JPMorgan completes takeover of Bear Stearns

Sat May 31, 2008 12:33pm EDT
 
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NEW YORK (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co said on Saturday it completed its $1.4 billion Bear Stearns Cos takeover, capping the demise of a Wall Street firm that survived the Depression and numerous slumps in its 85 years but could not navigate the mortgage crisis.

Weakened by its massive exposure to mortgage markets and the embarrassing blow-up of two of its hedge funds, Bear was driven to the brink of bankruptcy in March by traders who

drained about $17 billion of the firm's cash in a matter of days.

Federal officials, worried a Bear bankruptcy would drag the rest of the markets down with it, strong-armed the bank to accept JPMorgan's $2-a-share offer, backed by a Federal Reserve bailout of $30 billion in Bear assets.

A week later JPMorgan raised its offer five-fold to 0.21753 of a share for each Bear share. Based on JPMorgan's current market price of $43, that bid valued Bear at $9.35 a share, well below the $57 those shares fetched before traders began their run on Bear.

In exchange for the higher price, Bear had to sell a 39.9 percent stake to JPMorgan. Combined with other purchases, JPMorgan amassed a controlling 49.5 percent stake and effectively locked up Bear for good.

Since then, JPMorgan, which under CEO Jamie Dimon largely steered clear of credit losses that hobbled its rivals last year, has been sorting through Bear's people and assets.

For a fire-sale price, JPMorgan will gain a new headquarters tower in Midtown Manhattan, some of Wall Street's largest clearing, prime brokerage and energy trading arms.

Bear's name will survive on Wall Street through its retail brokerage business, which Morgan is keeping.  Continued...

 
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