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View Full Version : Tighten your money belts, we're in for a bumpy ride



Wildflower Fever
03-17-2008, 11:51 AM
Just one more sign that although we shouldn't panic, we are in for one of the worst economies in decades. Not to mention further financial monopolies being formed.:(

2ND UPDATE: J.P. Morgan To Buy Bear Stearns For $2 A Share

March 17, 2008: 09:18 AM EST


NEW YORK (Dow Jones) -- J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. is buying battered broker Bear Stearns Cos. for $236 million in a Federal Reserve-backed bailout unprecedented in scope and execution.

The Federal Reserve, which cut the discount rate in a coordinated move with its announced backing of the deal Sunday evening, is taking the extraordinary step of providing special financing in connection with this transaction.

The Fed has agreed to provide financing of up to $30 billion of less-liquid assets held by Bear Stearns (BSC). Roughly $20 billion of that funding will back mortgage securities.

J.P. Morgan (JPM) will exchange 0.05473 of a share of common stock for one share of Bear Stearns. Both boards have approved the transaction.

The deal offers Bear Stearns investors $2 a share -- a massive discount to the firm's closing price of $30 on Friday. A week ago, the stock was trading above $ 60 and a year ago it was at more than $150.

Shares of Bear Stearns traded at $3.30 in pre-market moves, down 89% from Friday's $30 close.

On Friday, Bear's executives told analysts and investors that the firm's book value -- a measure of assets minus liabilities -- was still at least $80 a share.

The price of $2 a share represents 2.4% of Bear Stearns' fourth-quarter 2007 book value per share of $84.09, Oppenheimer analyst Meredith Whitney said in a research note Monday.

The destruction of billions of dollars worth of value in a matter of days shows how vulnerable even the biggest brokerage firms are to the current credit crunch.

Bear Stearns' business quickly crumbled last week as counterparties and clients lost confidence and stopped trading with the firm. Since being founded in 1923, Bear managed to survive all other crises, including the Great Depression.

"During a crisis of confidence, earnings, book value and liquidity don't matter much," Prashant Bhatia, an analyst at Citigroup, wrote in a note to investors on Sunday. "Clients and counterparties vote with their money. And if confidence breaks down rapid deterioration will likely follow."

There's "nothing good about current situation," the analyst added. "A crisis of confidence does not benefit any of the industry participants. No firm that is reliant on the secured funding marketplace and short-term borrowings is immune to a crisis of confidence."

Such a crisis, Bhatia, "includes every investment bank."

Systemic stopper

J. P. Morgan executives said during a conference call late Sunday that the bank will guarantee all of Bear Stearns' trading obligations immediately. The guarantee will remain in place until the acquisition is completed in roughly 90 days, they noted.

That may reduce the risk of the broader financial system freezing up. Bear Stearns was one of the largest U.S. brokerage firms and the second-largest underwriter of mortgage-backed securities.

It was also very active in derivatives markets. If a firm with this many tentacles in the markets failed to meet its obligations to a lot of counterparties, other financial-services firms could also collapse.

"The Fed obviously acted to stopper systemic risk and its actions did keep the Bear portfolio of troubled securities from being dumped on the market," said Robert Brusca, chief economist at Fact and Opinion Economics.

Hedge fund business

J.P. Morgan will get Bear Stearns' prime brokerage business, which lends securities and money to hedge funds. Bear Stearns is the third-largest prime broker, behind Morgan Stanley (MS) and Goldman Sachs (GS).

Prime brokerage is a lucrative business but, like many of Bear Stearns' other businesses, it relies partly on the confidence of clients to keep trading with the firm. It's not clear whether some of Bear Stearns' hedge-fund clients may have already moved their accounts to rivals.

"Despite recent events, the health of franchise and the prime brokerage and clearing business is in good shape," a J.P. Morgan executive said on Sunday. He didn't give any more details.

J.P. Morgan also gets Bear Stearns' investment-banking business, which works with some clients that the bank doesn't advise. It also gets an equities business and a commodities unit with a focus on energy trading.

