Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
What lurks behind Bear Stearns bailout?
By Milt Neidenberg
Published Apr 10, 2008 1:17 AM
The banks are made of marble
With a guard at every door
And the vaults are stuffed with silver
That the workers sweated for
—Folk song by Les Rice
The week of March 10, the fourth-largest U.S. investment bank, Bear Stearns, collapsed. Panic-stricken investors, shareholders, employees and other creditors simultaneously demanded their money in a run on the bank, which had become the second-largest trader in speculative financial instruments.
Fear of a capitalist meltdown spread through the financial markets. Giant commercial banks CitiGroup, Bank of America and Wachovia, plus investment banks Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch and a host of others, were also swept up in a tsunami of risky investments. All were flooded with subprime mortgages, faulty structured investment vehicles, opaque credit default swaps and other over-valued financial instruments. They were forced to write down hundreds of billions in losses.
Britain’s Northern Rock went belly up, forcing the government to pick up the pieces. Swiss bank UBS, Germany’s Deutsche Bank and other European banks were also caught up in the whirlpool of risky financial instruments.
Was this the beginning of a 1929 meltdown? Or would bailing out the banks avoid a crash?
On the weekend of March 14-16, the leaders of the Federal Reserve Board and the government met in all-night sessions, panicked and fearful of a financial meltdown. Most important, JPMorgan Chase, one of the most powerful banking conglomerates in the world, was invited to join the conclave. It became the key player, dominating the negotiations and demanding big-time collateral and guarantees to buy out Bear Stearns and alleviate the fears of Wall Street.
Federal Reserve Board chair Ben Bernanke and President Timothy Geithner of the New York Federal Reserve, architects of the Bear Stearns bailout, were soon called before the Senate Finance Committee. They “compared the turmoil that weekend to the Panic of 1907 and the Great Depression-era run on banks.” (Bloomberg.com, April 4)
JPMorgan Chase is an amalgam of the infamous banking houses of Morgan and Rockefeller, widely heralded as the robber barons of yesteryear. They built empires of high finance off the blood, sweat and tears of mainly immigrant labor.
J. P. Morgan began his career by selling defective rifles to the government during the Civil War. He parlayed those profits into railroads built on stolen public land, and proceeded to build giant steel mills on the bones of small entrepreneurs.
John D. Rockefeller made his start in big oil by blowing up small rival oil operations, then expanding into mining and real estate. JP and JD came to dominate other monopolistic industries like auto and finance.
Both empires provoked wars abroad to consolidate their wealth, ruthlessly fought unions and brutalized workers, and created company towns and stores that kept workers in a constant state of debt and poverty.
Fed blesses Morgan buyout
In January, Bear Stearns stock had traded at $171 a share. By March, Jamie Dimon, head of JPMorgan Chase, saw a chance to steal this 85-year-old Wall Street dynasty at $2 a share. Although the price was later raised to $10, Bear Stearns shareholders and employees were totally wiped out.
For a pittance, JPMorgan acquired $1.2 billion in prime midtown property along with Bear Stearns’ premier assets. It arrogantly refused to take over most of the risky financial instruments, forcing the Fed, and eventually the worker/taxpayer, to assume that liability. The Fed blessed JPMorgan with a $29 billion credit line.
The swindle was worked out in secret meetings among powerful Wall Street players and led by the Fed, regulator of more than a thousand banks associated with the system. The government was represented by the Treasury Department, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Comptroller of the Currency and other governmental agencies. These are the movers and shakers that influence the stock market.
Following this financial coup, the Dow Jones average of industrial stocks climbed nearly 400 points. For the next few days the market elites were claiming the capitalist crisis was over.
Although the stock market is an integrated sector of the financial services industry, it is also the most prominent representative of capitalist production. All industry, agriculture, commerce and the means of production pass through the hands of stock exchange operators.
Workers bear the burden
When Fed chair Bernanke, savior of banking institutions, finally used the “R” word—for recession, no news to broad sectors of the working class—it was a confirmation that the financial crisis had drawn in the broader capitalist economy. In March 80,000 jobs were officially lost and the unemployment rate rose to 5.1 percent. However, these figures understate the extent of the assault on the workers and oppressed, who have lost more than 10 million jobs since the “jobless recovery” of 2001.
Increasingly, the workers and oppressed are faced with hard choices. Pay for gas to get to work? Stint on groceries? Pay the mortgage or the rent? Or buy the prescriptions? They have seen pensions disappear and wages sunk by hyperinflation—an enormous leap in the cost of staying alive. And the economy continues to stagnate.
One factor in rising inflation is the flood of money printed by the government, which is sinking the dollar. Others are the stoking of the war in Iraq and Afghanistan and the growing fear over the unprecedented debt and the credit crunch. “The Federal Reserve and other global central banks have been hosing the world with new money in their efforts to avoid a financial crisis.... The cheap money didn’t stop a Wall Street bank run—it was the Fed’s bold plan to absorb subprime debt that did that—but it may add fuel to the inflation fire,” warned the Washington Post on April 3.
Multibillionaire Victor Soros, a prominent Wall Street global investor, says a super-bubble is growing in the commodities markets. (“Wall Street Journal,” NBC-TV, April 6) Rising prices in metals, food, energy, services and a host of other staples are fueling hyperinflation, while the subprime housing crisis has yet to reach bottom. Is Soros talking about another 1929 crash?
A debate is going on within the ruling class—is the economy in a short-lived cyclical recession or will there be a capitalist economic crash?
The extreme volatility and sharp ups and downs in the stock market reflect the debate.
