Bear Stearnss supply of repo funding the lifeblood of any financial institution was curtailed and the broker ran out of cash because of liquidity being withdrawn by institutions concerned about its exposure to both mortgages and hedge funds.
Brokers have illiquid balance sheets and depend on the markets perception of their creditworthiness in order to operate. So when margin calls led to the forced liquidation of credit fund Carlyle Capital, and forced sales at other credit hedge funds, market rumours of liquidity problems at Bear became widespread. They became a self-fulfilling prophecy.
The Federal Reserve stepped in with an unprecedented (at least since the Great Crash in 1929) emergency line of funding via JPMorgan. The latter then agreed initially to pick up Bear at a cut-price $2 a share, a fraction of book value and with the additional benefit of a $30 billion back-up line...
You do not currently have access to this content. To gain access visit the subscription page or call our hotline on +44 (0)207 779 8999.
If you are a trialist or subscriber, please enter your username and password at the top right-hand side of euromoney.com
Subscribers to Euromoney benefit from:
Level 1:
- Online access to the past 12 months content
- Tailored RSS news feeds direct to your desktop
- News delivered directly to your mobile device or PC
- Personalised email newsfeed of 'Top stories' and 'Breaking news'
Level 2:
- Exclusive access to euromoney.com - Read the latest issue early online, search for specific developments by region or sector, interrogate the results of Euromoney's benchmark polls, and view the archive dating back to 2000
- 12 monthly issues of Euromoney magazine
- More than 30 specialist research guides free
- The results of Euromoneys polls and surveys
- Tailored RSS news feeds direct to your desktop
- News delivered directly to your mobile device or PC
- Personalised email newsfeed of 'Top stories' and 'Breaking news'
Click here to subscribe