Posted on 03/24/2008 6:42:43 AM PDT by jdm
The weirdness on Wall Street continues. The worlds greatest fire sale has turned into something of a fiasco for JP Morgan, who thought they had Bear Stearns wrapped up in a bow by the Fed at $2 per share. However, the deal has started unraveling thanks to angry BSC shareholders, and JPM now has quintupled its offer to $10 per share:
The sweetened offer is intended to win over stockholders who vowed to fight the original fire-sale deal, struck only a week ago at the behest of the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department.
Under the terms being discussed, JPMorgan would pay $10 a share in stock for Bear, up from its initial offer of $2 a share a figure that represented a mere one-fifteenth of Bears going market price.
The Fed, which must approve any new deal, was balking at the new offer price on Sunday night after several days of frantic, secret negotiations, these people said. As a result, it was still possible the renegotiated deal might be postponed or collapse entirely, said these people, who were granted anonymity because of their confidentiality agreements.
If the Fed were to reject the new proposal, it could set off a furor among shareholders of both firms that the government was preventing them from making a fair deal.
The Fed may have caused some of the problem itself. Its new $200 billion lending facility could have been used by Bear Stearns to reverse some of the bad paper it has acquired. That has shareholders who bought BSC when it rode high wondering why they need to sell their assets at 6 cents on the dollar now.
They especially object to the Feds pushing of the $2 share price after working with JPM to guarantee $30 billion of BSCs worst-performing assets. BSC shareholders ask why the Fed simply didnt offer that guarantee to BSC instead, and why they forced such a low price for the deal. The answer that the Fed didnt want to be seen bailing out Bear Stearns and especially the management that created its crisis hasnt satisfied the people holding nearly-worthless BSC shares. They feel as though they have to sacrifice for the Feds need to save face.
The irony, of course, is that without this deal, the shareholders would have had no value at all. Bear Stearns would have sunk under the red ink of its bad paper, and instead of 6 cents on the dollar, the only value the shares would have had would be as kindling for a warm fire in a winter cabin. But the structure of the bailout left the obvious question of why the Fed had acted in such a Deus ex machina manner, picking winners and losers with what looks like a hefty dollop of capriciousness. Why not just provide the same guarantees to BSC contingent on the removal of the board and chief executives, for instance?
This is the problem with muscular government intervention in markets. Even though BSC deserved bankruptcy for its terrible management in the marketplace, the fact that the government (or its auxiliary in the Fed) determined the winners and losers makes it political rather than the natural result of gross incompetence. The problem with the increased share price is that it makes the Fed action more clearly a bailout of BSC shareholders, and the Feds own guarantees make a higher share price inevitable. (via Tom Maguire, who has more thoughts).
>If they thought it was only worth a little more than $2 a share, they would not have raised it to $10 a share, right?<
They are attempting to quell lawsuits. When the deal was offered they had $6 BILLION set aside for legal costs. Evidently they now see that will be insufficient.
They have to protect real estate values otherwise the government take on capital gains goes out the window.......
In 1997 they exempted $250,000 in capital gains ($500,000 for a married couple) for a primary residence.
Lots of other property out there
Are you actually so stupid and biased that you don’t understand that the reason for buying in as a partner was to establish CONTROL?
Go away.
The governemnt screws up and creates the problem and the govt. screws up when it ‘fixes’ it...
Can’t WAIT until they start running HEALTH CARE~!!!
Those people are in control of the Fed? They get to vote on interest rate hikes or cuts?
Are you saying that their control doesn't lead to huge dividend payments? What good is control of the Fed if you don't get a cut of the Fed's profits?
He is.
Certainly, but they would still not offer $10 a share unless they were confident it was worth significantly more than that, right? I mean, they are not going to pay MORE than they think it is worth for any reason, correct?
I think so.
Let me issue and control a nations money supply, and I care not who makes its laws. (Mayer Amschel Rothschild, Rothschild Banking Dynasty)
Correct. The idea when the stock market drops is to have sufficient cash to buy stock in distressed companies that are of underrated value. Bear Sterns is such a company. Extremely undervalued. There is nothing but profits, over the long term, to be made from buying their stock and perhaps the short term too.
Ahhhhh, the Joooooooos control the Federal Reserve. It all makes sense now. Thanks.
33 is proof.
ijit.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.