A similar discussion took place in the latter part of the golden 1920s. The argument was settled by the devastating 1929 stock market crash, which led to the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Missing from the debate are the fundamental and material interests of the masses. There is an absolute necessity for an independent, class-wide, massive wave of demands, programs and strategies emanating from the needs of workers, the oppressed and their organizations. Radicalization of the multinational working class is inevitable. A struggle against the banks, the financial institutions, corporate monopolies and their stooges in government will be a good beginning.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Articles copyright 1995-2008 Workers World. Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011
Email: ww@workers.org
Keep shorting BSC. JPM will be good for covered calls, because it will probably lose less than most of the investment banking companies...now that they have swindled BSC.
Thats $10.70, -$0.02, -0.19%...
I really feel in a few months things are going to look nice... I took more risk and added... hoping when I look back in a few months I say..."I wish I bought more" 9>)
The new capitalism = privatize the profits and socialize ("socialism-ize") the losses
J.P. Morgan buys $140.7 million in Bear Stearns stock
5:42p ET April 3, 2008 (MarketWatch)
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. said it bought 11.5 million shares of Bear Stearns shares on the open market for $140.7 million on March 24, according to filing late Thursday with the Securities and Exchange Commission. All the purchases, which were made out of working capital, were made to "increase the likelihood that the plan to rescue Bear Stearns will be completed," J.P. Morgan said in the filing.
The one to buy is JPM, because JPM is going to make a killing on this. But, its kind of like giving the Devil a pat on the back.
Doesn't look like it:
Bernanke Defends Use of Public Money to Rescue of Bear Stearns
By Neil Irwin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, April 3, 2008; 11:31 AM
The government's rescue of investment bank Bear Stearns last month was necessary to protect the financial system as a whole from breaking down, the officials involved said today, in their most extensive defense of the unprecedented intervention in the workings of Wall Street.
In testimony to the Senate Banking Committee, top officials of the Federal Reserve system, the Treasury Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission described the series of actions that led to the Fed making an emergency loan to Bear Stearns on March 14 and backing its acquisition by J.P. Morgan Chase on March 16.
The top officials of J.P. Morgan Chase and of Bear Stearns, scheduled to testify later, stressed in prepared remarks that their actions were driven by extenuating and unique circumstances.
Both the government officials and executives said the plan they implemented was meant to prevent a much bigger problem than the dissolution of a single investment bank. Some $29 billion in public money is on the line to back assets of Bear Stearns, a concession the Fed made to get J.P. Morgan to agree to acquire Bear Stearns.
"In short, we judged that a sudden, disorderly failure of Bear would have brought with it unpredictable but severe consequences for the functioning of the broader financial system and the broader economy," said Timothy F. Geithner, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, "with lower equity prices, further downward pressure on home values, and less access to credit for companies and households."
The recent turmoil over Bear Stearns reflects broader concerns over the state of U.S. and global financial markets, and comes at a time when many feel the economy has slipped into or is heading toward a recession. Data over the next two days will add to the debate: Statistics released today showed that new claims for unemployment benefits spiked to more than 405,000 last week -- the highest level in several years. Tomorrow, the unemployment report for March will show whether the economy is continuing to shed jobs.
U.S. markets were down in morning trading, with the Dow Jones industrial average dropping about half of a percentage point.
Fed officials recognized they were taking extreme action by intervening, Geithner and Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said, but viewed it as the best possible action. Geithner offered an extensive timeline of the actions.
On March 13, Bear Stearns notified its regulators that it would have to file for bankruptcy the next morning short of some new action. The officials involved concluded that given the fragile state of financial markets and the extensive network of institutions that did business with Bear, such a move could have serious repercussions, they argued.
"The idea that the Bear Stearns fallout would have been limited to a few Wall Street firms just isn't so," Jamie Dimon, chief executive of J.P. Morgan Chase, said in prepared testimony to be delivered later today. "People all over America -- union members, retirees, small business owners, and our parents and children -- are now invested in the financial system through pensions, 401(k)s, mutual funds and the like."
Dimon's firm was able to acquire Bear for a deep discount in what Wall Street analysts viewed as a big financial win, and its stock soared the day the transaction was announced.
Alan Schwartz, chief executive of Bear Stearns, characterized the series of events that caused massive losses to his shareholders -- and to Bear executives and employees -- as the result of a run on the bank, as rumors and speculation led lenders to refuse to roll over short-term loans.
Senators questioning the officials expressed only modest reservations about the actions of the Fed and other government officials that weekend.
"As a bottom line, I happen to think this was the right decision," said Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.). "The alternative could have been devastating. So I don't question that decision. But I want to know about the rationale leading up to it."
Geithner also laid out principles for how the regulatory system should change to prevent such events. He said there needs to be a stronger set of "shock absorbers" in the amount of cash and other liquid investments held by large investment banks and other financial institutions, with stronger supervision of those companies.
Geithner argued for a simpler regulatory system in the financial world, and for stronger regulation of the markets for arcane financial instruments called derivatives and the "repo market," a market for short-term debt.
Finally, Geithner urged a reconsideration of the tools that the government uses to ensure the financial system has adequate cash, and that the Fed have proper authority and responsibility to respond quickly to threats.
Gonna be an interesting day! I hope they rip the fed and jpm apart for what happened.
I don't aggree with the target and feel its really worth much more.... I guess we will find out soon. They had alot of clients and alot of BIG clients...and alot of Big people had money here... I bet in 3-6 months we will all be asking ourselves why we didn't buy more.... I guess time will tell.
Goodluck everyone...
