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May 13, 2008 8:28:48 AM CDT



Bear Stearns

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Thread started by S Goldstein; Last updated Jan 8, 08 6:23 AM CST by D Lim | View history
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Bear Stearns

One of the largest global investment banks and securities trading and brokerage firms in the world struggles amid the US credit crunch

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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 »

    • Are Wall Street Banks Ready to Risk Again?

      Are Wall Street Banks Ready to Risk Again?

      Wary investors appear to be returning to Wall Street, the Journal reports, buying back into higher-risk debt issues from the likes of troubled Citigroup and Merrill Lynch. “Risk taking has come back in the market,” said one expert. More »

    • J'Accuse, Part Deux

      J'Accuse, Part Deux

      Economist, writer, actor, and lawyer Ben Stein follows up his December excoriation of Goldman Sachs' contribution to the subprime crisis with a look in today's New York Times into how Wall Street executives can get away with reckless behavior at the expense of the public. This time he targets the SEC, which has been so weakened in the Bush administration it quietly loosened the capital requirements for investment banks and "told Wall Street to police itself to save on regulatory costs."   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 »

    • Tough Market Greets Bear Castoffs

      Tough Market Greets Bear Castoffs

      Thousands of Bear Stearns employees face uncertain futures after the investment bank's takeover by JPMorgan, and they’re entering a Wall Street beset with problems and bereft of jobs, reports Reuters. "They are coming into a market at a time when Wall Street doesn't offer much opportunity," one analyst said. Of 26 top executive positions at JPMorgan, only five went to Bear employees. More »

    • Fed, Execs Defend Bear Bailout

      Fed, Execs Defend Bear Bailout

      Bear Stearns was just hours from collapse, and letting it go down would have been disastrous, executives and regulators argued on Capital Hill today while defending the controversial bailout, the New York Times reports. Without the takeover, “we would all be facing a far more dire set of challenges,” said JPMorgan CEO James Dimon, citing the possibility of a mass run on other investment banks. More »

    • Congress to Grill Bernanke on Bear Stearns

      Congress to Grill Bernanke on Bear Stearns

      Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke steps onto a tightrope today for two days of Congressional testimony focusing on the central bank’s starring role in the Bear Stearns bailout. Bernanke likely will be taken to task for not stepping in earlier, and more forcefully, to avert economic chaos, reports the New York Times . More »

  • March 2008
    • Lehman Is Selling $3B in Shares

      Lehman Is Selling $3B in Shares

      Lehman Brothers is selling $3 billion in new shares to allay fears after its stock dropped 42% this year, Bloomberg reports. "We still maintain that we don't need capital, but we've realized that perception is the dominant issue in today's markets,'' said CFO Erin Callan. Lehman fell up to 48% this month on rumors that it lacked cash and faced a Bear Stearns-style meltdown. More »

    • Market 'Fix' Just Feeds the Beast

      Market 'Fix' Just Feeds the Beast

      The Treasury plan unveiled today will never rein in free-wheeling markets because it isn't intended to, Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times . President Bush, who for 7 years has slashed at regulations, ignores how well they harness deposit-taking banks. And he denies that "non-depository" banks like Bear Stearns need them too. More »

    • Bear Stearns Chairman Sells $1B Stake for $61M

      Bear Stearns Chairman Sells $1B Stake for $61M

      Bear Stearns Chairman Jimmy Cayne yesterday became the poster boy for the company’s fall from grace, selling his one-time $1 billion stake in the investment bank for a mere $61.3 million, reports the Wall Street Journal. Cayne sold 5.7 million shares he’d acquired for $10.84 each, a far cry from the $159 they were worth last April. More »

    • Paulson Wants Closer Tabs on Investment Banks

      Paulson Wants Closer Tabs on Investment Banks

      Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said today that investment banks owe the government more information about their financial condition if they are occasionally allowed to borrow money from the Federal Reserve, the New York Times reports. Paulson seemed to call for tighter regulations before calling the recent bailout of Bear Stearns "precedent only for unusual periods of turmoil." More »

    • Bear Stearns Staffers Gird for Mass Layoffs After $3B Hit

      Bear Stearns Staffers Gird for Mass Layoffs After $3B Hit

      The Icarus-like fall of Bear Stearns stock, trading as high as $170 a share a year ago before plummeting to $2 last week, has cost Bear employees—who once owned nearly a third of the company—more than $3 billion. That's even after JPMorgan raised its bid for the investment bank to close to $10 a share, reports Reuters. More »

    • Bad Credit News Means Good Tidings for Analysts

      Bad Credit News Means Good Tidings for Analysts

      The Bear Stearns crisis was bad news for many, but it was good news—or at least good business—for financial analysts at London-based Breaking Views. The credit crunch is increasing demand for the company’s financial insights, offered online and, through various partnerships, in print. Breaking Views is seizing the moment, courting more newspapers and offering free online columns, the Guardian reports. More »

    • JPMorgan Boosts Bear Stearns Offer to $10/Share

      JPMorgan Boosts Bear Stearns Offer to $10/Share

      JPMorgan will quintuple its takeover offer for Bear Stearns, setting a new $10-per-share price today after a weekend of tense renegotiations. Bear shareholders had objected to the proposed $2 deal, saying the bank-saving bid was a heist. JPMorgan is also buying 95 million more shares of the bank, which will give it 39.5% ownership and improved odds of getting the deal accepted, the Wall Street Journal reports. More »

    • JPMorgan in Talks to Boost Bear Stearns Bid

      JPMorgan in Talks to Boost Bear Stearns Bid

      JPMorgan Chase was in negotiations last night to quintuple its bid for Bear Stearns following a storm of angry protests by Bear shareholders over the initial bargain-basement deal for the investment banking giant, reports the New York Times . Under the new deal, JPMorgan Chase would pay $1 billion—$10 a share, up from the initial offer of $2 a share, which represented just one-fifteenth of Bear’s market price. More »

    • Cramer: the Bear Has Been Tamed

      Cramer: the Bear Has Been Tamed

      We've hit bottom, Jim Cramer proclaims. Bear Stearns' collapse may have been apocalyptic in scale, but it at least woke up a complacent Fed and Treasury secretary, the bombastic market guru writes in New York today. “We’ve been through dozens of false bottoms,” he says, but now Bernanke and Paulson are “basically saying they will do anything to save the system.” More »

    • Hedge Funds Cash In on Collapse of Bear

      Hedge Funds Cash In on Collapse of Bear

      The epic collapse of Bear Stearns didn't mean bad news for everyone on Wall Street—several big hedge funds made a mint off it, the Wall Street Journal reports. The funds essentially placed bets that Bear would stumble, then raked in millions when the security firm's shares took a nosedive. The SEC is investigating to make sure profiteers did not have insider knowledge of the coming collapse. More »

    • Bear Stearns Hires Trauma Counselors

      Bear Stearns Hires Trauma Counselors

      Bear Stearns will provide grief counseling for employees facing decimated stock holdings, and the possible loss of their jobs, after the bank's sale to JP Morgan, ABC News reports. "Anything that effects human behavior or emotions at work are the areas where we focus," says one such professional. An average Bear employee who had $200,00 in company stock now has only $2,000. More »

    • Crisis Is More of Confidence Than Credit

      Crisis Is More of Confidence Than Credit

      The credit crisis that’s roiled financial markets has its genesis in the housing boom that began in 1998, David Leonhardt writes in the New York Times . The boom led lenders to create new financing options—including subprime loans—as investors saw potential for huge returns. Low interest rates encouraged investors, and homeowners, to stretch themselves too thin—and the seeds of crisis were planted. More »

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