A very high cost for big mistakes - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
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A very high cost for big mistakes

Posted Mar 16 2008, 10:37 PM by Charley Blaine
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The proposed sale of Bear Stearns on Sunday to JPMorgan Chase for $2 a share, or $236 million, will keep litigation lawyers busy for years as enraged shareholders seek to recover anything from the disaster.

The losses from Bear Stearns' demise are shocking, so shocking that Asian and Australian stocks tumbled on the news. The dollar was fallling. Crude oil jumped over $111 a barrel, and European shares were expected to open lower as was the U.S. stock market.

From a peak price of $171.52 in January 2007, Bear Stearns managed to lose 98.8% of its peak market value of $20.2 billion in less than 15 months, all because the company bet everything that the housing market and the markets for securities backed by subprime mortgages wouldn't break. It did.

The collapse came so fast that many investors big and small were unable get out of the stock. Institutions had held 70% of the stock at the end of 2007. Indeed, while some commentators called the deal a bailout, Barry Ritholtz, on his Big Picture blog, called the move a liquidation.

The run on Bear Stearns forced the Federal Reserve to agree to an emergency financing for Bear Stearns on Friday. The Fed approved the deal with JPMorgan on Sunday, approving a $30 billion line of credit to support the takeover. it also cut its discount rate as well on Sunday to 3.25%. The Fed is expected to cut its key federal funds rate to 2.25%, perhaps to as low as 2%, on Tuesday.

It won't be clear for some time who absorbed the biggest losses from the collapse. Everyone was trying to get out of the stock on Friday when 186 million Bear Stearns shares changed hands -- 50% more than than the shares actually outstanding. The share price fell 47% to $30.

Some smart people are sitting on big losses. Joseph Lewis, the billionaire British investor, owned 9.4% of Bear Stearns, a stake he started to build last summer and may have lost as much as $900 million, more than a third of his net worth. Sources told The Daily Telegraph in London that he may have been forced to sell his stake on Friday. Dallas money management firm Barrow, Hanley, Mewhinney & Strauss was Bear Stearns' largest institutional shareholder with a 9.95% stake. It's mostly gone. 

My guess is that Bear Stearns' 14,000 employees will be the biggest losers. The company's employee-stock-ownership plan owned 23% of the shares as of Feb. 14. The shares that day had a market value of $2.18 billion. It's almost gone now. Needless to say, Bear Stearns employees aren't happy. Check here for a sampling of their anger.

Bear Stearns' top brass are also huge losers. Chairman James Cayne, who was chief executive of the investment bank until late 2007, lost roughly $1 billion from that January peak. Current CEO Alan Schwartz saw his holdings shrink from roughly $240 million from January 2007 to less than $3 million.

But as painful as that is, it probably is as it should be. They and others were in charge of the company and failed to understand the poison eating away at the company.

They're not alone in losing millions. Wall Street bosses have seen the values of their holdings in their companies shrink dramatically from their peaks last year, thanks to the financial crisis that has engulfed the U.S. economy.

Richard Fuld, CEO of Lehman Bros., has seen his stake fall by a bit less than $600 million since February 2007. Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs, arguably Wall Street's most powerful investment bank, has watched his stake fall in value by more than $230 million. Morgan Stanley's John Mack has lost $130 million has his company's shares have fallen 47% since June 2007.

JPMorgan Chase CEO James Dimon has been hit as well. His stake's value has fallen by $130 million since peaking in May 2007.

And they may lose more until investors start to trust Wall Street again and the stock market finally stabilizes.

Comments

 

No matter how much the CEO's lose, they still remain multimilliumaires. Don't pitty them.  Pitty the poor folks that are in the trenches and have lost their life savings.  It's time that the "good old boys" school of CEOs be held accountable for the messes they get their companies into.  The  boards should be culpable for theft when they give the bank away to the CEO and he makes terrible desisions.  May be if boards were faced with jail time we would get results.  Certainly accountants are less willing to give bad advice to customers because of high penalties associated with their advice.

Debbie---you might want to read this

These Wall Street firms mentioned chased after the yields of risky subprime mortgage backed securities and ignored the inherent risk associated with those yields.  This the first basic rule of iinvesting!  Now the Federal Reserve will have to step in and save the situation from collapse.

It would be interesting to also know how much these Wall Street executives mentioned took out of their companies in the form of salary and cash paid year-end bonuses over the last few years, especially for both 2006 and 2007.    I'm sure they have managed their personal portfolio risk better and invested their accumulated fortunes elsewhere, not in the firm they work.  You can be sure they won't volunteer to give any of it back.

WHO IS SUPPOSED TO BE THE "WATCHDOG" OF THESE BIG FIRMS?

OBVIOUSLY  THIS DIDN'T HAPPEN IN A SHORT PERIOD OF TIME. WHAT ARE

THEIR BOARD OF DIRECTORS SEEING WHEN THEY MEET-APPARENTLY THERE ARE TOO MANY DIRECTORS WITH NO ACCOUNTING KNOWLEDGE OR ELSE THEY JUST ASSUME EVERYTHING IS OK.

LOOK AT THE INSIDER TRADING SHEET. ON DEC. 21, 2007, CAYNE, SCHWARTZ, MOLINARO, MINIKES, MAYER AND GREENBERG PULLED $44.14 MILLION OUT BY SELLING STOCK AT $89.01.

THAT'LL TIDE THEM OVER WHILE THE 14000 EMPLOYEES GO UNDER WITH THE TITANIC.

ON ANOTHER MATTER, THE LOWER THE INTEREST RATE THE HIGHER GAS, IMPORTS, ETC. THE FED IS DRIVING US OVER THE CLIFF AND IT;S NOT GOING TO STOP A RECESSION, IT'S GOING TO MAKE IT LAST LONGER.

It would appear to this observer that GREED is the cause of this collapse. When will business learn that the love of money is the root of all evil. I feel sorry for the investors as they will in all probability lose virtually all of their investments. Of course, the biggest losers will be the rank and file employees, more than likely their last paychecks will be worthless.

Hah!  "Financial planners / Investment firms" too bad they didn't follow their own advice.  No wonder Wall Street and the greedy CEOs are not trusted.  I don't think I'll ever consider their hype again.

What has happened to the value of Bear Sterns bonds now?

Does the investor loose ownership or do they convert to JP Morgan Chase?

How does your greed feel now boys.

What is this world coming to?  Since men have pretty much screwed up everything since the beginning of time, I think it is time that we have a woman in charge for a change.  It couldn't get much worse!!  We can thank George Bush for everything that has happened over the past 8 years.  The stock market ruled by men has pretty much destroyed the economy.  The men who rule over the oil industry is crippling the United States.

We need a WOMAN to get things back on track.  Vote for Hillary, not necessarily the best, but a hell of a lot better than her opponents are.

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