Mortgage exposures

But J.P. Morgan is also taking on some of Bear Stearns' large mortgage exposures. The troubled broker had $33 billion of mortgage-related holdings at the end of February.

Roughly $2 billion of that was tied to subprime home loans, with $15 billion backed by prime and so-called Alt-A mortgages, according to a J.P. Morgan presentation on Sunday. The rest -- $16 billion - is commercial mortgage-backed securities.

"In doing our due diligence, that was an area we needed to get comfort on," Jamie Dimon, chief executive of J.P. Morgan, said during the Sunday conference call.

About $20 billion of Bear Stearns' mortgage exposure will now be covered by the financing provided by the Fed, leaving J.P. Morgan exposed to roughly $13 billion of mortgage securities, he noted.

Bear Stearns also has about $9 billion of exposure to leveraged loans, which are used to finance leveraged buyouts, he added.

J.P. Morgan plans to "de-lever" the Bear Stearns balance sheet after the acquisition, executives at the bank said. That means assets that Bear Stearns bought, partly with borrowed money, will be sold and loans repaid with the proceeds.

Selling illiquid mortgage securities during a credit crunch could generate huge losses. J.P. Morgan said on Sunday that the deal will likely cost roughly $ 6 billion before taxes -- reflecting the impact of selling some of Bear's assets and de-leveraging the balance sheet, plus litigation and other costs.

The $6 billion figure "only represents about $40 per Bear share of value, so it seems to bake in considerable cushion for J.P. Morgan's shareholders in the event that additional markdowns on Bear's assets exceed projections," Banc of America analyst Michael Hecht said in a research report Sunday night.

'Absolutely zero chance'

The $2-a-share offer is so low that other bidders could, in theory, emerge. Earlier in the weekend, other suitors appeared to be vying for Bear Stearns, including private-equity firms J.C. Flowers & Co. and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday.

But according to one investor, other bidders are unlikely because there's so much uncertainty surrounding Bear Stearns' mortgage-related and derivatives positions.

"There's absolutely zero chance of another bidder because Bear is a huge black box," said Whitney Tilson, founder of investment firm T2 Partners.

"When a highly leveraged financial institution loses the confidence and backing of the market, all its liabilities accelerate and a lot of the assets become very illiquid. No one wants to trade with you. In a matter of days that's what happened to Bear."

Other large financial institutions that might be capable of handling Bear Stearns' liabilities and restoring confidence in the markets have their own problems, Tilson noted.

Indeed, Citigroup Inc. (C) has been struggling with its own mortgage-related exposures, and Bank of America Corp. (BAC) is trying to complete its acquisition of Countrywide Financial Corp. (CFC), a big mortgage lender that almost went bust.

J.P. Morgan is one of the few large financial institutions that is capable of trying to resuscitate Bear Stearns, partly because Dimon extricated the bank from a lot of its subprime mortgage exposures a few years ago, Tilson explained.

"That was a great move and that's the only reason he's able to buy Bear now," he said. "This deal could still be a complete disaster for J.P. Morgan, but the most likely scenario is that the bank is big and strong enough, along with the Fed's $30 billion insurance policy, to restore confidence."

J.P. Morgan, part of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York announced a historic agreement early Friday that gave a liquidity-starved Bear Stearns access to the Fed's discount window.

Shares of Bear Stearns closed at $57 on Thursday, before that agreement was announced.

Amy in Vermont
03-17-2008, 05:10 PM
Unfortunately, I think this is just the beginning. My gut tells me we are in for some very hard times ahead.

lucille
03-17-2008, 06:18 PM
You guys are coughing, and the rest of the world is getting a cold. I really don't understand The Federal Reserve bank, which I believe is a private entity.

Our Reserve Bank is wholly government owned and the board members are appointed by the Treasurer and treasury. It supposedly runs the economy for the financial good of the people. (I think it is going overboard at the moment with constant interest rate rises.) I have just sold an investment property because I can no longer afford the high mortgage which has gone from 5.5% to 9% in two years. I lost quite a few thousand dollars on it, but as I only had it to help out a friend, it was not necessary for me to keep it for my dotage, and had become a struggle to maintain.

