Sunday, March 16, 2008

Bear Stearns Bought For $2 A Share

I can't believe this shit...

I mean, this feels like "the game" must be over, or something...

NOTE: I'd love to hear from some of the older traders out there...

11 comments:

tradelikemike said...

Just can't stay away, huh? Hope all is well.

I plan on covering my shorts today because of the Fed meeting on Tuesday. I have other unrelated longs I'm leaving and I'll trade them as I see them during the day.

As much as it feels like the end of the world, it isn't. The Plunge Protection Team is in place. The government will just keep on printing more money. They will take it away from you in buying power.

TraderDave said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
TraderDave said...

sorry, wouldn't let me post direct link.
http://determinedtrader.blogspot.com/2008/03/tell-me-this-isnt-real.html

Dinosaur Trader said...

Hey Mike,

Yeah, last night I thought it'd be the end of the world. The futures were down 38 then... I woke this morning and they're down 24, so I'm surprised...

You think the FED meeting even matters? This started as a credit crisis but is now a crisis of confidence, not just in the banks and brokers, but in the FED.

More interest rate cuts and more money isn't going to do much at this point... I feel this story has an uglier ending. Hopefully, I'm wrong.

-DT

Unknown said...

old tape reader- trading bsc on friday watchin the nyse inside quotes freeze then the lrp crap- was a joke.

got a number of friends at bear- vaporized equity- should be a somber hamptons summer -1/2 price off bbc's at cyril's.

think taleb's black swan is ready to take flight

Dinosaur Trader said...

Hey, I hope thos BBCs are half price!

Floater?

Absolutely!

-DT

Unknown said...

turn those machines back on!
-randolph duke

gotta come out of the radical surfin sabbactical for today at least.

tradelikemike said...

Psychogically the rate cuts help( which is half the battle), on an economic scale, it disastrous long term. The dollar is going to zero.

Dinosaur Trader said...

great quote Pete... so far, tough trade... it hasn't been a slam dunk for the office...

-DT

Dinosaur Trader said...

The fate of the world rests in GS... if it doesn't hold the morning lows, fare thee well... fare thee well.

-DT

wincity said...

This might give you some perspective. I read last night that if they didn't sell out, they'd have to declare bandruptcy right away. Feel bad about all the falling-knife-catchers. From $30 to $2 over-night!


Let's Get Real About Bear



I already have a slew of emails from people upset about what they see as a bailout of a big bank, decrying the lack of "moral hazard." And I can understand the sentiment, as it appears that tax-payer money may have been used to bail out a big Wall Street bank that acted recklessly in the subprime mortgage markets.

But that is not what has happened. This is not a bailout. The shareholders at Bear have been essentially wiped out. Note that a third of the shares of Bear were owned by Bear employees. Many of them have seen a lifetime of work and savings wiped out, and their jobs may be at risk, even if they had no connection with the actual events which caused the crisis at Bear. Don't tell them there was no moral hazard.

For all intents and purposes, Bear would have been bankrupt this morning. The $2 a share offer is simply to keep Bear from having to declare bankruptcy which would mean a long, drawn out process and would have precipitated a crisis of unimaginable proportions. Cue the lawyers.

As I understand this morning, JP Morgan will take a $6 billion write down, which is essentially what they are paying for Bear. The Fed is taking $30 billion dollars in a variety of assets. They may ultimately take a loss of a few billion dollars over time, although they may actually make a profit. When you look at the assets, much of it is in paper that will likely get close to par over time, and the good paper will pay premiums mitigating the potential loss. The problem is, as the essays below point out, no one is prepared to take that risk today.

If it was 2005, Bear would have been allowed to collapse, as the system back then could deal with it, as it did with REFCO. But it is not 2005. We are in a credit crisis, a perfect storm, which is of unprecedented proportions. If Bear had not been put into sounds hands and provided solvency and liquidity, the credit markets would simply have frozen this morning. As in ground to a halt. Hit the wall. The end of the world, impossible to fathom how to get out of it type of event.

The stock market would have crashed by 20% or more, maybe a lot more. It would have made Black Monday in 1987 look like a picnic. We would have seen tens of trillions of dollars wiped out in equity holdings all over the world.

