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Too_Many_Tools Too_Many_Tools is offline
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Default OT - The Republican Prosperity

On Mar 16, 8:39*pm, Too_Many_Tools wrote:
One for the record books...

The US taxpayer is paying for this one.

How do you like being a part owner of a bankrupt bank?

There are likely more to come.

And the Iraq War is costing you $12 billion a month.

How deep are your pockets?

TMT

JPMorgan to buy Bear for $2 a share By JOE BEL BRUNO and MADLEN READ,
AP Business Writers

Just four days after Bear Stearns Chief Executive Alan Schwartz
assured Wall Street that his company was not in trouble, he was forced
on Sunday to sell the investment bank to competitor JPMorgan Chase for
a bargain-basement price of $2 a share, or $236.2 million.

The stunning last-minute buyout was aimed at averting a Bear Stearns
bankruptcy and a spreading crisis of confidence in the global
financial system sparked by the collapse in the subprime mortgage
market. Bear Stearns was the most exposed to risky bets on the loans;
it is now the first major bank to be undone by that market's collapse.

The Federal Reserve and the U.S. government swiftly approved the all-
stock buyout, showing the urgency of completing the deal before world
markets opened. The Fed also essentially made the takeover risk-free
by saying it would guarantee up to $30 billion of the troubled
mortgage and other assets that got the nation's fifth-largest
investment bank into trouble.

"This is going to go down in very historic terms," said Peter Dunay,
chief investment strategist for New York-based Meridian Equity
Partners. "This is about credit being overextended, and how bad it is
for major financial institutions and for individuals. This is why
we're probably heading into a recession."

JPMorgan Chase & Co. said it will guarantee all business -- such as
trading and investment banking -- until Bear Stearns' shareholders
approve the deal, which is expected to be completed during the second
quarter. The acquisition includes Bear Stearns' midtown Manhattan
headquarters.

JPMorgan Chief Financial Officer Michael Cavanaugh did not say what
would happen to Bear Stearns' 14,000 employees worldwide or whether
the 85-year-old Bear Stearns name would live on after surviving the
Great Depression, two World Wars and a slew of recessions. He told
analysts and investors on a conference call that JPMorgan was most
interested in buying Bear Stearns' prime brokerage business, which
completes trades for big investors such as hedge funds.

At almost the same time as the deal for control of Bear Stearns was
announced, the Federal Reserve said it approved a cut in its lending
rate to banks to 3.25 percent from 3.50 percent and created another
lending facility for big investment banks. The central bank's official
meeting is on Tuesday. Before the emergency move to lower the discount
rate, which is the rate at which banks lend each other money, the Fed
was widely expected to again cut its headline rate by as much as a
full point to 2 percent.

"Having taking Bear Stearns out of the problem category, and the
strong action by the Federal Reserve, we would anticipate the market
will behave quite differently on Monday than it was Thursday or
Friday," Cavanaugh said.

Some analysts expected it to be a brutal day for global stocks,
nevertheless. Shortly after the news broke, Japan's benchmark Nikkei
stock index plunged more than 3 percent in morning trading.

A bankruptcy protection filing of Bear Stearns could have heightened
anxiety in world financial markets amid a deepening credit crunch. So
far, global banks have written down some $200 billion worth of
securities slammed amid the credit crisis -- more write-downs could
come. Last week, a bond fund controlled by private equity firm Carlyle
Group faltered near collapse because of investments linked to mortgage-
backed securities.

JPMorgan's acquisition of Bear Stearns represents roughly 1 percent of
what the investment bank was worth just 16 days ago. It marked a 93.3
percent discount to Bear Stearns' market capitalization as of Friday,
and roughly a 98.8 percent discount to its book value as of Feb. 29.

"The past week has been an incredibly difficult time for Bear
Stearns," Schwartz said in a statement. "This represents the best
outcome for all of our constituencies based upon the current
circumstances."

Wall Street analysts say the bid to rescue Bear Stearns was more than
just saving one of the world's largest investments banks -- it was a
prop for the U.S. economy and the global financial system. An outright
failure would cause huge losses for banks, hedge funds and other
investors to which Bear Stearns is connected.

After days of denials that it had liquidity problems, Bear was forced
into a JPMorgan-led, government-backed bailout on Friday. The
arrangement, the first of its kind since the 1930s, resulted in Bear
getting a 28-day loan from JPMorgan with the government's guarantee
that JPMorgan would not suffer any losses on the deal.

This is not the first time Bear Stearns has earned a place in Wall
Street history. A decade ago, Bear Stearns refused to help bail out a
hedge fund that was deemed "too big to fail." On Friday, the tables
had turned, with the now-struggling investment bank in need of the
same kind of aid.

Bear Stearns was founded in 1923 and in recent years was best known
for its aggressive investing in mortgage-backed securities -- and what
was once a cash cow turned into the investment bank's undoing.

In June, two Bear-managed hedge funds worth billions of dollars
collapsed. The funds were heavily invested in securities backed by
subprime mortgages. Until that point, subprime mortgage-backed
securities were immensely popular with investors because of their
profitability.