Whereas your Federal Reserve is all about profit to shareholders. Do any of you knowledgeable Rudies understand the strange economics in the US.:confused:

I just received yet another letter from my bank advising that the interest rate has gone up again. This is the tenth rise in the last 2 years or so, and I now owe more than I borrowed. I replied to their letter as follows:


"Mr Richard Lorraway
Bank of Western Australia Ltd
Level 2 100 James Street
Northbridge WA 6003

Dear Mr Lorraway

Account No. *********HOME LOAN

I refer to your letter of 12 March 2008, and offer you and your company my sincere sympathies. It must be difficult to keep up the investors dividends and increase your yearly gross profit, unless you increase the interest rates to your bread and butter clients. It is heartening to see that you have your priorities right.

After all, you also have the meagre directors fees and bonuses to keep up with, and they, whilst a miserly millions of dollars per director per year, must be maintained at all costs. After all the directors have established and need to maintain a decent lifestyle. However it is beyond me how they manage to spend these grotesque millions of dollars in a life span.

Perhaps if you just make it a condition of lending that you will in future raise the interest rate by .05% every quarter until the loan is repaid, it may save you the costs of correspondence and postage. Every little bit helps! Of course you may have to put up with foreclosures and acquiring properties, and this could take up a bit of time, and time is money. Just a suggestion. Put it to your shareholders and directors.

Yours faithfully


Wendy Maguire
18th March 2008

DaveM
03-18-2008, 01:48 PM
Unfortunately, our money is backed by nothing but the "full faith and credit of the United States"--presumably referring to our government, which has been drowning in red ink for decades. Without exception, every system which has attempted to run on paper money as opposed to money backed by tangible value has failed in short order (some excellent examples can be found in the first attempts by former Soviet Republics and parts of the former Yugoslavia to issue money backed by nothing but say-so).

In a weird sense, those now suffering from the "credit crunch" may end up profiting from a collapse of the dollar, since resulting hyper-inflation will make it easy to pay off what now seem impossible debts. That, however, will put every bank in the country out of business. Not exactly beneficial to anyone in the end.

The collapse of Bear Stearns stock, conversely, most likely did not harm the company itself in any way. Stock sales only benefit their issuer on the Initial Public Offering--after that, it is investors who profit or lose. I would presume that every employee of Bear Stearns who is hauling down a six figure or greater salary is still receiving paychecks for the moment. Some of the low folks on the totem pole, however, will have to worry a bit as J.P. Morgan will not need everyone.

Oak Kitten
03-18-2008, 02:14 PM
Wendy,

Great letter. I am no expert on the federal reserve, but it is a "quasi-public" institution.

This mess is what you can expect when you put the foxes in charge of the henhouse, as this administration has done for the last 8 years. Bush's "base" consists of the wealthy bankers, oil men and industrialists who make their livings through the exploitation of others. He pushes deregulation on all fronts, which opens the floodgates for corruption. Republicans run for office on the platform that government doesn't work, and once they get elected, they set out to prove it by appointing people to head agencies whose interests are diametrically opposed to the mission those agencies are supposed to perform. That's why you get the head of the Consumer Product Safety Commission testifying before Congress in the wake of all these stories of tainted products coming into the US from China insisting that the CPSC does NOT need a larger budget, despite the fact that its staff has been slashed to the bone.

Bush was on TV the other day, saying "he was an optimistic guy." No sh*t. When you have gone through life never having to accept accountability for anything, and always having someone around to bail you out, you'd be optimistic, too. Bush's buddies are not going to pay the price, it is all the "little people." And you are right, as the US economy goes pear-shaped, its the rest of the world that is really going to get hurt.

Oak

DaveM
03-18-2008, 10:47 PM
The first thing I thought of when I heard of the Bear Stearns buyout was that Busheney must have friends in high places at J. P. Morgan. No doubt all will come out in due time, but as with most of the current administration's actions, the truth will come out at a time and in such a manner as to serve as much practical use to the folks who got screwed as a positive result to a test for herpes simplex.