Lehman Chief Scrambles To Find A Buyer

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

JOE BEL BRUNO | September 12, 2008 11:11 PM EST | AP

Compare other versions »

Pedestrians walk pass Lehman Brothers headquarters on Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2008 in New York. Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., the nation's fourth-largest investment bank whose shares have fallen more than 80 percent this year as investors lost confidence amid mounting losses also said Wednesday it lost $3.9 billion during the third quarter due to wrong-way bets on mortgage securities and other risky assets. (AP Photo/Jin Lee)

NEW YORK — The Wall Street firm that started the U.S. cotton trade before the Civil War and financed the railroads that built a nation might soon fade into history.

Just days after Lehman Brothers Chief Executive Richard S. Fuld tried to pitch Wall Street on a plan to save the firm by shrinking it, he's in complicated negotiations with potential buyers that may see the company sold piecemeal as soon as Sunday night, analysts said.

"Nothing short of a miracle can save Lehman as is," said Anthony Sabino, professor of law and business at St. John's University. "It is highly unlikely Lehman will be in existence on Monday morning."

Late Friday, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York held an emergency meeting with top Washington policymakers and major financial institutions to discuss Lehman's future.

Attendees included Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson; Christopher Cox, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission; and Timothy Geithner, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Fed spokeswoman Michelle Smith declined to disclose what financial institutions participated or whether the group had reached any conclusion. The Wall Street Journal reported on its Web site that the group included Morgan Stanley chief executive John Mack and Merrill Lynch chief executive John Thain, among others.

Other financial firms may swallow portions of Lehman's investment banking or bond trading business, analysts said. Considering the firm's deep financial problems, riskier assets like its mortgage and real-estate portfolios could be sold for just pennies on the dollar.

Potential buyers could include Bank of America Corp., Britain's Barclay's Plc, Japan's Nomura Securities, France's BNP Paribas and Deutsche Bank AG. All have declined to comment.

Story continues below
advertisement

Randy Whitestone, a spokesman for Lehman Brothers, declined to comment on the firm's situation Friday.

On Friday, Lehman's stock closed at $3.65 _ an all-time low and down nearly 95 percent from its 52-week high of $67.73 as investors grew more convinced that Lehman may be auctioned at fire-sale prices.

The stock's plunge was a humiliating beating for the 158-year-old investment bank, one of Wall Street's oldest firms, and for Fuld, 62, who has run the bank through internal squabbles, the technology bust, and the 9/11 attacks that destroyed its headquarters.

The company's roots began in 1844 when Henry Lehman immigrated from Rimpar, Germany to Alabama, where he established a dry goods store that catered to local cotton farmers in Montgomery. Lehman Brothers evolved from merchandising to a commodities broker, and then later into underwriting where the firm helped finance construction of the Pennsylvania Railroad, among others.

Lehman built its reputation trading government and corporate bonds. Over his 15 years at the helm, Fuld expanded the firm's repertoire to investment banking and money management for wealthy clients. He also stretched its overseas reach to better compete with big rivals like Goldman Sachs Group Inc. About half of the firm's profit comes from outside the U.S.

As it grew, it also took on greater risk, including the kind of real estate investments that have forced global banks and brokerages to write down more than $300 billion since the subprime mortgage crisis undermined the credit markets.

On Wednesday, Lehman reported it lost almost $4 billion because of the sales and write-downs on its residential and commercial real estate assets. Its total losses for the year added up to $6.9 billion.

To shore up confidence among investors and its customers, Lehman presented a plan that called for selling its money management unit and spinning off most of its real estate investments into a separate publicly traded company.

The attempt failed, forcing Fuld to consider selling the firm he has worked at since 1969.

In March, the government helped engineer Bear Stearns' sale to JPMorgan Chase & Co. with a deal backed by a $29 billion loan from the Federal Reserve .

The difference this time is the government is not likely to provide any financial backing.

