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Monday, March 17, 2008

Bear Stearns is Having a Worse Day Than You

Bear Stearns--the fifth largest Investment bank in the U.S.-- is in the process of selling out to JPMorgan Chase for $236 million--a mere fraction of its market value.

Bear Stearns' alternative: the dire task of declaring bankruptcy.

Yeah, there really is no upside.

To give you a better/tangible idea of how hard things suck for the investment bank, Bear Stearns' market value was determined to be $4 billion on Friday. And just a year ago it was valued at a staggering $19 billion... and then some.

Its shares were priced and set to be sold to JPMorgan Chase for a measly $2 on Sunday; a pittance compared to its record share price of more than $172 last year.

According to Reuters, the deal size is less than the value of Bear Stearns' midtown Manhattan headquarters, which is estimated to be worth $1 billion!

To say that Bearn Stearns is having a sequence of beyond shitty days is an understatement.

The moribund firm is barley clinging to life!

The Wall Street Journal is saying that the collapse of the bank has "shaken American capitalism."

Shawn Tulley, Forbes editor-at-large, is saying that the Bear Stearns meltdown has triggered the "End of Wall Street as we know it."

And e
conomist Paul Krugman, who,thankfully, isn't comparing the current situation to the Great Depression, does say "if the recession started in January 2008, then that would mean July 2010 is the first month we have anything that feels like a recovery." He adds, "but I wouldn't be surprised if it goes longer than that - maybe into 2011" i.e. our economy is taking a circuitous turn for the worse.

Mission accomplished! I'm officially afraid.

I know this is a vague posting, but this is a confusing matter that I don't entirely understand.

That being said, I couldn't find anyone having a worse day than Bear Stearns...not even you.

For more insight into what ultimately toppled Bear Stears, read this CNNMoney article "How subprime killed Bear Stearns." It's the easiest to understand.

This BusinessWeek article is also digestible.

This Wall Street Journal article is wordy and confusing, but it does offer a comprehensive timeline of Bear Stearns' downfall. You won't die if you don't read it.

Image courtesy of REUTERS/Kristina Cooke.

Note. A foreboding look into the future: Lehman Brothers might be having a worse tomorrow than you.



2 comments:

Anonymous said...

No blockbuster? That's a pretty good pic you found :)

Jen said...

Yeah I decided to take it out.