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JPMorgan's Higher Bear Stearns Bid Spurs Market
But Experts Say Rally Could Be Short-lived
By Les Jacobs, published Mar 25, 2008
Published Content: 61 Total Views: 35,084 Favorited By: 27 CPs
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(25 March 2008) JPMorgan Chase's increased bid for Bear Stearns helped spur stock prices, infusing investors with the hope that the market has bottomed and will now rebound. Investment experts don't share this rosy outlook, however, and foresee more pain to come. Facing shareholder discontent at Bear Stearns, JPMorgan yesterday upped is offer for the investment bank from US$2.52 to US$10 a share. It also negotiated to buy 39.5% of the company without a shareholder vote so that the transaction would close quickly and JPMorgan would increase its chances of retaining Bear Stearns' employees and clients.
The U.S. market reacted positively to the news, with the S&P 500 rising 3.1% today. Shares oversees jumped as well, up 2.12% in Tokyo, 6.4% in Hong Kong and 6.07% in Mumbai. The S&P 500 is now up 5% since March 16, when JPMorgan made its initial bid for Bear Stearns, backed by the U.S. Federal Reserve.
The Bear Stearns buyout development, coupled with promising news in the U.S. housing sector, seems to have given investors a boost of confidence and convinced traders that a rally is in the offing. The National Association of Realtors reported yesterday that sales of existing homes rose 2.9 percent in February, the first gain since July 2007.
Most seasoned market watchers remain skeptical, however, and believe the market has further to fall.
"The Bear Stearns rescue addressed a liquidity problem," John Plender of the Financial Times wrote in an editorial today. "Even so, this is not just a crisis of liquidity."
It is, as we all know, also a housing crisis, and although yesterday's housing numbers were "cheering," Plender writes, "there remains a huge overhang of newly built inventory, which guarantees that prices will continue to fall, thereby raising further questions about the value of all manner of mortgage-backed paper that is no longer traded because markets have dried up."

JPMorgan's Higher Bear Stearns Bid Spurs Market
The recent spike in stock prices will probably be short-lived, experts say.
Credit: Les Jacobs
Copyright: Les Jacobs
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