California asks Bear if it can still underwrite debt

Fri Mar 14, 2008 8:44pm EDT
 
[-] Text [+]

By Jim Christie

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - California's state treasurer's office contacted Bear Stearns on Friday to check on the U.S. investment bank's ability to handle two upcoming bond sales amid the cash squeeze forcing the company to turn to the JPMorgan Chase and the Federal Reserve for funding.

Bear Stearns is senior underwriter for a refunding of $1 billion of state Department of Water Resources power revenue bonds in a sale closing on March 19, and for a sale of $302 million in state Public Works Board lease revenue bonds closing on March 26.

California expects $1.3 billion after the sales close, said Tom Dresslar, a spokesman for California Treasurer Bill Lockyer.

"Given their financial difficulties, we have been in touch with the head of their underwriting desk telling them we want a written assurance from a senior Bear Stearns official that we're going to get our money on time," Dresslar said.

"We want that assurance to come from the top of the company," Dresslar said.

Bear Stearns, in a letter to the California treasurer's office signed by Samuel Molinaro Jr., the investment bank's chief operating officer and chief financial officer, said it will be able to pay California.

"The secured loan facility provided by JPMorgan Chase & Co which we announced this morning is available to assure that Bear Stearns has sufficient liquidity to continue normal operations, fulfill its commitments and meet all obligations, including its obligations under the Bond Purchase Agreements with the State of California," said the letter, provided to Reuters by the treasurer's office.

The potential damage from Bear Stearns' meltdown on U.S. states, cities and agencies that relied on it as one of the leading underwriters in the $2.6 trillion U.S. municipal bond market goes well beyond this role.

The bank also is a counterparty for interest rate swaps, which issuers use to guard against unexpected shifts in rates. And public pension funds could have owed stock in Bear Stearns, whose price plunged 46 percent on Friday, the experts noted.

ARNOLD SHRUGS

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said he is not concerned about California's upcoming debt sales.

"I'm not concerned about that at all," Schwarzenegger said in an interview on CNBC. "I think we will be able to sell our bonds. People are excited to invest in California."

California is seeing solid demand for its bonds, general obligation debt or otherwise, Dresslar said.

"If the last g.o. deal is any indication, demand is increasing on the retail side in particular," Dresslar said. "Given the upheavals in other capital markets, investors, particularly retail investors, see bonds as solid investments, and it doesn't hurt that yields at least at this point have been somewhat higher than in the last year or so."

Other states, including New Jersey and Wisconsin, said they also now will analyze whether to keep Bear Stearns as an underwriter for upcoming bond sales.  Continued...

 

Featured Broker sponsored link

Editor's Choice

A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours.   Slideshow 

Most Popular on Reuters

  • Articles
  • Video
Bernd Debusmann
America’s perennial Vietnam syndrome

History does not repeat itself, but the wartime struggles of President Obama in 2009 and President Johnson in 1963 are striking in their similarities. Does the ghost of Vietnam still hang over the White House?  Commentary