Fed and rival bail out Bear Stearns

Date : 03/15/2008 @ 5:04AM
Source : TFN
Stock : Bear Stearns Companies Inc (BSC)
Quote : 9.89  0.0 (0.00%) @ 4:14PM
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Fed and rival bail out Bear Stearns

        NEW YORK (AP) -                                     businessminute
    On the verge of a collapse that could have shaken the very foundations of
the U.S. financial system, investment bank Bear Stearns Cos. was bailed out
Friday by a rival and the federal government. The near-miss raised new alarm
about the credit crisis -- and whether other big firms might be in jeopardy.
    The rescue came from JPMorgan Chase & Co. and, in an extraordinary step, the
Federal Reserve, both rushing to pump new money into the venerable Wall Street
firm after its financial state deteriorated so much in a 24-hour period that it
threatened to fail.
    Bear Stearns stock lost nearly half its market value, about $5.7 billion, in
a matter of minutes, and pulled the broader market down with it. The Dow Jones
industrial average fell nearly 200 points.
    If Bear Stearns were to go under, "it has the potential of bringing down the
whole market," said Richard Bove, an analyst at Punk, Ziegel & Co. "This is the
crescendo of the crisis."
    JPMorgan and the central bank agreed to extend loans for 28 days to Bear
Stearns, the nation's fifth-largest investment bank and the one hit hardest by
the subprime mortgage mess.
    Two hedge funds managed by Bear Stearns failed last summer, setting off a
credit crisis that has swept up banks and brokerages around the globe.
    In backing up JPMorgan, the Fed dusted off a rarely used, Depression-era
provision to provide loans. It also said it was ready to step in to fight an
erosion of confidence in the nation's largest financial institutions.
    Officials from the Fed and the Securities and Exchange Commission held
conference calls throughout the day Thursday to assess the potential impact on
the broader economy, according to a Treasury official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the discussions.
    For Bear, the crisis started when market speculation grew that it might have
to seize collateral -- mostly mortgage-backed securities worth next to nothing
-- from the private equity firm Carlyle Group.
    Carlyle runs a bond fund and has come under intense pressure during the past
week from creditors demanding collateral to back their investments.
    As speculation swelled in the market, investors, customers and lenders raced
to withdraw their money or rescind their credit lines. By Thursday night, Bear
Stearns Chief Executive Alan Schwartz said, the bank realized the withdrawals
might outpace the bank's resources -- so it reached out to JPMorgan for help.
    JPMorgan, the nation's third-largest bank, has been hurt far less by the
mortgage mess than other financial institutions. It will provide secured loans
to Bear for four weeks -- insured, in essence, by the Fed.
    Schwartz said it would buy Bear time and allow it to convince customers
"that we have the ability to fund ourselves every day, to do business as usual."
No one has disclosed how large the financing offered to Bear Stearns is.
    The CEO also confirmed -- as many on Wall Street had suspected -- that Bear
Stearns could be up for sale. He told analysts on a conference call that the
bailout is a "bridge to a more permanent solution."
    Bear is working with investment bank Lazard Ltd. to explore its options.
That may include an outright sale of Bear Stearns to JPMorgan, something top
executives from both banks were discussing, according to a person familiar with
the talks who was not authorized to speak on the record.
    JPMorgan is considered to have one of the strongest balance sheets among
Wall Street banks, and is not already involved in a rescue like Bank of
America's purchase of Countrywide Financial Corp., the nation's largest mortgage
lender.
    Bear Stearns, which has about 14,000 employees worldwide, has struggled
since the two hedge funds under its control lost billions of dollars after
investing heavily in securities backed by pools of subprime mortgages.
    "They were the dominant firm for repackaging mortgages," said Andrew
Wilkinson, senior market analyst at Interactive Brokers Group. "That's where all
earnings came from. They had the least-diversified earnings stream of all of
Wall Street securities firms, and as a result, they're paying the price today."
    As delinquencies and defaults swelled among subprime mortgages, investors
shied away from buying securities backed by the troubled loans.
    Those fears expanded to encompass all but the safest bonds and securities,
forcing investment banks to significantly reduce the value of their holdings and
drying up money throughout the market.
    Bear Stearns has racked up $2.75 billion in write-downs since last year, and
releases first-quarter results on Monday that could show more losses. The bank
lost $859 million during the quarter that ended Nov. 30, a stark contrast to its
$558 million profit during the same period just one year earlier -- before the
credit crisis.
    The broader financial services sector has racked up nearly $160 billion in
write-downs since the middle of last year.
    "My guess is by next week, there will be rumors of other large, familiar
institutions" that could be in trouble, said Anil Kashyap, a professor at the
Graduate School of Business at the University of Chicago.
    JPMorgan said it would not expose itself to any serious risk by helping
Bear, but its shares dropped anyway, down $1.57, or about 4 percent, to $36.54.
Bear stock plummeted 47 percent, or $27, to $30.
    
    AP Business Writers Madlen Read and Dan Seymour in New York and Martin
Crutsinger and Marcy Gordon in Washington contributed to this report.
    
Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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