Note: JPMorgan will also buy 95 million newly issued shares of Bear Stearns common stock, or 39.5% of the outstanding Bear Stearns common stock after giving effect to the issuance, at $10 a share.
Bear Stearns Cos. (BSC), J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM)
Premium offered: -$0.56 or -5.2%
Acquirer: JPM
Target: BSC
Shares offered per share: 0.21753 share
Value of offer per share: $10.09
Value of outstanding common equity: $1,191,935,474
Acquirer share price: $46.40
Target share price: $10.65
Expected closing: Late second quarter 6/30/2008
Annualized gain: N/A
Does the FED even have audited financials under GAAP?
ok so let's offer $5 A SHARE for JPM and when everyone says way to low... make it $15 LOL just sham games ..total scam...
FED wants more power in public business ...
FED is a PRIVATE COMPANY ...someone make a buyout offer for them
PLEASE !!!!
TALK BACK: Good Call On Bear Deal Nabs Monthly Contest Award
Apr 1, 2008 10:05:06 (ET)
Dow Jones NewsPlus asked readers if investors should accept JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s (JPM) offer to buy Bear Stearns Cos. (BSC) for $2 a share and the response was a resounding no.
Readers were outraged the Federal Reserve would allow JPMorgan to take over the storied Wall Street brokerage for a fraction of its closing price from the previous trading session while guaranteeing the brokerage's risky debt portfolio.
Many called for shareholders to reject the deal and allow the company to fall into bankruptcy or better yet allow the firm to rise from the ashes, should the Fed be willing to accept their mortgage securities for collateral as they started doing for other brokers.
But Gerry Graphia, a Bear Stearns shareholder in Houston, took a somewhat more pragmatic approach. While he, too, was firmly against the offer, he wasn't looking for a return to the long-gone days of $170 a share, or even $30 a share, its closing price the previous Friday. On Wednesday, March 19, he said the bank could easily command $10 to 12 a share. The next Monday, JPMorgan agreed to raise its offer to $10 a share.
For his prescience, Graphia's Talk Back comment was named the Editors' Choice for March, and he wins a Dow Jones Newswires' pullover fleece. We are looking forward to hearing from you. Keep your comments coming. Read Graphia's post:
I would vote no to the Bear Stearns offer from JPMorgan of $2 per share.
I believe that it is an absolute joke. Bear Stearns is nearly a 100-year-old company and carries a lot of weight.
JPMorgan is trying to take advantage of a situation.
I would vote no to the offer, participate in litigation and do whatever it takes to raise the share price to a reasonable level.
This stock should be easily priced at the $10 to $12 range.
(TALK BACK comments may well be submitted by readers who have a financial interest in the securities that are being discussed.)
(TALK BACK: We invite readers to send us comments on this or other financial news topics. Please email us at TalkbackAmericas@dowjones.com. Readers should include their full names, work or home addresses and telephone numbers for verification purposes. We reserve the right to edit and publish your comments along with your name; we reserve the right not to publish reader comments.)
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
Swaps Hold Huge Corner Needing Focus
By SCOTT PATTERSON and SERENA NG
April 1, 2008;
As policy makers plot out a grand redesign of financial-market regulation, one huge corner of the marketplace ought to get a lot of attention: credit-default swaps.
These financial instruments, which don't trade on exchanges, are like disaster insurance on debt defaults. Investors who buy these swaps get a big payment if a bond or loan defaults. In return for the protection, the investor has to make regular payments to the seller of the swap.
The market has become immensely important, yet regulators still haven't figured out how to deal with it. The Bush administration's blueprint for new regulation curiously had almost nothing to say about it.
Credit-default swaps were a factor in the recent troubles of Bear Stearns. Hedge funds and other firms that were on the other side of credit-default swap trades with Bear tried to exit from their positions or pass them on to other brokers. That set off a broader panic about Bear's health as a counterparty, which pushed the firm to the brink.
Swaps also played a deciding factor in the Federal Reserve's dramatic intervention. If Bear went down, others could have been dragged down through their exposure to the firm through swaps.
Many firms have no way of knowing about problems of their counterparties in these trades.
Such swaps were written against $45 trillion of underlying debt as of the first half of 2007, according to the International Swaps and Derivatives Association. In many instances, there are far more of these swaps written than there is actual debt that swaps are meant to insure.
The market is important for other reasons. The explosion in these derivatives occurred at a time when corporate defaults were near record lows. Moody's Investors Service expects the junk-bond default rate to climb to a range of 7% to 7.5% in the next 12 months from just 1.5% now.
"We haven't gone through a massive default cycle," says Gregg Berman, co-head of the risk management unit at RiskMetrics Group. "I do not believe the market is remotely prepared for the fallout if that happens."
Swaps also present potential insider-trading problems for regulators to work out. In 2006 and early 2007, during the leveraged buyout boom, credit-default swaps at times soared in value before details of big deals were announced. Just last week, swap values were moving before news broke that the buyout of Clear Channel Communications was in jeopardy.
One problem for securities regulators: Because these can be considered private contracts, and not securities, it's not even clear if traditional securities laws apply to them.
Large commercial banks do need to file regular reports on their derivative exposures with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation also has set up an information warehouse that stores records of CDS trades. And the Federal Reserve Bank of New York has been pushing dealers and other firms to confirm and process trades more quickly. Last week, large dealers unveiled plans to centralize settlement of their credit-derivative trades by September.