The funds' demise and subsequent problems in the credit markets called
into question Bear Stearns' ability to manage its own risk and the
leadership ability of then-Chief Executive James Cayne. Critics of the
company said Cayne spent too much time away from the office last year
playing golf and bridge as the problems unfolded.

Cayne is the same executive who refused to let Bear Stearns provide
support as part of a Federal Reserve-led plan to rescue Long-Term
Capital Management in 1998. His reticence was said to deeply anger
some of his fellow Wall Street CEOs, and the episode came up every
time Bear was reported to be in trouble in recent months.

Cayne took over from the legendary Alan "Ace" Greenberg in 1993.
Greenberg joined Bear Stearns as a clerk, working his way up through
the ranks to eventually take over as CEO in 1978. Greenberg was known
for his irreverent style, and his regular memos to employees were
turned into a book called "Memos from the Chairman."

Before Greenberg's ascendancy to CEO, Bear Stearns began to expand
from its New York roots throughout the 1950s and 1960s, opening
international offices and expanding its U.S. operations.

____

AP Business Writers Jeannine Aversa in Washington and Stephen Bernard
contributed to this story.


Another view of this rape of the American taxpayer....

yes folks...that's from $170 to $2 a share.

And it is happening under George Bush...the fool who says all is well
with the American financial markets.

Like his advice with Katrina....at least stupid is as stupid does.

Anyone want to guess how long it will take some idiot conservative to
blame Bill Clinton for this one?

TMT

JPMorgan Buys Bear on the Cheap
With bankruptcy looming, the banks reach a deal: JPMorgan will acquire
the troubled investment house for only $2 a share
by Matthew Goldstein

In the end, Bear Stearns (BSC), the once-storied New York investment
firm that became the victim of an old-fashioned run on the bank,
wasn't worth much more than a subway ride.

JPMorgan Chase (JPM), the big bank that helped bail out Bear last
Friday, is paying just $2 a share to take over the investment firm,
which a little over a year ago was trading for as high as $170 a
share. The deal to buy Bear will avert a looming bankruptcy filing by
the investment firm and potentially stave off a new crisis in the
financial markets.

The purchase price is an indication of just how far things have fallen
at Bear, which a year ago helped spark the subprime meltdown with the
collapse of its two big hedge funds. The deal values Bear at $236
million.

The Buck Stops at JPMorgan
In the end, Bear's most valuable assets weren't its legendary prime
brokerage and back-office clearing operation. Rather, it was Bear's
new gleaming office tower in Madison Avenue, that some value a little
short of $1 billion.

As part of the transaction, the Federal Reserve, which engineered last
week's emergency bailout of Bear, will provide up to $30 billion of
Bear Stearns' less liquid assets. "JPMorgan Chase stands behind Bear
Stearns," said Jamie Dimon, chairman and chief executive of JPMorgan.
"Bear Stearns' clients and counterparties should feel secure that
JPMorgan is guaranteeing Bear Stearns' counterparty risk. We welcome
their clients, counterparties, and employees to our firm, and we are
glad to be their partner."

Bear Stearns CEO Alan Schwartz said in a Friday conference call that
"nervousness in the market" prompted clients and lenders to "get cash
out" of the firm. Schwartz says, "A lot of people wanted to act from
the possibility of the rumors being true." He says before the turmoil,
Bear had been working with investment firm Lazard (LAZ) to explore
"alternatives" and those discussions will continue. Bear officials
also said the decision to seek aid from JPMorgan was their decision.

The quick collapse of Bear is a sober reminder of just how quickly a
Wall Street firm can lose the confidence of investors, traders, and
other institutions. A week ago, Bear executives were talking about how
the firm was poised to report a profitable first quarter, after the
firm posted its first quarterly loss in its history in the fourth
quarter. But in the span of seven days, Bear went from being Wall
Street's fifth largest firm to another in a long line of investment
firms to bite the dust.

In a conference call with analysts after the deal was announced,
JPMorgan executives said the big bank will stand behind all of Bear's
trades and pending deals until Bear shareholders vote on the merger.
JPMorgan officials said Bear will be "open for business" Monday
morning. The bank officials say they fully expect Bear shareholders to
approve the deal because there is no better option.

Quick Work to Contain the Risk
It's not clear what had changed so dramatically at Bear to necessitate
the emergency bailout. But events appear to have moved quickly on Mar.
13. People familiar with the situation say Bear officials called the
Fed late in the day, saying the firm had a funding problem.

Officials from the Fed were at Bear's spacious offices on Madison
Avenue all night, scouring its books and trying to devise a rescue
plan. The Fed and Bear then reached out to JPMorgan, to find out
whether the big bank could help out. JPMorgan, which has multiple
business relationships with Bear, was inclined to do so. But only with
some guarantee from the Fed that it would make JPMorgan whole if Bear
were to fail and become unable to make good on its obligations.

It would have been highly risky for other Wall Street firms if Bear
Stearns had been allowed to go under because they are tightly
interconnected with Bear as both borrowers and lenders. Any firms that
are owed a lot of money by Bear would have fallen under suspicion, on
grounds that they might not be able to pay their own debts if Bear
failed to pay them. That could have triggered a dangerous wave of
defaults. The rescue by JPMorgan Chase gives the financial system
breathing room to pay off Bear's debts gradually.