Paulson is against any use of government money in whatever deal comes together for Lehman, a person close to his thinking said Friday.

Unlike Bear Stearns, which happened swiftly and with little warning, financial markets have been aware of Lehman's troubles for a long time and have had time to prepare.

The government may also be less willing to bail out Lehman because the firm has been able to borrow money directly from the Fed through a program the central bank began after Bear Stearns imploded.

Finally, the government might not want to give investors the impression that it is the financial savior of troubled banks, analysts said. Instead, the feeling in Washington is that financial institutions will live or die by the free market.

Lehman Brothers _ despite its tarnished image _ has been one of Wall Street's most respected franchises.

The company's investment banking and trading operations routinely rank among the highest in the industry. For instance, Lehman Brothers is ranked eighth in the global mergers and acquisitions so far this year, advising on deals with a total value of $105 billion, according to financial data provider Dealogic.

Fuld said during a conference call Wednesday that the firm's core businesses remains healthy.

Banks such as Bank of America may be interested in Lehman's investment banking division.

With Bank of America, for example, a deal with Lehman Brothers would instantly catapult it to the top ranks of investment banking. For Barclays, buying Lehman would instantly boost its presence in the U.S. and give it a stronger position in stock and bond markets.

Whoever buys Lehman or its individual assets will have their own knot of problems to untangle, however.

"The damage is done," Sabino said. "The house has been burned to the ground, now you're just picking through the ashes."

NEW YORK — The Wall Street firm that started the U.S. cotton trade before the Civil War and financed the railroads that built a nation might soon fade into history. Just days after Lehman Broth...
NEW YORK — The Wall Street firm that started the U.S. cotton trade before the Civil War and financed the railroads that built a nation might soon fade into history. Just days after Lehman Broth...
 
Comments
40
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)

Lehman Bros. is dead and floating at the top of the fishbowl.The rest is simply a matter of how long the corpse will be left to rot. As for the rest, the only folks who will lose money on the imminent burial of the US economy will be John and Jane Q. Public. In a few months a roll of toilet paper will be worth more than US currency in any denomination.It's coming sheeple...bread lines winding for blocks around boarded up businesses and yes,schools and hospitals.The hard rain is just beginning to fall in big drops on your failed corporate police state.By 2010 the only profitable business left in freedom's land will be arresting and imprisoning those of us who won't fall into line. I can't wait to hear the crying and gnashing of teeth from proud,patriotic red white and blue Americans who let it happen,voted for it to happen,cheered for it to happen,waged war so that it might happen,threw away their rights so that it might happen,kissed the hand of a government that hated them and treats them like animals.It's coming soon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:13 PM on 09/14/2008
photo

what goes up....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 PM on 09/13/2008
photo

Keep in mind that those who want to privatize Social Security Insurance will gamble with your hard earned money like Lehman Brothers and likely lose it all. The financial markets can be summed up in one word "gambling". We seriously need to think about getting rid of financial markets. Thus far they have brought us recessions and depressions since the South Sea Bubble of 1720.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 AM on 09/13/2008
photo

the US government borrows every dollar it prints from a private company,
at a rate of interest...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 PM on 09/13/2008

The question should be who will save our citizens and our country, the United States?

We will be reading more articles like the one in my local paper. A poor young man who bought an air conditioner from another man but having discovered the air conditioner didn't work, went back to the seller asking for his money back. When his request was denied, the young man pull out a gun.

It is because of crooks in the major banks and brokerages who knew people were not smart enough to question subprime loans, who knew they were selling worthless instruments to unsuspecting buyers, who knew rating agencies and how they could manipulate them, the few who knew they would be making millions and millions at the expense of millions and millions of our citizens, it is because of those crooks that we are in the trouble we are in. It is those few who should have "their" money and "their" homes stripped from them, just as the millions of their victims have had done to them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:28 AM on 09/13/2008

If I'm using My Brain right & thinking correctly, then not only do the Ceo's walk away with Millions or Billions of Dollars, they also will be able to buy back any of the assets that their previous had on their books, later down the line with that same Money that they walked away with after they collapsed those same Companies ....