But credit-default swaps have become too important for the wattle and daub approach regulators have given them in the past few years.
calm yourself. I smell another RTC issue,shhhhh after another one of those we'll hear that they used a C"X"O structure and when that one implodes the Fed will own it all. Carteresque inflation cubed on the horizon IMO,
yes the FEDS a private company, yes its the bastard child of a duckhunt and its british plotters,yes the federal income tax is the endless vig, yes US taxpayers and consumers are slaves to it, yes, every single penny is produced as a debt somewhere in the system,yes like Bear Steans,every financial institution is too some degree over leveraged,yes the plan when the dogs turn on eachother is to consume and consolidate,yes puppet bush bla bla bla,
my opinion is that the Fed acted in the best interests of all to attempt "another interpretation" of the Red Adaire Solution ( http://www.redadair.com/bio.html ).
$30bn more $fiat is a drop in the ocean compared to whats coming IMO, if I'm right then the 30bln was a waste of money.
http://www.lw.com/upload/pubContent/_pdf/pub1874_1.pdf
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/russian-doll-that-could-turn-toxic-for-diamond-544621.html
Whatzayou?
This is just the beginning of another chapter in the redistribution of wealth and corporate welfare.
The Fed is the Biggest scam ever perpetrated on Americans.
And now Bush offers up a new plan,,, Who wrote it for him?
One of the Fed Members? Was it ready before the BSC game ?
Reports say the "new plan" is set up to
"to regulate business conduct and consumer protection."
consumer protection WTF The fed HAS NEVER PROTECTED US
CONSUMERS !!! NEVER,,, EVER >>>> and I doubt they ever will.
They push 30 billion into taxpayers . Can anyone confirm that
JPM is a share holder in the Fed.
Has EVERYONE forgotten that the Fed is a PRIVATE COMPANY ???
If this is not the best planned screwjobs on the American
public, then it has to be second only to the Fed act ...
This is my opinion, whats yours ??? Let me know.
CFA Arbitrage Spreads On Pending Mergers & Acquisitions
Dow Jones Newswires - March 31, 2008 10:52 AM ET
The following provides information on selected mergers and acquisitions. All figures are updated by Dow Jones Newswires, with share prices as of 10 a.m. Monday EDT.
Annualized rate of return is based on Monday's date and the expected closing date and isn't compounded. Expected closing dates are compiled from company statements and reports, and when a time period is cited, that information is provided with that period's midpoint date, which was used to make the annualized return calculation.
Deals are listed alphabetically by target, and spreads don't include dividend or interest payments. "Premium offered" refers to the amount that the current value of the offer exceeds the stock price of the target. Deal values don't include the assumption of debt.
Bear Stearns Cos. (BSC), J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM)
Premium offered: -$1.17 or -11.11%
Acquirer: JPM
Target: BSC
Shares offered per share: 0.21753 share
Value of offer per share: $9.35
Value of outstanding common equity: $1,103,567,844
Acquirer share price: $42.96
Target share price: $10.51
Expected closing: Late second quarter 6/30/2008
Annualized gain: N/A
Note: JPMorgan will also buy 95 million newly issued shares of Bear Stearns common stock, or 39.5% of the outstanding Bear Stearns common stock after giving effect to the issuance, at $10 a share.
Chaos on Wall Street
The big banks' fear of big losses is threatening to bring down the entire system, with dire consequences for all of us. Here's what's going on, and what we can do about it.
By Allan Sloan, senior editor at large
http://money.cnn.com/2008/03/28/news/economy/disaster_sloan.fortune/?postversion=2008033103
THE BAILOUT BOYS: S.E.C. Chairman Christopher Cox with Paulson, President Bush and Bernanke.
POINT MAN: New York Fed President Geithner
An accident waiting to happen
How would I mop up this mess? I have no magic cures, but I can offer a few modest suggestions.
Profit Sharing
If we taxpayers are going to subsidize Wall Street, as we're now doing, the Fed - or some agency the government sets up - should get a piece of the action for us in return for saving those firms.
Model: the $1.2 billion of Chrysler loans the Treasury guaranteed in 1980 and 1981. Chrysler repaid the loans, and the government made $311 million from stock-purchase warrants it extracted for issuing the guarantee.
If firms can't raise the capital they need, Uncle Sam himself should recapitalize them, as Israel did for its banks in the 1980s, with an eye toward making a profit by selling stock when things improve.
Regulation
If Wall Street is going to create its own banking system, let's regulate it - especially the hedge funds - or restrict what it can do. Otherwise, how can regulated banks, which need to follow rules and have capital, compete with the cowboys that don't have to worry about either?
Transparency
Wall Street has made tons of money by selling and trading esoteric securities without informing investors in any meaningful way about the mortgages or other assets that underlie them. It's now in everyone's interest to disclose more, so these securities can be analyzed and trust in the market restored.
I'd start with Richard Field, founder of TYI - it stands for "trust your input." TYI's programs let you track individual assets like auto loans, credit card debts, and medical receivables that are in collateral pools. It's worth a look.
Mortgages
The one thing I won't try to do is solve the home mortgage problem that started all this. I'd like to save the truly innocent homeowners, while punishing speculators and imprudent lenders. Alas, I have no idea how to do that quickly, cost-effectively, or well.More from Fortune
Parsing Paulson's proposal
How to crack the credit crunch
The last days of Bear Stearns
(Fortune Magazine) -- What in the world is going on here? Why is Washington spending billions to bail out Wall Street titans while leaving struggling homeowners to fend for themselves? Why are the Federal Reserve and the Treasury acting as if they're afraid the world may come to an end, while the stock market seems much less concerned? And finally, what does all this mean to those of us who aren't financial professionals?
