Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Bear Sterns

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Bear Sterns

    JPM is buying Bear Sterns for about $2 a share. Currently the BSC stock price is zooming near $8.

    Anybody understands this idiocy?

  • #2
    Re: Bear Sterns

    Lehmans is also rallying after announcing huge losses, regaining all of yesterday's drop and more. Welcome to the strange world of Frankenstein finance.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Bear Sterns

      Its called a dead cat bounce - anything thrown out of a 40th story window, will bounce when it hits the ground.

      Of course, after the bounce, dead cats tend to stay down...

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Bear Sterns

        Barry Ritholtz on his blog today hypothesized this:

        Since the announcement of the $2 dissolution of Bear Stearns, the stock has undergone a puzzling rally. After gapping down 94% or so Monday morning, the stock of BSC traded up to $7+.

        Floyd Norris posed the "Great market puzzle" of the day: Why was Bear Stearns stock trading so much above what Morgan plans to pay?

        Today's WSJ notes that Bear's stock has soared 23%. Their answer: "bets that J.P. Morgan will have to pay more for the firm, setting the stage for a high-stakes game of brinksmanship with investors in one corner and the Fed and J.P. Morgan in the other."

        I think that's wrong.

        There is a simpler explanation, one that might surprise you: BOND HOLDERS are buying up Bears loose stock. As much as they can get.

        Why?

        THEY WANT TO MAKE SURE THE DEAL GETS DONE!

        Consider: there is ~$75 billion in outstanding bonds (see Bloomberg screen below), and another $75 billion in other miscellaneous paper. (UPDATE: The NYT pegs it at $300B). Prior to the BSC/JPM deal's announcement, the BSC Bonds were trading for 80 cents on the dollar.

        Imagine your fund owned a one billion dollars worth of Bear bonds (mark to market = $800 million). Isn't it worth buying 10 million shares or so at $3 - 4 or so dollars a share? You will get $2 per share in JPM stock, so buying it a few bucks over the takeover price isn't all that risky. Remember, insiders own 30%, and Joe Lewis also owns about 10%.

        So as mad as the accumulation appears, its actually quite rational -- IF YOU ARE A MAJOR BOND HOLDER, and are doing this to capture voting stock. (All the other idiots buying BSC are pretty much fucked).

        UPDATE: March 19, 2008 9:48am

        I just noticed the NYT has a piece on this same issue: It’s Bondholders vs. Shareholders in a Race to Buy Bear Stearns Stock -- They also state the total outstanding Bear bonds are $300B ...

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Bear Sterns

          What an incredible mess, incompetence is written in large letters here.

          http://biz.yahoo.com/rb/080324/bearstearns.html?.v=1

          Comment

          Working...
          X