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May 16, 2008 6:46:26 AM CDT



Bear Dead at 85

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Thread started by Imperator; Last updated Mar 17, 08 7:03 AM CDT by P Spain | View history
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Bear Dead at 85

A victim of its poor bets on sub-prime mortgages and its own bad management Bear Stearns died a quiet death Sunday when JP Morgan acquired it for a 93% discount over its closing market value on Friday.  Herewith the sad tale of the tape.

Stories

Stories 1 - 20 of 25

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  • April 2008
    • Bear Bailout Called 'Worst Mistake in a Generation'

      Bear Bailout Called 'Worst Mistake in a Generation'

      A former top-ranking Fed official has called the central bank's decision to bail out Bear Stearns its "worst mistake in a generation," the Wall Street Journal reports. The official, former chief of monetary policy, compares the hasty move to errors that helped trigger the Great Depression. He accused officials of ignoring other options, such as demanding more from buyer JP Morgan, seeking other suitors or removing certain assets from Bear's portfolio. More »

    • New Hires at Bear Stearns Axed Before They Start

      New Hires at Bear Stearns Axed Before They Start

      Hundreds of college grads who thought they had landed dream positions with Bear Stearns were canned before their first day on the job, the Wall Street Journal reports. As the giant bank began to implode, the students were at first assured their new jobs were safe—but then were sent packing to hunt for work along with 38,000 others recently let go by the financial industry. More »

    • Bear Stearns Could Face Civil Charges

      Bear Stearns Could Face Civil Charges

      Bear Stearns has been warned it could face civil charges stemming from an SEC probe into its anti-competitive bidding for municipal bonds, the Wall Street Journal reports. The firm is also being investigated by the FTC for alleged violations of consumer protection laws involving its mortgage-servicing unit. Bear Stearns officials said the company is co-operating with both agencies and the Department of Justice. More »

  • March 2008
    • Angry Shareholders Want More for Bear Stearns

      Angry Shareholders Want More for Bear Stearns

      Bear Stearns shareholders are threatening to vote against its sale to JPMorgan, saying the $2 price per share for the nation’s fifth largest investment bank is unrealistic; speculators seem to agree, trading up Bear stock to $5.91 yesterday, a 23% bump. Expect some serious brinkmanship to force a higher offer or lure another bid, reports the Wall Street Journal . More »

    • Economy in 'Sharp Decline,' Paulson Admits

      Economy in 'Sharp Decline,' Paulson Admits

      Hank Paulson came closer than ever to conceding that the economy is in recession in a series of interviews yesterday, Reuters reports. Weary after a weekend in which he helped to broker Bear Stearns' fire sale to JPMorgan, the treasury secretary avoided the R-word but admitted: "There's no doubt that the American people know that the economy has turned down sharply. So to me much less important is the label that's placed on it today." More »

    • Bear Stearns Jumps on Hope for Higher JPMorgan Bid

      Bear Stearns Jumps on Hope for Higher JPMorgan Bid

      Bear Stearns shares jumped 23% today on hopes that stockholders will reject JPMorgan's bailout offer in favor of a higher offer, Bloomberg reports. The surge moved the price to nearly three times the current value of the fire-sale bid, which one major stockholder termed "derisory." "There's every incentive for shareholders to vote 'no' the first time," said one analyst. More »

    • Will Lehman Be the Crunch's Next Victim?

      Will Lehman Be the Crunch's Next Victim?

      After a collapse of confidence sank Bear Stearns last week, some traders are betting that Lehman Brothers will be the next victim of the credit crunch. Its stock went on a rollercoaster ride yesterday—plunging 40% at one point and closing down 19%, the biggest fall since the firm went public. But analysts, wary of giving vultures more reasons to circle, are watching what they say about the brokerage firm, Marketwatch reports. More »

    • Stocks Rebound, Countering Selloff in Financials

      Stocks Rebound, Countering Selloff in Financials

      Stocks steadied after steep early morning losses today, with the Dow actually rising 1.06 points by mid-morning, the Wall Street Journal reports. But financials were still down big, as the Bear Stearns fire sale loomed large over the market. Lehman Brothers, down 22%, was hit the worst, other than Bear itself, which nosedived 87%. Still, at $3.79, it remained stubbornly above its $2 buyout price. More »

    • Investors Ask: Who's Next?

