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After Bear Stearns Rescue, Who's Next?



By Joe Bel Bruno And Madlen Read, AP
17 March 2008 @ 10:02 am EST


JPMorgan Bear Stearns
The headquarters for securities firm Bear Stearns is shown March 16, 2006 in a New York file photo. JPMorgan Chase said Sunday March 16, 2008 it will acquire rival Bear Stearns for a bargain-basement $236.2 million _ or $2 a share _ a stunning collapse for one of the world`s largest and most storied investment banks. The last-minute buyout was aimed at averting a Bear Stearns bankruptcy and a spreading crisis of confidence in the global financia...
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"This is going to go down in very historic terms," said Peter Dunay, chief investment strategist for New York-based Meridian Equity Partners. "This is about credit being overextended, and how bad it is for major financial institutions and for individuals. This is why we're probably heading into a recession."

JPMorgan said it will guarantee all business such as trading and investment banking until Bear Stearns' shareholders approve the deal, expected to be completed during the second quarter. The acquisition includes Bear Stearns' midtown Manhattan headquarters.

JPMorgan Chief Financial Officer Michael Cavanagh did not say what would happen to Bear Stearns' 14,000 employees worldwide, or whether the 85-year-old Bear Stearns name would live on after surviving the Great Depression and a slew of recessions. He told analysts and investors on a conference call that JPMorgan was most interested in buying Bear Stearns' prime brokerage business, which completes trades for big investors such as hedge funds.

At almost the same time as that deal was announced, the Fed said it approved a cut in its lending rate to banks to 3.25 percent from 3.50 percent and created another lending facility for big investment banks. The central bank's official meeting is Tuesday. Before the emergency move to lower the discount rate the rate at which banks lend each other money the Fed was widely expected to again cut its headline rate by as much as a full point to 2 percent.

Wall Street analysts say the rescue bid was more than just saving one of the world's largest investments banks it was a prop for the U.S. economy and the global financial system. An outright failure would cause huge losses for banks, hedge funds and other investors to which Bear Stearns is connected.

After days of denials that it had liquidity problems, Bear was forced into a JPMorgan-led, government-backed bailout on Friday. The arrangement, the first of its kind since the 1930s, resulted in Bear getting a 28-day loan from JPMorgan with the government's guarantee that JPMorgan would not suffer any losses on the deal.

"The past week has been an incredibly difficult time for Bear Stearns," Bear Stearns Chief Executive Alan Schwartz said in a statement. "This represents the best outcome for all of our constituencies based upon the current circumstances."

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AP Business Writers Jeannine Aversa in Washington and Stephen Bernard in New York contributed to this report.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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