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Bear Stearns got bailed out?

Posted Mar 19 2008, 03:07 AM by Matt Koppenheffer
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If Bear Stearns got a bailout this week, then it's sure news to the company's shareholders. The price that JPMorgan is expected to pay is around 1% of the company's value last year and in the range of 5% of what it was fetching on Friday when the original plan was announced for JPMorgan to loan Fed money to Bear.

So who did get bailed out here? On the top of my list are Bear's creditors. At the end of Bear's most recent fiscal year it had $11.6 billion in unsecured short term debt and another $68.5 of longer term debt on its books -- and that's not to mention the hundreds of billions of other liabilities that the company had. If the super-duo of JPMorgan and the Fed hadn't swooped in those creditors are likely working with bankruptcy courts to sort out what they could recover.

But even beyond bailouts there are plenty of people making out like bandits. I've heard commentators suggest that JPMorgan could face as much as $6 billion in litigation stemming from this deal, but it still seems like the bank is getting a pretty sweet deal -- it's picking up Bear for $236 million and it has the Fed backing up a big slug of Bear's assets.

In the "who made out" column, let's not forget about Bear Stearns management. While it's easy to focus on the fact that some of these guys lost a heck of a lot of money on their stock holdings -- former CEO Jimmy Cayne owned about 5% of the company -- these guys have been hitting the bonus jackpot over the past few years as the housing market raged. Between 2004 and 2006 Jimmy Cayne took home nearly $40 million worth of cash bonuses, and Alan Schwartz, who was at the helm when the ship sank, pocketed $38 million.

So what's next for Bear and its investors? Well, since the stock closed on Tuesday at nearly triple the proposed buyout price, it's apparent that a lot of people think that somebody is going to swoop in and bid above JPMorgan, or at least that the deal with JPMorgan will be renegotiated. Though there will no doubt be a lot of weight thrown behind the push to get more from the buyout, it seems very unlikely that we'll see an alternate outcome.

In The Motley Fool's CAPS community, CAPS All-Star EnochRoot also believes that the deal will go through, and noted that bondholders will likely have a big hand in that:

This melt-up is a result of short covering and the bondholders buying stock. The goal is for the bondholders to own enough equity to vote the deal through. With $150b in bonds at par, the bondholders are essentially giving up ~$300mm in losses on the stock [($7-$2)*59mm shares or 50.1% of shares outstanding] in order to save billions in bond value.


In the end, some traders speculating on Bear stock might be able to make some money as the stock bounces around wildly in the coming days, but investors are probably best served taking the current price and moving on to greener pastures.

Comments

 

This mortgage mess is not caused by "freeloaders and dopes" as  zosa suggests. It is caused by a lessening or reversal of the standards  of Us lenders.  Lenders have lied and deceived the working folks in this country. You go to a mortgage professional because that is what they know. The borrower may be a car mechanic  and would not expect a customer to come in knowing how to fix their own car. This borrower expects the same from the lender. What  ever happened to honesty in America. What ever happened to kindness?

This mortgage mess is not caused by "freeloaders and dopes" as  zosa suggests. It is caused by a lessening or reversal of the standards  of Us lenders.  Lenders have lied and deceived the working folks in this country. You go to a mortgage professional because that is what they know. The borrower may be a car mechanic  and would not expect a customer to come in knowing how to fix their own car. This borrower expects the same from the lender. What  ever happened to honesty in America. What ever happened to kindness?

Sometimes when you play Monopoly, someone gets some lucky rolls early on, and buys up all the choice properties. Couple that with a few unlucky rolls by another player, and before you know it an imbalance is created. Eventually you're giving away what little proerty you have to cover your "rents", and then you fall behind, and you give away your "go" money, the $200, to cover debts that you keep falling further behind on. The only way to fix this is to clear the board and start over. Monopoly the board game is based on pure, arbitrary, transparent luck at the start. This game, the U.S. economic structure and system, seems to have always been rigged.

Chan, You are an idiot.  You hate the US because we are like the Yankees.  Everyone hates a winner.  Everyone hates the guy on top.  Well that is us.  The USA!  Hate us, call us names, but we will be on top.  We will continue to be on top continuing to be the world super power.  Because we are the only ones able to bear that responsibility.  Chan I leave you with this....your an idiot.

Chan,

I do think your financial outlook is right on. I also appreciate the fact that the flat screen TV I just bought for a thousand that most likely was built in you region and cost you twice as much to buy over there.  I do think you are missing one point though.  That most of the money in our financial market is money from overseas. I hope you don't prey for our downfall as it will not just be our country falling on our face.  As far as "super power" is concerned who is more superior than us? Russia? China? When was the last time you have seen anything brilliant come from them? We invented the light bulb and have some of the smartest people in the world living here.  We will come out of this just ask one of your kids how are markets are doing after they look it up on there I-phone while you eat dinner at MacDonald's.

