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LENDERS
OF THE LAST RESORT UNITE!
by Brady Willett
FallStreet.com
March 14, 2008
According
to Bear Stearns CEO, Alan Schwartz, his company went from being a stable
and liquid enterprise to nearly insolvent in the span of 24-hours. What
unexpected event arrived to shipwreck poor Bear? Market chatter of
course:
“Bear
Stearns has been the subject of a multitude of market rumors regarding
our liquidity. We have tried to confront and dispel these rumors and
parse fact from fiction. Nevertheless, amidst this market chatter, our
liquidity position in the last 24 hours had significantly
deteriorated.” Bear
Stearns PR
Obviously
Mr. Schwartz is being disingenuous. After all, financially stable
companies do not suddenly blow-up because a handful of investors are
spreading erroneous rumors. Rather, by definition financially stable
enterprises are those that are not slaves to their creditors and/or
those that do not carry a market risk profile that can turn the company
into road kill inside of 24-hours.
The
reality is that Bear Stearns was carrying more than $28 billion in
‘level 3’ assets on its books at the end of fiscal 2007 versus a net
equity position of only $11.7 billion. In other words, the company’s
balance sheet was highly leveraged to many untradable and potentially
worthless assets. It is this pitiful balance sheet that had Bear in the
fetal position, and when investor and lender confidence finally
evaporated it was this balance sheet that forced Bear to call the New
York Fed.
“The
Board voted unanimously to approve the arrangement announced by JPMorgan
Chase and Bear Stearns this morning.”
Federal
Reserve Board Statement
~ JP
Morgan Release
Before
today’s historic bailout of Bear Stearns, the Fed announced another
new lending platform for $200 billion. This time around the Fed
will take basically anything as collateral, which means potentially
rotten assets will be held and perpetually rolled over by the Fed until
things settle down.
Also
this week, Standard and Poor’s said the worst of the subprime
write-downs are behind the markets. Not coincidentally, this declaration
– which actually saw S&P’s raise its earlier write-down
estimate of $265 billion to $285 billion – came after the Fed
announced its new lending scheme. Is it that difficult to contend that
the pace of write-downs will slow when the Fed pledges to take $200
billion out of the equation?
Also
this week, the SEC announced or said that they are planning new
initiatives aimed at allowing manipulation of auction-rate securities,
further manipulation of financial statements, and more freedom for hedge
fund managers. While the word ‘manipulation’ is open to
interpretation, it is safe to say that all of the SEC’s time today is
being spent trying to make life easier for the credit markets and
corporate America. Who knows, maybe the SEC will try to get some of
those ominous off balance sheet numbers back onto the balance sheet in
the next decade?
Getting
back to Bear, Mr. Schwartz concluded his statement with the following:
“We
took this important step to restore confidence in us in the
marketplace, strengthen our liquidity and allow us to continue normal
operations.”
As
financial regulators leap to the aid of the markets and the rating
agencies continue their shenanigans, Mr. Schwartz tells us of the one
step a financial stable company would never be compelled to make.
Incidentally,
the most pressing question at hand isn’t what happens next, but
whether or not Bear Stearns called the Fed or JP Morgan first...


© 2007 Brady Willett
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