Okay, take a few breaths, pour yourself a beverage of your choice, and I'll tell you what's happening - and what I think is going to happen. Although I expect these problems will resolve themselves without a catastrophic meltdown, I'll also tell you why I'm more nervous about the world financial system now than I've ever been in my 40 years of covering business and markets.
Finally, I'll tell you why I fear that the Wall Street enablers of the biggest financial mess of my lifetime will escape with relatively light damage, leaving the rest of us - and our children and grandchildren - to pay for their misdeeds.
We're suffering the aftereffects of the collapse of a Tinker Bell financial market, one that depended heavily on borrowed money that has now vanished like pixie dust. Like Tink, the famous fairy from Peter Pan, this market could exist only as long as everyone agreed to believe in it.
So because it was convenient - and oh, so profitable! - players embraced fantasies like U.S. house prices never falling and cheap short-term money always being available. They created, bought, and sold, for huge profits, securities that almost no one understood. And they goosed their returns by borrowing vast amounts of money.
The first shoe
The fantasies began to fade last June when Bear Stearns (BSC, Fortune 500) let two of its hedge funds collapse because of mortgage-backed-securities problems. Debt market - both here and abroad - went sour big-time. That, in turn, became a huge drag on the U.S. economy, bringing on the current economic slowdown.
And before you ask: It's irrelevant whether or not we're in a recession, which National Bureau of Economic Research experts define as "a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months." What matters is that we're in a dangerous and messy situation that has produced an economic slowdown unlike those we're used to seeing.
How is this slowdown different from other slowdowns? Normally the economy goes bad first, creating financial problems. In this slowdown the markets are dragging down the economy - a crucial distinction, because markets are harder to fix than the economy.
A leading political economist, Allan Meltzer of Carnegie Mellon, calls it "an unusual situation, but not unprecedented." When was the last time it happened in the U.S.? "In 1929," he says. And it touched off the Great Depression.
No, Meltzer isn't saying that a Great Depression - 25% unemployment, social unrest, mass hunger, millions of people's savings wiped out in bank collapses - is upon us. Nor, for that matter, am I. But the precedent is unsettling, to say the least. You can only imagine how unsettling it is to Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke, a former economics professor who made his academic bones writing about the Great Depression.
Academics now feel that the 1929 slowdown morphed into a Great Depression in large part because the Fed tightened credit rather than loosening it. With that precedent in mind, you can see why Bernanke's Fed is cutting rates rapidly and throwing everything but the kitchen sink at today's problems. (Bernanke will probably throw that in too, if the Fed's plumbers can unbolt it.) None of this Alan Greenspan (remember him?) quarter-point-at-a-time stuff for him.
Fear is the culprit
So why hasn't the cure worked? The problem is that vital markets that most people never see - the constant borrowing and lending and trading among huge institutions - have been paralyzed by losses, fear, and uncertainty. And you can't get rid of losses, fear, and uncertainty by cutting rates.
Giant institutions are, to use the technical term, scared to death. They've had to come back time after time and report additional losses on their securities holdings after telling the market that they had cleaned everything up. It's whack-a-mole finance - the problems keep appearing in unexpected places. Since the Tink market began tanking, so many shoes have dropped that it looks like Imelda Marcos's closet.
We've had problems with mortgage-backed securities, collateralized debt obligations, collateralized loan obligations, financial insurers, structured investment vehicles, asset-backed commercial paper, auction rate securities, liquidity puts. By the time you read this, something else - my bet's on credit default swaps - may have become the disaster du jour.
To paraphrase what a top Fednik told me in a moment of candor last fall: You realize that you don't know what's in your own portfolio, so how can you know what's in the portfolio of people who want to borrow from you?
Combine that with the fact that big firms are short of capital because of their losses (some of which have to do with accounting rules I won't inflict on you today) and that they're afraid of not being able to borrow enough short-term money to fund their obligations, and you can see why credit has dried up.
The fear - a justifiable one - is that if one big financial firm fails, it will lead to cascading failures throughout the world. Big firms are so interlinked with one another and with other market players that the failure of one large counterparty, as they're called, can drag down counterparties all over the globe. And if the counterparties fail, it could drag down the counterparties' counterparties, and so on. Meltdown City.
The long-term view
In 1998 the Fed orchestrated a bailout of the Long-Term Capital Management hedge fund because it had $1.25 trillion in transactions with other institutions. These days that's almost small beer, because Wall Street has created a parallel banking system in which hedge funds, investment banks, and other essentially unregulated entities took over much of what regulated commercial banks used to do.
But there's a vital difference. Conventional banks have reason to take something of a long-term view: Mess up and you have no reputation, no bank, no job, no one talking to you at the country club.
In the parallel system a different ethos prevails. If you take big, even reckless, bets and win, you have a great year and you get a great bonus - or in the case of hedge funds, 20% of the profits. If you lose money the following year, you lose your investors' money rather than your own - and you don't have to give back last year's bonus. Heads, you win; tails, you lose someone else's money.
Bernanke and his point man on Wall Street, New York Fed president Tim Geithner, know everything I've said, of course. As does Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, former head of Goldman Sachs (GS, Fortune 500).
They know a lot more too - such as which specific institutions are running out of the ability to borrow and have huge obligations they need to refinance day in and day out. Walk by Fed facilities in New York City or Washington, and you can feel the fear emanating from the building.
Because these aren't normal times, the Fed has tried to reassure the markets by inventing three new ways to inundate the financial system with staggering amounts of short-term money. This is in addition to the Fed's existing mechanisms, which are vast.