All this to keep from sliding into a full blown Depression.   We're that close to one, I think what with banks going bankrupt.

Chan: You and your invester friends just don't get it do you?  Don't worry, I can help you. The US has been in a recession since 2001. Surprised! You obviously don't live in the US and are not a  hardworking American Joe who tries to do the right thing. We are the ones who work the daily "grind" and know the score. You and your friends have a lot to learn about us. It is partly your fault that the FED holds this together with "Elmer's glue."  You are quite correct in your statement that this country has lots of problems that will not go away soon.

Chan,

I do think your financial outlook is right on. I also appreciate the fact that the flat screen TV I just bought for a thousand that most likely was built in you region and cost you twice as much to buy over there.  I do think you are missing one point though.  That most of the money in our financial market is money from overseas. I hope you don't prey for our downfall as it will not just be our country falling on our face.  As far as "super power" is concerned who is more superior than us? Russia? China? When was the last time you have seen anything brilliant come from them? We invented the light bulb and have some of the smartest people in the world living here.  We will come out of this just ask one of your kids how are markets are doing after they look it up on there I-phone while you eat dinner at MacDonald's.

Twenty five years of greedy CEO's, corrupt politicians and stock market mania are a few of the things ruining America.

When are we going to stop giving so much to the rest of the world and take care of our own country. When our house is in order and we actually have some real EXTRA money in our pockets then we can be charitable.

If you took a bad loan because you were ignorant, to bad for you, shame on the accountants/businessmen who took advantage of you, where were the laywers who should have been pressing them on acceptable accounting practices.

This country is so messed up, nobody is accountable for themselves, lawyers keep other lawyers in business, judges are just lawyers, there are so many practical fixes for societies problems but we don't institute them because the civil liberties union will complain they aren't fair to all, 90% but not all. Or some lobbiest is paying off a politician. Or some power group isn't making money off the solution.

When are we going to start putting ALL crooks in jail, along with the sex offenders and murderers without cutting deals, why do jailbirds have better health insurance than working class people.

Political correctness is out of control, now its okay to be racist if your a minority, we just need the media to stop making the haters (the Jesse Jacksons, the David Dukes) out to be somebodies, lets make them nobodies!  Racism decreases with each generation, you can't fix anything all at once, my white sons best friend is black, he hangs out at our house all the time, sleeps over,eats breakfast with us most Saturdays & Sundays. we don't call him an African American we don't call ourselves Irish Americans. Just Americans! Good, honest hard working Americans.

Americans try to save money, but its like swimming upstream. They tax us on our savings accounts, when they already taxed that money in our paychecks, they tax us on our lottery winnings and when we spend it, Then the USA gives the money away to some other country that NEEDS it. The USA rose to the top in a few hundred years, these other countries have been around for thousands of years and can't take care of the basics?

Yes we are at the beginning of a big decline but you won't see any other countries helping us out, paying us back, do you think Iraq will send some of the 40 billion in oil profits they netted in the third quarter of 2007 to us to help fund the war for their own independence and freedom, NEVER and its politically incorrect to take a dime, for others will think we "did it for the oil". Who cares what the rest of the world will say or think.  

Most American people are clueless or ignorant to whats really happening in society and the world, they spend all their time dreaming,reading magazines about movie so called stars who are mostly privileged misfits that trying to kill themselves because their last movie tanked. Again the media is in control.

Lets get America educated, education will eventually solve most of our problems.

Lets start taking care of the American family and start running our country the right way.

SORRY, JUST HAD TO GET A FEW OF THE THINGS OFF MY CHEST!!

Bob

I have come up with a theory why so many people hate the U.S. There is a scene in the movie " Deliverance", where the character played by Ned Beatty says of the character played by Burt Reynolds, " Boy, I really hate that guy! ", after Burt's character catches a fish when the others failed to catch any. Why did he hate him? Because Burt's character is the kind of guy  who won at whatever he tried, and he won ultimately because he tried  so dammed hard.

The combination of education, open-mindness, and work ethic present in American workers is a more rare and unique combination than the media portrays. The Corporations have done a fantastic job of convincing themselves and a lot of American workers that the Chinese, Indians, etc can do the work better and faster in order to justify the shipment of jobs overseas in the vain attempt to make a few more bucks.

We all like to be democratic, even, fair. There's a part of us that loves to see a winner fail and a loser win. We want to think that everyone tries hard and that if an individual, company, country seems to win more than it should, it must somehow be cheating or doing smething wrong. That's why we come to hate it.

I use to be like that, a hateful, jealous, lazy bum. I changed my ways and my life changed for the better. The rest of the world hated the U.S. long before George Bush ever became President.

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