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Tuesday, September 09, 2008 2:07 PM


Lehman Worth A Big Zero?


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Lehman is getting crushed today. It may not be long for this world. Bloomberg is reporting Lehman Shares Fall After Talks With Korean Bank End.

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. fell 35 percent in New York trading after talks about a capital infusion from Korea Development Bank ended. The Wall Street firm is continuing to negotiate with other potential investors, a person briefed on the matter said.

Lehman, based in New York, has been seeking to raise capital and shed devalued real estate assets after $8.2 billion in writedowns and credit losses in the past year. Korean regulators told the development bank it would be "inappropriate" to pursue a Lehman acquisition.

Lehman CEO Richard Fuld and President Bart McDade are preparing to announce third-quarter financial results next week along with the outcome of their negotiations to sell assets and obtain cash infusions from outside investors.

The announcement will include "key strategic initiatives," Lehman said in a statement yesterday, without elaborating.

The firm has been in talks Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., Carlyle Group and other private-equity firms interested in buying its asset-management unit. Lehman is mulling all options and hasn't concluded any of the discussions yet, the person familiar with the matter said. Fuld will decide in the next 10 days how best to raise capital, the person said.
Lehman (LEH) Daily Chart



click on chart for sharper image

Yesterday Lehman gapped up to 17.73 and I called it ridiculous. It was ridiculous.

Why was Fannie and Freddie equity and preferred shares going to zero supposed to be a savior for Lehman?

Here is the chart I posted in Stunning Reversals.
Lehman 5 Minute Chart



click on chart for sharper image
Today Lehman traded as low as $8.00. If Lehman cannot quickly raise capital $8 is still ridiculous.

Zero Value

Bloomberg is reporting Wall Street Trading Gets Zero Value From Lehman, Merrill Owners.
Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. is trying to sell its fund-management unit to cover further mortgage- related writedowns. If it does, what's left won't be worth much, based on how investors value the firm.

Lehman's market capitalization of $11.2 billion is almost equal to the value of its asset-management arm, which includes Neuberger Berman Inc. That leaves its main business of trading stocks and bonds as having little worth. The numbers are similar for Merrill Lynch & Co.: Take out its retail-brokerage and asset- management businesses, and the investors' valuation of the rest of the third-biggest U.S. securities firm is zero.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analyst William Tanona estimates another $12 billion of losses for the three firms in the third quarter. Those probably will wipe out any trading revenue for the period.

"Uncertainty requires a discount," said Roger Lister, New York-based chief credit officer for financial institutions at DBRS Inc., a Canadian credit-rating company. "Equity investors are worried about writedowns resulting in more dilution. That swamps longer-term valuations. Similarly, the credit-default swaps on these banks' debt are treated like junk."

Lehman would be crippled more than its rivals if it sold its asset-management division, he said. While Morgan Stanley and Merrill have retail-brokerage divisions to bring in revenue, Lehman would be hard-pressed to replace the income it earns from asset management.

Investors are having a hard time valuing the rest of the business at Lehman because there's no transparency about the mortgage securities on their books, said Janet Tavakoli, author of "Credit Derivatives & Synthetic Structures." Lehman, Merrill and Morgan Stanley borrowed heavily to fund their mortgage investments, which is coming back to hurt them, she said. The three investment banks' total assets were about 30 times their capital levels last year.

"When you're highly leveraged, you need to be very careful about the quality of your fixed-income assets," said Tavakoli, president of Chicago-based Tavakoli Structured Finance Inc. "Even if you held Treasuries, you could lose big money when interest rates moved against you. When you take credit risk as well, which was the case with mortgage bonds, then you're really in trouble."
From The Trading Desk

Minyanville professor Bennet Sedacca is writing about Lehman preferreds and Washington Mutual (WM) credit default swaps (CDS)
On Deck: Lehman

Lehman(LEH) preferreds are now offered in size at 17%.

Washington Mutual (WM) CDS are trading around the 30% level.

Me thinks LEH is next.

And if you own the preferreds, you can expect... zero.

The best case is that the company sells its good assets and ends up a carcase. Meanwhile, most of my Street contacts won't trade with 'em.
Key Strategic Initiatives

Lehman CEO talked about "key strategic initiatives".

THE key strategic initiative is to raise capital. And no one is biting. Without capital it is the end of the line. Lehman's equity is worthless. Depending on the agreement to raise capital, its shares could be worth zero even IF it does raise capital. Anyone smell another Fed sponsored shotgun marriage coming up?

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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