Why Bear Stearns Might Be Sold

Thanks to Helen Thomas for reminding

me that I reckon a Bear Stearns takeover ain’t going to happen – or

at least that I thought

that a month ago. But since the FT is revisiting

the issue, it’s worth taking another look.

There’s no doubt that the chart

of the Bear Stearns stock price is pretty ugly. Earlier this year, the stock

was at an all-time high of more than $170 per share; it’s now just over $114.

That equates to more than $8 billion in value being obliterated – a drop

which really can be blamed

on subprime.

Remember, that’s a reason for Jimmy Cayne not to

sell. If he wasn’t willing to take $24 billion for his company in January, why

should he take $16 billion now? And have no doubt – whether or not a deal

gets done is entirely a function of what Jimmy Cayne ultimately decides. The

won’t be any hostile takeover of Bear Stearns: the road to its acquisition starts

and ends in his office.

But Cayne might now be realizing the value of being a big bank, and not a small

one. JP Morgan is down only 16% from its highs, not 34%; Barclays today announced

a healthy rise in net income and said that its subprime exposures are really

not a big deal at all.

Cayne is 73, and, as Ken Houghton commented on my earlier

post, it’s not clear how much faith he has in his potential successors. He won’t

be running Bear Stearns forever, and he might not like to take the risk that

his billions could be wiped out by future mismanagement or some other black

swan. If he starts thinking along those lines, then he might be more minded

to accept a large chunk of Barclays shares in exchange for his own stake in

Bear. Similarly, if Barclays fails to snag ABN Amro, then a Bear Stearns acquisition

would serve the rather handy dual purpose of beefing up its capital-markets

operation while also making the whole bank that much harder to acquire itself.

At that point, however, it’s hard to see how Cayne could come to an agreement

as to price with any potential acquirer. As Lex notes today, Bear’s current

price-to-book ratio of 1.2 is "below trough valuations earlier this decade".

I’m quite sure that Cayne doesn’t want to be the guy who sold off his investment

bank at some small premium over a low valuation like that. But if a big bank

somewhere offers him a whopping great big premium over where the shares are

currently trading, he might start to think twice.

Bear Stearns might just be sold, then, although the obstacles to a sale remain

formidable. Just don’t expect it to be sold cheap.

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