It was better for them to bid $2 and have the stock crash... think how reasonable $10 sounds now. If they would have bid $10 everyone would have screamed bloody murder...now, people are lined up to take it. Reality is it should be at least $20+ ...all of the brokers and clients aren't being properly valued. Yeah, BSC is going to lose a LOT of money, but its got the potential to make a BOAT LOAD if someone comes in and does the right thing.
JPM is buying a building and a huge BLACK BOOK of clients ;) The government is going to absorb almost all of the debt.
Still think it will go to $7 before it goes up. If it ever does. I wish Waxman would make an example out of JPM and blast them, but congress won't.
I am going short from here...I think it will go through BSC is toast...but, JPM is still getting a hell of a deal. Dilution will drop this down to $7. Look at how CFC traded after BoA happened.
I'm usually on the Yahoo message boards but thought I'm come by for a quick hello.
Any thoughts if JP will raise it's bid again?
I find it insane that they first bidded $2 for BSC only to loaded up the ship durring the market plummet and then raise the BSC bid to $10 ?
Could we see another increase in the bid?
Or is the $10 bid BS so those that bought in at $3 can unload at $10?
Fishy I say.
The trigger event in an EDS is not default (equity cannot default), but a specified percentage decline in equity value from inception (70% is a popular choice).
No ambiguity about the trigger event here, unlike in a CDS.
uhm ummm.
Guys, here's a new one to look at while BSC hovers in the $10 to $11 range - TSRA (Tessera Technologies). I think it's good for a momentum-based trade:
AP - Tessera Shares Soar After ITC Decision
Friday March 28, 12:03 pm ET
Tessera Shares Soar in Premarket Trading After Company Says ITC Overturns Patent Stay Order
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- Shares of Tessera Technologies Inc. soared 65 percent in premarket trading Friday after the company said the International Trade Commission overturned an administrative law judge's order to stay a wireless patent case against Motorola and others.
Tessera provides miniaturization technologies for the electronics industry. The patents relate to chip packages, which carry electrical signals between chips and computers and protect the chips from contamination.
Tessera said has not yet received a written notice from the ITC but expects it will be available "shortly."
A Motorola spokeswoman said Friday the company is reviewing the decision.
Tessera's shares rose $6.04, or 36.6 percent, to $22.53 in midday trading. The stock has traded between $11.11 and $46.43 in the past year.
JPM raised their bid to $10 and told Cayne to sell them his shares. Simply put. Cayne's + another 40% gives them more than enough control, I wouldn't be surprised if JPM has been buying since it went to $3/share.
After the 40% dilution you can cut this stock down to $6/share + some goodwill...call it $7/share. Get in position to either short or buy puts on BSC. Its not going to get any better until its gets much worse.
Glad to have some other positions right now. Made my money on the dead cat bounce...but, as with all dead cats, they may bounce when you drop them, but in the end, their dead.
And to think Lewis could have bought BSC outright for $1 Billion months ago and had 100% control. I bet he is pissed off beyond belief, but he can't do anything about it.
LOL. Good Morning Analogdog.
I partialy agree with you. But they do have to pay the Fed back so all is not lost.
Every person who pays federal taxes in this country ( and it aint everyone thats for sure) should have recieved shares of BSC since we actually paid for it. I know, I am dreaming. It would happen if I were King though.
Yea he did it the day that JP raised the price. Wonder if the SEC will come after him for it. I can't see them doing it when he sold at the $10 range but I could see it if he did it at the $30 range just before the big drop.
CNBC- Cayne sold out his entire position at 10.84 per share . He netted 61MM for shares worth over 1BIL not long ago.
Winning bid... 2 bux.
Cayne sells $1bn stake in Bear for $61m
By Ben White in New York
Thursday Mar 27 2008 18:30
Jimmy Cayne, a one-time travelling salesman who became a paper billionaire last year as chief executive of Bear Stearns (NYSE:BSC) , has sold his entire stake in the investment bank for a little more than $61m.
According to a filing with the Securities and , Mr Cayne sold 5.6m Bear shares for $10.84 each on Tuesday, a day after after JPMorgan Chase agreed to raise its bid for the stricken investment bank fivefold to $10 a share. Mr Cayne's wife, Patricia, sold 45,669 shares at the same price.
The sale by Mr Cayne, who helped build Bear into a maverick Wall Street powerhouse during four decades at the company, suggests he does not believe JPMorgan will have to raise its $10-a-share bid. Shares in the stricken bank fell 5.6 per cent to $10.60 in after-hours trading.
Every person who pays federal taxes in this country ( and it aint everyone thats for sure) should have recieved shares of BSC since we actually paid for it. I know, I am dreaming. It would happen if I were King though.
Fed's rescue halted a derivatives Chernobyl
Last Updated: 11:55pm GMT 24/03/2008Page 1 of 3
When the Federal Reserve stepped in to save Bear Stearns, most people had no idea what was at stake, writes Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
We may never know for sure whether the Federal Reserve's rescue of Bear Stearns averted a seizure of the $516 trillion derivatives system, the ultimate Chernobyl for global finance.
"If the Fed had not stepped in, we would have had pandemonium," said James Melcher, president of the New York hedge fund Balestra Capital.
"There was the risk of a total meltdown at the beginning of last week. I don't think most people have any idea how bad this chain could have been, and I am still not sure the Fed can maintain the solvency of the US banking system."
All through early March the frontline players had watched in horror as Bear Stearns came under assault and then shrivelled into nothing as its $17bn reserve cushion vanished.
Melcher was already prepared - true to form for a man who made a fabulous return last year betting on the collapse of US mortgage securities. He is now turning his sights on Eastern Europe, the next shoe to drop.
