... But Lehman Goes For Broke The fate of Real Estate, Stock and Debt
held by Lehman Brothers in India could now go under hammer. Nifty
Singapore has opened at 4020, and Dow Futures are minus 240.
Fortunately all Asian markets Shanghai, Hongkong, Korea and Japan are
closed for a public holiday today. Only Sydney and Singapore are open,
otherwise there could have been terror on the Streets as AIG (American
Insurance Group) is now believed to be seeking Fed help after bailout
of the GSEs and the Bear Stearns acquisition by JP Morgan...Nothing
gets brighter in the US, it seems. So this is the way it ends. Not with
a bang but a whimper–Lehman Brothers looks headed into liquidation.
Apparently, you can put dozens of Wall Street's finest into conference
rooms at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, but they can't rewrite
an immutable law of human nature: people act in their self-interest.
And it is in everyone's narrow interest–except for Lehman's
shareholders, debt holders and employees–to see Lehman in bankruptcy
proceedings. Over the weekend, it has become clear that Lehman is a
zero sum game. Slice it and dice it. Ring fence asset manager Neuberger
Berman. Put the commercial mortgages into a separate vehicle. But the
$53 billion of illiquid assets that Lehman has on its books are still
bad assets. Early on the Treasury Department made it clear the U.S.
taxpayer doesn't want these assets. Barclays and the Bank of America
don't want them either. So the Treasury has tried without success to
convince Lehman's Wall Street brethren to take them on. But why should
they? Imagine you are John Thain, CEO of Merrill Lynch. Unlike Dick
Fuld, who has held tight, in July you sold collateralized debt
obligations with a face value of $31 billion at 22 cents on the dollar.
But you still are capital constrained. And now you are asked by
Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, the man who didn't make you CEO of
Goldman Sachs, to put up billions of dollars to save Lehman? So that
Barclays or BofA can pick up Lehman on the cheap to compete with you?
It is humiliating enough that you may soon need one of those banks to
bail you out. Indeed, the Wall Street Journal reports that BofA and
Merrill are in merger talks. You can see Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd
Blankfein and Morgan Stanley CEO John Mack offer up a couple of billion
dollars apiece as acts of noblesse oblige. They know a Lehman
bankruptcy would be a big headache come Monday when the credit markets
freeze up. But "unselfish" acts have their limits. Goldman has billions
of dollars dedicated to distressed debt situations just like this. It
may very well run counter to the interests of Goldman investors and
shareholders to subsidize any deal for Lehman. This is where the Lehman
death drama turns into farce. It isn't a shortage of outside capital
that is driving Lehman into bankruptcy. It is the bid-ask spread on its
bad assets, or the difference between a buyer's and seller's views on
price. Sure, the $53 billion in assets are illiquid, but at some price
there is a buyer. Are the assets worth 10 cents on the dollar or 50
cents on the dollar? Dick Fuld was afraid to find out because he knew
that at 10 cents, Lehman likely was bankrupt anyway. Still, there are
tens of billions of dollars of Wall Street capital happy to bid for the
assets. Goldman, private-equity firms like J.C. Flowers, Kohlberg
Kravis Roberts, Carlyle Group, TPG or Blackstone Group, hedge funds,
distressed-debt funds and sovereign-wealth funds all have capital. They
are just waiting for the clearing prices on Lehman's assets to get
attractive. Which is why a Lehman bankruptcy makes sense. Instead of a
complex game of chicken between the U.S. Treasury and Wall Street, you
have a straightforward auction. Lehman is broken up and its assets sold
to the highest bidder. Only in this way will each buyer and the seller
be able to fulfill its obligation to act in its self-interest. Yes, but
what about the collective well-being of the markets? What about a
feared-for financial apocalypse brought about by the unwinding of
Lehman's $600 billion balance sheet? It may not be pretty, but
apparently Wall Street has decided that the price won't be too steep.
Or else, it would have put up the money. If a Chapter 7 filing is made,
Wall Street will move on. In offices and conference rooms not far from
the New York Fed, bankers probably are already gathering to prepare for
bids on assets they hope to pick up on the cheap in any potential
Lehman liquidation. In the coming weeks, Wall Street's vultures will
pick over Lehman's still-warm body–and wait for one or two more victims
to come their way.

Safe Harbor Statement:
Some forward looking statements on projections, estimates,
expectations & outlook are included to enable a better comprehension of
the Company prospects. Actual results may, however, differ materially
from those stated on account of factors such as changes in government
regulations, tax regimes, economic developments within India and the
countries within which the Company conducts its business, exchange rate
and interest rate movements, impact of competing products and their
pricing, product demand and supply constraints. Nothing in this article
is, or should be construed as, investment advice.





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Posted By Ronald Chisley to Investor Forums at 9/15/2008 07:47:00 AM
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