Updated from 12:24 p.m. EDT
The stunning and sudden collapse of
Bear Stearns(BSC Quote) has cast an ominous pall on Wall Street as the major brokerages report earnings this week.
The 85-year-old investment bank's stock has plummeted more than 90% from its Thursday close of $57, after a week of rumors about its shaky liquidity position -- and a host of denials from company officials -- ended Friday with a bailout by the
Federal Reserve and
JPMorgan Chase(JPM Quote). That turned out to be a prelude to a fire sale in which Bear on Sunday agreed to
sell itself to JPMorgan for roughly $236 million, or just $2 a share, with the Fed backstopping illiquid mortgage-related assets. Shares recently were trading at $3.67.
Moreover, the Fed on Sunday
cut the discount rate and extended discount-window borrowing to securities dealers, one of several dramatic recent moves to boost liquidity for Wall Street banks as securities tied to mortgages have become all but impossible to trade.
Beyond Bear's Collapse: Who's Next? |
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The liquidity concerns are weighing heavily on brokerage stocks Monday morning.
Lehman Brothers(LEH Quote) shares are down more than 22%, after Moody's Investors Service affirmed its rating on Lehman's debt, but lowered its outlook to stable from positive.
Goldman Sachs(GS Quote) shares dipped more than 6% and
Morgan Stanley(MS Quote) stock was shedding about 9%. Lehman and Goldman are set to report earnings Tuesday morning; Morgan Stanley is slated to report Wednesday.
Bear Stearns has indefinitely postponed reporting its earnings, in light of the deal.
During the three-month period ending in February, the struggling capital markets continued to weaken, making it likely to see even further writedowns at the brokers, whose fiscal year ends in November. Not only are leveraged loans and collateralized debt obligations at risk for writedowns, but securities backed by commercial mortgages and other residential mortgages including Alt-A mortgages and certain prime loans also could inflict pain.
While the four securities firms will attempt to dress up their earnings, analysts predict an extended bleak outlook for the brokers. Earnings for the investment bank and brokerage industry in the
S&P 500 index are expected to fall 62% from a year ago, according to Thomson Financial.
Lehman is expected to record earnings of 72 cents a share, down 63%. Goldman is expected to earn $2.58 a share, down 61%, while Morgan Stanley is expected to make $1.03 a share, down 59% from last year.
"The outlook for the fiscal first quarter ending [in] February is looking pretty grim for the bulge bracket firms," writes Lauren Smith, an analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods in a note earlier this month. Since mid-February, "we have witnessed continued weakness in investment banking as well as increased costs of risk management in the credit markets," she said.
Analysts are becoming increasingly concerned about any writedowns related to the brokers' commercial real estate exposures and other residential mortgages besides subprime.
"In [fourth quarter 2007] the writedowns were centered on subprime mortgages and asset-backed securities CDOs," David Trone, an analyst at Fox-Pitt, Kelton Cochran Caronia Waller, wrote in an early March note. "In [first quarter 2008] we project writedowns across leveraged loans and commercial mortgage (commercial real estate and [commercial mortgage-backed securities]) as well as more residential mortgages (Alt-A, subprime, non-U.S. mortgage and ABS CDOs.)"