press
The headquarters of Bear Stearns on Madison Avenue in Manhattan. 

Related
Fears That Bear Stearns Downfall May Spread (March 17, 2008) 
Paulson Defends Bailout of Bear (March 16, 2008) 
Fair Game: Rescue Me: A Fed Bailout Crosses a Line (March 16, 2008) 
Fed Chief Shifts Path, Inventing Policy in Crisis (March 16, 2008) 
Run on Big Wall St. Bank Spurs Rescue Backed by U.S. (March 15, 2008) 
News Analysis: A Wall Street Domino Theory (March 15, 2008) 
News Analysis: F.D.R.’s Safety Net Gets a Big Stretch (March 15, 2008) 
Times Topics: Bear Stearns | JPMorgan Chase



A deal for Bear Stearns would end the independence of one of Wall Street’s most storied firms and help halt a sweeping panic that set in at the end of last week, causing Bear Stearns’s stock to swoon 47 percent on Friday. If an agreement is not reached and Bear Stearns files for bankruptcy, it could cause an even deeper global scare over the fate of the financial system.
The talks, which are being overseen by the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department because of their potential effect on financial markets, are being rushed in the hopes of reaching a deal before stock markets open in Asia at 8 p.m. Eastern time.
Bear Stearns’s chief executive, Alan D. Schwartz, and other top Bear executives huddled in all-day meetings at the firm’s Madison Avenue headquarters, trying desperately to persuade skeptical potential suitors that the firm was worth buying for a price that would likely represent a steep discount to its book value, considered the truest measure of the financial health of a banking institution.
JPMorgan has been balking at the deal in the absence of guarantees from the Federal Reserve that its liabilities would be limited, people involved in the talks said. JPMorgan was working with the Federal Reserve on Sunday afternoon to hash out exactly what liabilities would be guaranteed, said these people, who insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the talks.
On Friday, JPMorgan, with the backing of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, said it would provide financing in order to keep Bear Stearns solvent as lenders and clients rushed to pull their money out.
At Friday’s closing price of $30 a share, Bear Stearns is valued at a yawning 62 percent discount to the $80 book value that the firm has reported, reflecting the broad view among investors that the fallout from the credit crunch has permanently devastated Bear’s core mortgage operations.
At a market capitalization of $3.5 billion, investors are concluding, for now, that the business of one of Wall Street’s oldest investment banks is perhaps worth no more than $2 billion, accounting for the firm’s midtown skyscraper, which is probably worth at least $1 billion.
Wall Street analysts say that the sudden collapse of Bear Stearns is not likely to set off a wave of consolidation in the beleaguered financial services industry. That is because the same fear that has paralyzed the markets has paralyzed buyers.
There is little faith in the assigned or “marked” value of so many assets, including but not limited to mortgage-related securities. In fact, the experience of Bear Stearns proves that it is confidence, not capital, that topples even the savviest financial institutions.
“Once you have a run on the bank you are in a death spiral and your assets become worthless,” said David Trone, a brokerage analyst at Fox Pitt Kelton. “If JPMorgan can pull off a rescue, the assets can be saved,” he argued. But if not, the assets may lose their value.
According to Mr. Trone’s analysis, Bear Stearns’s best-case scenario would be to sell for $60 a share, a value based on a few key assumptions: clients stop pulling their business from Bear, the units produce half their normal revenue, and the troubled securities are reduced in value by a third.
But the market did not put much faith in the Fed’s bailout of the firm, announced on Friday, suggesting to Mr. Trone that it may have to sell for $30 or less. Bear Stearns’s hedge fund servicing business and its clearing operations have traditionally been profitable operations, though they have suffered in recent months as investors and lenders have lost confidence in Bear.
JPMorgan, the private equity investor J.C. Flowers and others have been poring through Bear Stearns’s books since Friday, with the assistance of Samuel Molinaro, Bear’s chief financial officer, and senior members from the firm’s bond and mortgage operations.
Throughout much of its history, Bear Stearns has masterfully persuaded the market that its business — narrowly focused on mortgage finance — was worth more than it actually was. To some degree this trick has been a testament to the coy gamesmanship of two of its past leaders, Alan “Ace” Greenberg and James E. Cayne.
Both men are devout bridge players, and Mr. Greenberg is an amateur magician to boot, so they are well schooled in the art of not showing their hand. Mr. Cayne’s hint eight years back — that he would sell the firm only for four times its book value — was even then a flight of financial fancy.
Wall Street investment banks rarely command such a premium to their book value, given the inherent and unpredictable risks of their business. Nevertheless, Mr. Cayne and Mr. Greenberg were adept at spreading the view that Bear Stearns was constantly being pursued by buyers as varied as European commercial banks and even banks like JPMorgan, though it was never clear that any of these talks reached a serious level.
But Bear Stearns’s quirky culture and the high pay it awarded its senior executives made it a difficult fit for larger, more staid institutions, and it always seemed that Mr. Greenberg and Mr. Cayne were having too much fun running their business to sell it to an outsider.
Now Mr. Schwartz, a longtime investment banker whose approach to deal-making is more pragmatic and results-oriented than his predecessor, is racing against the clock to seal a deal that salvages some measure of value for shellshocked Bear Stearns employees, who own more than 30 percent of the firm, and its investors.
“Banks and brokerages are a house of cards built on the confidence of clients, creditors and counterparties,” Mr. Trone said. “If you take chunks out of that confidence, things can go awry pretty quickly. It could happen to any one of the brokers.”

  
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