"We've been worried for a long time there would be nobody to pay on the other side of our contracts, so we took profits early and got out of everything. The Greenspan policies that led to this have been the most irresponsible episode the world has ever seen," he said.
Fed chairman Ben Bernanke has moved with breathtaking speed to contain the crisis. Last Sunday night, he resorted to the "nuclear option", invoking a Depression-era clause - Article 13 (3) of the Federal Reserve Act - to be used in "unusual and exigent circumstances".
The emergency vote by five governors allows the Fed to shoulder $30bn of direct credit risk from the Bear Stearns carcass. By taking this course, the Fed has crossed the Rubicon of central banking.
Liam Halligan: UK house prices will escape America's crash
News and analysis from the banking sector
To understand why it has torn up the rule book, take a look at the latest Security and Exchange Commission filing by Bear Stearns. It contains a short table listing the broker's holding of derivatives contracts as of November 30 2007.
Bear Stearns had total positions of $13.4 trillion. This is greater than the US national income, or equal to a quarter of world GDP - at least in "notional" terms. The contracts were described as "swaps", "swaptions", "caps", "collars" and "floors". This heady edifice of new-fangled instruments was built on an asset base of $80bn at best.
On the other side of these contracts are banks, brokers, and hedge funds, linked in destiny by a nexus of interlocking claims. This is counterparty spaghetti. To make matters worse, Lehman Brothers, UBS, and Citigroup were all wobbling on the back foot as the hurricane hit
I wonder if the SEC is going to probe this guy or others who bought PUTS on BSC.
CNBC- Cayne sold out his entire position at 10.84 per share . He netted 61MM for shares worth over 1BIL not long ago.
KUDOS Dead Rabbits.
Message In Reply To:
well put it this way, a decent bonus is out of the question.
Expecting it to float between $10-$12 the rest of this week and into next. Then I expect some (Grassy, etc.) to call the deal unfair. We'll see a spike up to $15 range. But, ultimately I think this deal will end up closing around $12-$13.
If this would have been done correctly it should have closed around $25.
Even a blind pig finds a truffle once in a while. Sit on the bid with WNRC and pick up some profit. Also, just started getting some DYTB on the hope they'll put out news.
Founder of fallen hedge fund John Meriwether back in trouble
Siobhan Kennedy
John Meriwether, the man behind one of the world's largest hedge fund collapses in the late Nineties, is struggling to keep investors from bailing out on his latest venture.
Mr Meriwether is best known as a founder of Long Term Capital Management (LTCM), the hedge fund that collapsed in 1998, losing $4 billion and sparking panic across global financial markets.
The debacle led to a Wall Street led bailout and US government hearings on the dangers of hedge funds.
Now Mr Meriwether, who runs JWM Partners LLC, is in trouble again as his largest fund has lost 28 per cent of its value this year and investors are threatening to jump ship.
According to a report in The Wall Street Journal, the investors have until Monday to request withdrawals from his bond fund, but Mr Meriwether and his partners are trying to reassure them that they have reduced their risk exposure and will preserve about $1.4 billion (£700 million) in assets.
Mr Meriwether's problems are the latest to beset large funds invested in mortgage backed securities.
Last month Carlyle Capital Corp (CCC), a $21 billion fund managed and co-owned by Carlyle, the giant US private equity group, collapsed after it failed to meet margin calls from banks.
CCC, like Mr Meriwether's bond fund, was invested in mortgage securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two US mortgage agencies whose packages of bonds were seen as among the safest assets because they are tied to the US Government.
Peloton Capital, a London-listed hedge fund, was also wiped out after its investments in mortgage-backed securities tumbled in value.
"We have sharply reduced the risk and balance sheet of the portfolio," Mr. Meriwether told clients in his bond fund, Relative Value Opportunity Fund, in a letter dated March 18.
"While the opportunities are among the best we recall, we continue to balance our need to control risk while attempting to capture the opportunities we feel are available."
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/banking_and_finance/article3631173.ece
The Fed bailout wasn't just for fat cats
Marketwatch - March 27, 2008 12:01 AM ET
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- If you're thinking about refinancing your mortgage, getting a loan to buy a new car, or switching to a lower-interest rate credit card, you can thank the Federal Reserve for your ability to do so.
You might also want to mention that the recent boost to your 401(k) portfolio is appreciated as well.
Though it may not be obvious, anyone who participates in the credit world -- and that's most of us -- owes the Fed a debt of gratitude for stepping in and helping to prevent the collapse of Bear Stearns Cos. (BSC).
Populist class wars are convenient for politicians such Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid or anyone who claims this deal is for Wall Street fat cats. But class and privilege don't float as good explanations for the Fed's $30 billion bailout of Bear. See full story.
Sure, the Fed is taking it on the chin. Taxpayers will buy a boatload of sketchy securities from Bear and hope that they produce any kind of return. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM), with the Fed's backing, will absorb the rest of Bear through a buyout. Taxpayers will probably take a loss, but no one knows how much it will be. It could be $29.9 billion. It could be half that, or nothing.
The move is unprecedented. The Fed on rare occasions has backed up banks, but it's never backed up investment banks. The idea that investment banks get bank protection is what should be debated, but no, everyone wants to know if the little guy is getting screwed.
On the surface, it sure seems that way, but the reality is Bear and the executives who run it are going to disappear. At best, Bear's biggest investors are getting about 10 cents on the dollar for stock they bought last year, and as many as half of the company's ranks will be unemployed by summertime.
Call it a bailout or call it corporate welfare, Timothy Geithner, the New York Federal Reserve president, had something else in mind when he forced Bear into the arms of its rival and took responsibility for $30 billion in its assets: the financial system.