As I have been writing, the Fed gets it. Their action today is actually re-assuring. I have been writing for a long time that they would do whatever it takes to keep the system intact. As one of the notes below points out, this was the NY Fed stepping in, not the FOMC. The NY Fed is responsible for market integrity, not monetary policy, and they did their job. And you can count on other actions. They are going to change the rules on how assets can be kept on the books of banks. Mortgage bail-outs? Possibly. The list will grow.

Yes, tax-payers may eventually have to cover a few billion here or there on the Bear action. But the time to worry about moral hazard was two years ago when the various authorities allowed institutions to make subprime loans to people with no jobs and no income and no means to repay and then sold them to institutions all over the world as AAA assets. And we can worry in the near future when we will need to do a complete re-write of the rules to prevent this from happening again.

But for now, we need to bail the water out the boat and see if we can plug the leaks. Allowing the boat to sink is not an option. And get this. You are in the boat, whether you realize it or not. You and your friends and neighbors and families. Whether you are in Europe or in Asia, you would have been hurt by a failure to act by the Fed. Everything is connected in a globalized world. Without the actions taken by the Fed, the soft depression that many have thought would be the eventual outcome of the huge build-up of debt would in fact become a reality. And more quickly than you could imagine.

As I have repeatedly said, recessions are part of the business cycle. There is nothing we can do to prevent them. But depressions are caused by massive policy mistakes on the part of central banks and governments. And it would have been a massive failure indeed to let Bear collapse. I should note that this was not just a Fed action. Both President Bush and Secretary Paulson signed off on this.

The Fed risking a few billion here and there to keep the boat afloat is the best trade possible today. Their action saved trillions in losses for investors all over the world. It is a relatively small price. If you want to be outraged, think about the multiple billions in subsidies for ethanol and the hundreds of billions of so-called earmarks over the past few years to build bridges to nowhere. And think of the billions in lost tax revenue that would result from the ensuing crisis. I repeat, this was a good trade from almost any perspective, unless you are from the hair-shirt, cut-your-nose-off-to-spite-your-face camp of economics.

The Fed is to be applauded for taking the actions they did. And they may have to do it again, as there are rumors that another major investment bank is on the ropes. I hope that is not the case, and will not add to the rumors in print, but I am glad the Fed is there if we need them.

It is precisely because the Fed is willing to take such actions that I am modestly optimistic that we will "only" go through a rather longish recession and slow recovery and not the soft depression that would happen otherwise.

I got a very sad letter today from a lady whose husband is in the construction business an hour from Atlanta. He has had no work for four months and they are rapidly going through their savings. The jobs he can get require them to spend more in gas to drive to than he would make. He is sadly part of the construction industry which everyone knows is taking a major hit.

But without the Fed action, that story would have multiplied many times over, as the contagion of the debt crisis would have spread to sectors of the economy that so far have seen only a relatively small impact. Unemployment would have sky-rocketed over the next year and many more families would have been devastated like the family above. It would have touched every corner of the US and the globe.

Bailing out the big guys? No, the Fed does not care about the big guys, and only mildly pays attention to the stock market, despite what conspiracy theorists think. In the last few years, I have had the privilege of meeting at length with a number of Fed economists and those who have their ear. They are far more focused on the economy, their mandates for stable inflation and keeping unemployment as possible.

No one who owned Bear stock was protected. This was to protect the small guys who don't even realize they were at risk. To decry this deal means you just don't get how dire a mess we were almost in. It is all well and good to be rich or a theoretical purist and talk about how the Fed should let the system collapse so that we can have a "cathartic" pricing event. Or that the Fed should just leave well enough alone. But the pain to the little guy in the streets who did nothing wrong would simply be too much. The Fed and other regulatory authorities leaving well enough alone is part of the reason we are where we are. First, get the water out of the boat and fix the leaks, and then make sure we never get here again.

And yes, I know there are lots of implications for the dollar, commodities, markets, interest rates, etc. But we will get into that in later letters.

For now, let's go to the essays from my friends and then a quick note about the stock market.

John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box