Even if I'm slightly wrong about that assessment, Our Government should be fine, as long as the assets on those Companies books are of good quality & in good shape, which means " get those People out of their House before they tare them down, from the inside-out, that's are Money on the line" ...........

I'm just making up stuff, I've never taken any type of Business or Financial Classes in My Life !

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:58 PM on 09/13/2008

Who is this guy really? An angry Jimmy Smits?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:17 AM on 09/13/2008

Why the bailout of Bear Sterns and not Lehman?? I would have thought Bernanke and Paulson would have been as buddy-buddy with Lehman as with Bear Sterns........

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:33 AM on 09/13/2008

To Me what's happening with these CEO's & Companies mostly looks like Financial Re-deployment, without Personal responsibility to anyone.

It kind of looks like " The Sharks eating The Sharks " to Me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:53 AM on 09/13/2008
photo

Let's see. Under the republicans all you have to do is owe "huge" amounts of money. Then your safe. Great system for truly incompetent money managers.

For me..... Not so much.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 AM on 09/13/2008

To repeat, in America-we have socialism for the rich & only the rich. It is an old, honored, American tradition. How do you think they got money to dig canals, build railroads. States at 1st financed canals, Uncle Sugar financed the transcontinental railroad with land grants, etc. Socialism for the rich is as American as apple pie, motherhood, incest, drunkeness, corporate fraud, theiving elected officials, etc. Socialism would ruin the productivity of American workers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:41 PM on 09/12/2008
photo

Word has it that today Fuld put in an ebay bid for the Bat Signal

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 PM on 09/12/2008
- max I'm a Fan of max permalink

1929 again?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:27 PM on 09/12/2008

I find it amusing that Lehman start in the south during slavery, and they are still using us as slaves to bail them out. What I don't find amusing is taxpayers have to bail them out when most of us have our retirements tied up in the market. Moreover, if I'm short in my bank account and can't cover a check I end up with huge fees. So why should we help them when basically these banking elites wouldn't give us the time of day, unless they need us or I mean our tax dollars.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 PM on 09/12/2008
- JBS I'm a Fan of JBS permalink
photo

I don't believe them.

They'll find some reason why Lehman Brothers is "TOO BIG" to be allowed to fail and some Bush crony will get a sweetheart deal to take over the assets while the taxpayer assumes the liabilities just like they did for J.P. Morgan in the Bear Stearns sellout.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:56 PM on 09/12/2008
photo

The writing is on the wall for Lehman. The rumor I heard was BofA buying it. BofA has been the sin-eater recently, and it is hardwired into the Administration by General Tommy Franks who sits on the Bank's board.

I wouldn't shed a tear over Lehman though, they might be the latest casualty, but it won't be the last.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:21 PM on 09/12/2008

They said they won't buy it unless they get what JPM got so they're probably working that out with Paulson right now. I also heard Barclays was interested but I thought foreign banks couldn't buy banks in this country.

We really should not have repealed the law that made it illegal for regulard banks to merge with investment banks because it's a conflict of interest.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:36 PM on 09/12/2008

hold your horses!! this time there wont be a bailout for LEH. the company will be "taken under" (acquired below its last market price).

Govt. has already said, no bailout. LEH is no fannie/freddie. its not even that big. i believe it will be split up and different banks take different pieces (not a single acquirer).

so go easy on it. only if there is a govt. backstop/funding for the acquisition then only you guys can again start ranting. for now just chill!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:06 PM on 09/12/2008
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

You must be logged in to reply to this comment. Log in  or  Connect

 
Right Now on HuffPost
FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE

MOSCOW — Presidents Barack Obama and Dmitry...

STANDOFF IN HONDURAS HEATS UPMilitary Blocks Ousted President Zelaya's Plane From...

(AP) TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — Ousted President Manuel...