Dave Beal

  • Switch to Small Text Size
  • Switch to Medium Text Size
  • Switch to Large Text Size
Recommend to a friend Print Submit a Comment

    Bear Stearns news makes tense day for area financial folks

    Twin Cities brokers, money managers and financial advisers were riveted to their television screens, computer monitors and telephones Monday, in the wake of the takeover engineered by the Federal Reserve of the Bear Stearns investment firm.

    Braced for the worst, they found that by the end of the day the stock market wound up back pretty much where it began at the opening bell.

    With two glaring exceptions, Bear Stearns and J.P. Morgan Chase Co. J.P. Morgan rose 10.3 percent, thanks to investors' conclusions that it will benefit immensely from the deal.

     

     

    Relief may be short-lived
    However, any relief over the calming of the market on Monday may be strictly temporary. Investors are still waiting to see where the next shoes will drop in the Great Credit Crunch of 2008.

    "This was a very bad day if you were a Bear shareholder or employee," said Dave Heidel, an analyst for Accredited Investors in Edina. "I was up at a quarter to five this morning to see how the Asian markets were reacting."

    Late Sunday, Fed officials agreed to lend $30 billion to J.P. Morgan to help finance that firm's takeover of stressed Bear Stearns for $236 million, or just $2 a share. They feared that Bear would have gone bankrupt without the rescue, sending global financial markets into a chilling, domino-like crash.

    Bear's stock traded for $30 a share when it closed on Friday. Just 14 months ago, it reached $170.

    "It amazed me," Randy Nitzsche, CEO at Northland Securities in Minneapolis said of the $2-a-share price. "Nobody knew they were in that bad of a shape."

    Accredited manages about $750 million, largely for 350 individual investors. Heidel kept in contact with business associates at J.P. Morgan over the weekend. But Accredited Investors' clients are generally long-term investors and the firm sends them market summaries regularly. Thus they seldom need impromptu advice or soothing words from Heidel or others at Accredited. Only four clients called the firm on Monday.

    MPMG long wary of bank stocks

    Money managers at the Minneapolis Portfolio Management Group (MPMG) took the news in stride. That's largely because they deliberately avoid putting their clients' money into bank stocks. MPMG manages $700 million, about 95 percent of it in stocks, with roughly a third of that in the stocks of gold and natural resource companies.

    "What we've been telling our clients for years is 'Don’t own any financial stocks,' " says Phil Grodnick, MPMG's chief executive officer. Apparently they've taken that advice, because the firm didn't get any calls of concern from them on Monday.

    Grodnick argues that generally, financial stocks are too heavily burdened with debt. "We don't like they way they've been doing their business," he said. "We’re not comfortable with it." But beyond those companies, "the market is in better shape than many people think," he said.

    1 Comments: Hide/Show Comments

    1 Comment: Hide/Show Comment

    0 Comments:

    Post a comment:

    To post a comment, please log in below as a registered commenter.

    E-mail address

    Password

     

    Forgot Password? | Register to Comment

    MinnPost does not permit the use of foul language, personal attacks or the use of language that may be libelous or interpreted as inciting hate or sexual harassment. User comments are reviewed by moderators to ensure that comments meet these standards and adhere to MinnPost's terms of use and privacy policy.

    We intend for this area to be used by our readers as a place for civil, thought-provoking and high-quality public discussion. In order to achieve this, MinnPost requires that all commenters register and post comments with their actual names and place of residence. Register here to comment.

    Dave Beal
    Illustration by Hugh Bennewitz


    minnpost.com/davebeal



    Dave Beal, a longtime business columnist for the Pioneer Press and former business editor there, will write about business and the economy. Beal was business editor at the Milwaukee Journal before coming to the Twin Cities and is a past president of the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. He is co-author, with Fred Zimmerman, of the 2002 book "Manufacturing Works" and serves as treasurer of the Society of Professional Journalists' Minnesota Chapter and as a member of the Minnesota News Council's hearing board.  He can be reached at dbeal [at] minnpost [dot] com. 

    Recent Posts by Dave Beal