Lehman shares slide on fears over results
By Ben White in New York
Published: August 19 2008 18:42 | Last updated: August 20 2008 07:14
Shares in Lehman Brothers continued their steep decline on Tuesday, falling more than 13 per cent amid fresh predictions of significant third-quarter writedowns.
The decline also came after reports that the troubled investment bank may sell all or part of its asset management arm, Neuberger Berman, a move it has long resisted.
Lehman shares dropped 13.04 per cent, or $1.96, to close at $13.07 in New York, reducing the market value of the investment bank to around $9.1bn. That is less than the estimated $10bn standalone value of Neuberger, which Lehman bought for $2.6bn in 2003.
Lehman shares are off nearly 80 per cent this year following large writedowns on the bank’s troubled mortgage portfolios. Lehman was among the leading underwriters of mortgage-backed securities and was left with large holdings after the subprime crisis curtailed investor appetite for the fixed-income products.
Tuesday’s share price drop came after analysts at JPMorgan Chase said in a report that Lehman would post another $4bn in credit-related writedowns in its fiscal third quarter, which closes at the end of August.
Lehman has already posted over $8bn in writedowns and has been scrambling to raise capital to shore up its balance sheet. Lehman declined to comment on the JPMorgan report. Lehman has been selling some mortgage assets but still has about $61bn in exposure, JPMorgan said.
Lehman raised $6bn in the spring from a group of mostly US-based institutional investors following an embarrassing $2.8bn second-quarter loss, the first in its 14-year history as a public company.
Lehman had hoped to make a deal with a strategic Asian partner as part of the capital raising but talks failed to progress. Investors in the last capital-raising are sitting on significant losses so it is not likely that Lehman could sell more shares to raise fresh capital.
People close to the matter said Monday that Lehman was involved in exploratory talks with several private equity and strategic bidders for all or part of Neuberger Berman.
However, the JPMorgan analysts said they did not believe the business would be sold because it is a reliable cash generator.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008
No comments:
Post a Comment