      Investors Ask: Who's Next?

      Wall Street, reeling over JP Morgan’s bargain-basement purchase of Bear Stearns, is anxiously watching to see “who’s next” to succumb to the continuing credit squeeze, reports the Financial Times. As investment banks prepare to release first quarter results this week—led by Goldman Sachs and Lehman Brothers tomorrow—the mood is grim. “Short-sellers could have a field day with bank stocks this week,” said one banker. More »

    • JP Morgan Buys Bear Stearns for $2 a Share

      JP Morgan Buys Bear Stearns for $2 a Share

      JP Morgan has agreed tonight to buy Bear Stearns for a scant $2 a share, a bargain-basement price—stock closed at $30 a share—that demonstrates the urgency of staving off the collapse of the venerable investment bank and widespread panic in financial markets, the AP reports. The Bush administration and Federal Reserve have reportedly approved the all-stock sale, which was rushed today under federal oversight to avoid Stearns filing for bankruptcy, the New York Times reports. More »

    • Wounded Bear Scrambles for a Savior

      Wounded Bear Scrambles for a Savior

      What's next for Bear Stearns? A Wall Street institution for the better part of a century, it is now scrambling to find a buyer. Its best hope is JP Morgan, which provided a temporary lifeline yesterday along with the Fed. But other possible suitors include Citibank and HSBC, the Wall Street Journal reports. In a sign of the times, the Journal notes that Bear's single biggest asset might be its building—the Madison Avenue digs could fetch $1.2 billion. More »

    • Bear Bailout Invites the Bears

      Bear Bailout Invites the Bears

      News of the Bear Stearns bailout triggered a sell-off today as investors were reminded that the true depth and breadth of current credit problems remains uncertain, the Wall Street Journal reports. Bear Stearns stock closed at 30, down a breathtaking 47.4% on the day. The Dow fell 194.65 to 11,951.09, the Nasdaq 51.12 to  2,212.49, and the S&P 500 27.34 to 1,288.14. More »

    • JP Morgan, Feds Bail Out Bear Stearns

      JP Morgan, Feds Bail Out Bear Stearns

      Bear Sterns has reached out to rival JP Morgan Chase and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York for emergency funding to reassure investors concerned about the struggling investment bank's deteriorating liquidity, the Wall Street Journal reports. The move is a startling indicator of how hard the subprime virus has hit US credit markets and financial firms. More »

  • January 2008
    • Bear Stearns CEO Will Step Down

      Bear Stearns CEO Will Step Down

      Add Bear Sterns CEO Jimmy Cayne's to the list of rolling heads in the subprime mortgage market collapse, reports the Wall Street Journal . Cayne, 73, has been the target of board and shareholder angst over the 53% drop in the bank’s stock last year—the largest of any of the big securities firms. He began informing directors yesterday of his decision. More »

  • December 2007
    • Bear Stearns Posts First Loss

      Bear Stearns Posts First Loss

      Analysts expected Bear Stearns to post its first-ever loss today, they just expected it to be smaller. After $1.9 billion in subprime writedowns, the company posted a $6.91 loss per share, dwarfing the $1.82 analysts predicted. Executives gave up their bonuses, as revenue from debt sales and trading were wiped out, Bloomberg reports. “They’ve got a myriad of problems,” one analyst said. More »

    • No Bonus for Bear Stearns Execs

      No Bonus for Bear Stearns Execs

      Bear Stearns’ CEO and other top executives, poised to announce the company’s first quarterly loss in its 84-year history tomorrow, are expected to bypass millions of dollars in annual bonuses, an acknowledgment of the dismal year the firm had, driven down by the collapse of the subprime mortgage market and two internal hedge funds, the Wall Street Journal reports. More »

  • October 2007
    • Bear Stearns, China's Citic Trade $1B Stakes

      Bear Stearns, China's Citic Trade $1B Stakes

      In a welcome boost after this year's devastating subprime losses, Bear Stearns today moved to secure a long-coveted slice of the Chinese market. Stearns and China’s Citic Securities Co. agreed  to invest $1 billion in each other, pooling their Asian resources to develop new products for the Chinese market, and launching a Hong Kong-based joint venture to reach markets outside China, Bloomberg reports. More »