"Main Street, directly or indirectly, by holding mutual funds, by having a pension in mutual funds or insurance invested in securities -- all of these are ways the person on the street has an interest in a stable financial system," said Lawrence J. White, a New York University professor who served on the Federal Home Loan Bank Board during the savings and loan crisis.
"The ability of an individual to get credit also" comes from Wall Street, White said.
The campaign trail
It's those kinds of truths that get lost in the rhetoric in Congress or on the campaign trail. The latest to chime in, Republican John McCain, said on March 25 that he didn't favor government intervention either for "big banks or small borrowers."
The Arizona senator, after months of silence on the issue, outlined a policy that seemed to suggest that the market should clean itself up. He wants accountants to review appraisal policies and lenders voluntarily to help homeowners on the brink. Should institutions fail or homeowners go bankrupt, McCain hinted that both had brought it upon themselves.
"Any assistance must be temporary and must not reward people who were irresponsible at the expense of those who weren't," McCain said according to a transcript of his remarks.
Sorry John, but an economic collapse wouldn't be limited to those who made bad bets or mistakes.
On the Democratic side, Barack Obama, the Illinois senator, told reporters that he is generally wary of bailouts but that there can be "exceptions," according to an interview in the Chicago Tribune.
Obama has said he'd like to create incentives for lenders to refinance mortgages and he wants crack down on irresponsible lenders. Most of the candidate's policies are tougher standards for lenders not borrowers.
Sen. Hillary Clinton has proposed a $30 billion program to help troubled home borrowers. She also wants to get former Fed chairmen Paul Volcker and Alan Greenspan on the job. But she also offered an honest assessment of the Bear Stearns bailout.
"When there's a run on mortgage-backed securities and the bottom falls out for investment banks, the bottom falls out for families who see the value of their homes -- their greatest source of wealth -- decline.
"When our credit markets freeze up, that doesn't just cause panic on our trading floors, but in small businesses that can't get the capital they need to survive, and on college campuses, like this one, when the student loan for next semester falls through," Clinton said.
Though she stopped short of endorsing the Fed's bailout of Bear Stearns, she's come the closest of any candidate to acknowledging that Wall Street and Main Street are just two names for the American credit highway.
'Deleterious consequences'
It's that chain reaction Clinton is referencing that Geithner and the Fed were anticipating as Bear Stearns slid toward bankruptcy on March 16. Make no mistake; the industry would have collapsed without Fed intervention.
"It was not a bailout of Bear Stearns," White said. "A run on Bear would have deleterious consequences. The Fed's goal was to reassure creditors and to stop the run problem...Lehman would have been next."
So, if the Fed is backing up investment banks like it does commercial banks, then shouldn't investment banks be under tighter controls? Isn't this intervention the equivalent of creditor insurance for those complex loan agreements between Wall Street banks?
If so, then there are bigger questions at stake than whether or not some fat cats got bailed out. Wall Street has been living a life of freewheeling risk, built around the fact the industry was doing it on its own dime. Backed by taxpayers, brokers may be subject to capital requirements, managerial competency standards and restrictions on what kinds of business it can do.
In other words, they'd be just like regular banks.
Taxpayer bailouts are the means, but regulation is the price of survival -- for the fat cats and all of us.
BSC - I say noise is beginning to settle...As so is the volume. Some bumps coming? I suppose but the panic is over what's done is done and the company will move on from here...should be a good rest of the week...
Ugly dog. That thing even makes Yoda look pretty. :)
News for 'BSC' - (=DJ US Sen Dodd:Bear Stearns-JPM Deal Raises "Serious" Questions)
By Michael R. Crittenden
OF DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--U.S. lawmakers stepped up their scrutiny of JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s (JPM) purchase of Bear Stearns Cos. (BSC) on Wednesday, with the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee scheduling an April 3 hearing that could feature testimony from the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department.
Expressing concern about the federal government's role in engineering the deal, Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., has asked Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to testify before the committee.
"While it is imperative to maintain the orderly structure of our markets, the sale agreement between JPMorgan Chase and Bear Stearns raises serious public policy questions," Dodd said in a statement.
Others asked to testify include Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox, Bear Stearns Chief Executive Alan Schwartz, JPMorgan Chairman James Dimon, and Timothy Geithner, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Dodd called the deal an "unprecedented arrangement," citing the Fed's decision to guarantee up to $30 billion in possible losses to help facilitate the acquisition. He said he was concerned about the impact on investors and the financial markets, as well as the exposure of taxpayers to any future losses stemming from the deal.
Earlier Wednesday, the top two members of the Senate Finance Committee also said they plan to seek more information about the deal. Sens. Max Baucus, D-Mont., and Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, said they had requested documents, names and other information from the Fed, Treasury and the two companies pertaining to the deal.
Baucus said in a statement that it was the finance committee's responsibility "to pin down just how the government decided to front $30 billion in taxpayer dollars...and to monitor the changing terms of the sale."
-By Michael R. Crittenden, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9273; michael.crittenden@dowjones.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 26, 2008 15:34 ET (19:34 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.- - 03 34 PM EDT 03-26-08
Longest orgasm on record. WTF was that?
Funny...left hand "forces" the process and then the right hand questions it.
Yep, time to offer shareholders $15.00 to get it over with quickly, before the feds get there butts in gear.
Followers
|
11
|
Posters
|
|
Posts (Today)
|
0
|
Posts (Total)
|
644
|
Created
|
10/29/07
|
Type
|
Free
|
Moderators |
Volume | |
Day Range: | |
Bid Price | |
Ask Price | |
Last Trade Time: |