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Morgan Stanley in talks as fear grips financials
18 September 2008 | 09:42 | Source: Reuters
*NEW YORK -- Morgan Stanley topped the list of major financial services 
firms scrambling to sell themselves.

* It came as fear gripped global credit and stock markets, with former 
emerging markets darling Russia paralyzed.

Morgan Stanley was discussing a deal with U.S. regional banking 
powerhouse Wachovia, while CNBC reported that HSBC Holdings and China's 
CITIC Group were also eyeing the venerable Wall Street firm.

Lloyds TSB achieved a long-held ambition in Britain by scooping up the 
country's biggest mortgage lender HBOS in a $22 billion all-share deal 
timed to end a slump in its rival's shares prompted by fears about 
HBOS's funding

Among the possible buyers of Morgan Stanley, the Government of Singapore 
Investment Corp (GIC) said it would consider all possibilities, 
including taking a stake if approached.

A Morgan Stanley spokesman in Hong Kong declined to comment. A 
spokeswoman at HSBC, which this week became the world's biggest bank by 
market value, also declined to comment.

A senior executive at the Chinese group's CITIC Securities arm said his 
firm was not in any talks towards investment in Morgan Stanley. An 
official with the CITIC group could not be reached for comment.

With the financial landscape undergoing its most dramatic transformation 
since the Great Depression, potential takeovers lurked for No. 2 U.S. 
investment bank Morgan Stanley and weakened top U.S. savings bank 
Washington Mutual.

The MSCI index of Asia stocks excluding Japan fell 3.75 percent, while 
Tokyo shares were 2.22 percent lower. Hong Kong was especially hard-hit, 
with the Hang Seng index falling more than 7 percent.

Financial stocks in Europe were indicated to open lower, with Swiss 
heavyweights UBS seen down 7 percent and Credit Suisse down nearly 4 
percent.

And Russian stock markets remained closed for a second day, with 
authorities unable to say when they would reopen.

"After the bailing out of AIG failed to reassure the market, it is 
difficult to imagine what could really stop the un-orderly deleveraging 
that is going on," French investment bank Calyon said in a Thursday note.

Panicked matchmaking followed the surprise $85 billion rescue of insurer 
American International Group by the U.S. Federal Reserve on Tuesday that 
did little to calm investors' nerve, with financial shares bludgeoned.

Shares in Macquarie Group, Australia's biggest investment bank, skidded 
21 percent to their lowest level in more than 5 years amid funding worries.

Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, which had been the world's most 
valuable bank until being surpassed by HSBC on Wednesday fell nearly 14 
percent.

"Stop The Insanity," pleaded a research note from Swiss bank UBS as U.S. 
financial shares appeared to be in free-fall. The U.S. stock market 
plunged 4.7 percent to a three-year low and the dollar slumped, while 
gold and oil soared.

Lending between big banks was essentially frozen by cash hoarding and 
mistrust, creating crises of liquidity and confidence. Overnight U.S. 
dollar lending rates have soared this week and traded as high as 8.5 
percent on Thursday.

Japan and Australia pumped an additional USD 17bn into money markets on 
Thursday to prevent banks from hoarding cash.

"Banks are reluctant to lend money to each other, everybody seems to sit 
on stockpiles of cash," said Markus Ammann, a trader at Bayerische Hypo 
und Vereinsbank in Hong Kong.

The AIG rescue capped a week of bailouts, bankruptcy and moves by 
central banks around the world to flood the financial system with funds 
to prevent it from seizing up.

Shares of Morgan Stanley and larger rival Goldman fell as much as 43 
percent and 27 percent respectively, even after both reported 
better-than-expected quarterly earnings.

The cost of protecting debt in both spiked, reflecting investor fears 
their debt issues are no safer than junk bonds.

Morgan Stanley's Mack blamed short sellers, or investors who bet on 
falling stock prices, saying in an internal memo: "We're in the midst of 
a market controlled by fear and rumors, and short sellers are driving 
our stock down."

"The fear is who is next," said John O'Brien, senior vice president at 
MKM Partners in Cleveland. "It almost feels like people scour the books 
and say who is the next likely target that we can put a short on. And 
that spreads continuous fear."

"Anything's possible"

"In this market, anything's possible. It seems like the market wants the 
investment banking model to disappear," said Danielle Schembri, a bond 
analyst covering brokers at BNP Paribas in New York.

Washington Mutual, beleaguered by mortgage losses, put itself up for 
sale, sources familiar with the situation said. Potential suitors 
include Citigroup, JPMorgan, Wells Fargo and HSBC.

"I think there's going to be a lot of mergers and acquisitions for 
either good reasons or because people don't have choices," said Wells 
Fargo Chairman Richard Kovacevich.

He said his company was "buying with both hands" and said that he felt 
"like a kid in a candy store" given the distressed state of financial 
assets, but declined to comment on targets.

The merger mania spread to other trading businesses. U.S. power firm 
Constellation Energy was talking to potential suitors after its shares 
fell 58 percent this week on investor concerns the credit crisis has 
hurt its power trading.

Credit crunch

As banking shares imploded, the White House said it was "concerned about 
other companies".

On the U.S. presidential campaign trail, John McCain blasted Wall 
Street's "casino culture" and Barack Obama stressed protection for 
mom-and-pop investors.

The U.S. government was looking to raise USD 40 billion to boost the 
Fed's firepower as a major U.S. money market fund "broke the buck", or 
fell below USD 1.00 a share -- a rare event that has the potential to 
panic retail investors.

U.S. authorities have spent USD 900bn to prop up the financial system 
and housing market.

The AIG rescue came just over a week after the bailout of mortgage 
finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and six months after the 
Fed brokered the sale of failed investment bank Bear Stearns to JPMorgan 
Chase.

Over the weekend Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc filed for bankruptcy and 
Merrill Lynch & Co struck a deal to sell out to Bank of America Corp.

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