  • September 2007
    • Billionaire Takes Huge Stake in Bear Stearns

      Billionaire Takes Huge Stake in Bear Stearns

      Billionaire Joseph C. Lewis has bought enough stock to become the largest single shareholder in embattled investment bank Bear Stearns, Reuters reports. The reclusive British-born currency trader bought up $860.4 million in shares over the last month, nabbing a 7% stake. Putnam Investing, the second largest shareholder, owns a 6% stake. More »

  • August 2007
    • Bear Stearns Takes Refuge in Caribbean

      Bear Stearns Takes Refuge in Caribbean

      Bear Stearns, faced with the implosion of two hedge funds worth more than $1 billion, has decided to liquidate them in the Cayman Islands—a move that will give creditors and investors less access to their money.  Bloomberg forecasts a court battle over the tactic, which an analyst said will yield creditors and investors “a pittance on the dollar.” More »

    • Bear Stearns Axes Prez Over Fund Fiasco

      Bear Stearns Axes Prez Over Fund Fiasco

      Bear Stearns has fired its No. 2 and once-likely successor as CEO in the wake of  the collapse of two company hedge funds worth more than $1B, reports the Wall Street Journal . Warren Spector, the most high-profile casualty to date in the subprime-mortage crisis rocking Wall Street, is a mortgage and trading expert who oversaw the unit that housed the two failed funds. More »

Stories 1 - 20 of 25

<< Prev 1 2 Next >>
Bear Dead at 85
The logo for Bear Stearns is shown at its corporate headquarters in New York, Wednesday, July 18, 2007. Stocks retreated Wednesday after Bear Stearns Cos. told investors there was little value left in...   (Associated Press)
Bear Dead at 85
The headquarters for securities firm Bear Stearns is shown March 16, 2006 in a New York file photo. Bear Stearns Cos., the fifth-biggest U.S. investment bank, said Thursday, June 14, 2007 fiscal second-quarter...   (Associated Press)
Bear Dead at 85
The logo for Bear Stearns is shown at its corporate headquarters in New York, Wednesday, July 18, 2007. Stocks retreated Wednesday after Bear Stearns Cos. told investors there was little value left in...   (Associated Press)
Bear Dead at 85
People enter Bear Stearns corporate headquarters in New York, Wednesday, July 18, 2007. Stocks retreated Wednesday after Bear Stearns Cos. told investors there was little value left in two failed hedge...   (Associated Press)
Bear Dead at 85
People pass the entrance to Bear Stearns corporate headquarters in New York, Wednesday, July 18, 2007. Stocks retreated Wednesday after Bear Stearns Cos. told investors there was little value left in...   (Associated Press)
Bear Dead at 85
This is an undated handout file photo of Bear Stearns Cos. Inc. chief executive James E. "Jimmy" Cayne. (AP Photo/HO/Bear StearnsCos. Inc., file)   (Associated Press)
Bear Dead at 85
Bear pelt being dried   (Sutterstock (Louise Cukrov))
Bear Dead at 85
The logo for Bear Stearns is shown at its corporate headquarters in New York, in this July 18, 2007 file photo. Bear Stearns Cos., the nation's fifth-largest investment bank, on Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2007...   (Associated Press)
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play
Rival to buy Bear Stearns   (bbcworldnews (YouTube))
Bear Stearns scares Wall St.   (reutersvideo (YouTube))

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Related Threads

Subprime Collapse    Bear Stearns    Credit Market Chaos    Hedge Funds    The Markets    Mergers & Acquisitions    The Big Banks    A Billion Here...    Ben Bernanke    Henry Paulson

Background

Bear Stearns - Company Overview - Hoover's
Hoover's

This bear never hibernates. One of the top investment banking, clearing, and brokerage firms in the US, Bear Stearns serves a worldwide clientele of corporations, institutional investors, governments, and wealthy individuals. It owns several subsidiaries which provide asset management, clearing and...

» Read more about Bear Stearns - Company Overview - Hoover's at Hoover's

Bear Stearns
Wikipedia

The Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. (NYSE: BSC) is the parent company of Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc., which is one of the largest global investment banks and securities trading and brokerage firms in the world. The firm's main businesses include capital markets (equities and fixed income), investment banking,...

» Read more about Bear Stearns at Wikipedia


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