Stocks fell on Monday after JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM - News) bought Bear Stearns (NYSE:BSC - News) at a fire sale price and the Federal Reserve provided emergency cash to Wall Street as the global credit crisis worsened.
Futures have been pricing in a 100-basis-point cut from the Fed when it meets tomorrow.
JPMorgan is buying Bear Stearns for $236 million, or $2 per share -- one-fifteenth of the price at Friday's close. Shares of Bear, which until recently had ranked as the fifth-largest U.S. investment bank, reached a high of $172.61 last year. Bear's stock plummeted 87.3 percent to $3.91 at midday on Monday.
The financial sector tumbled, as Lehman Brothers (NYSE:LEH - News) sank 23.9 to $29.86 and Citigroup dropped 7.3 percent to $18.35. The Standard & Poor's financial index (^GSPF - News) was down 3.6 percent.
JPMorgan, the top gainer in both the blue-chip Dow average and the S&P 500, climbed 8.3 percent to $39.58, preventing an uglier morning on Wall Street.
"The Fed took very aggressive action over the course of the weekend, and so that's having an impact," said Michael Darda, chief economist at MKM Partners LLC, in Greenwich, Connecticut.
"The problem is that action will have an inflationary price tag. And you can see that in all of the commodity and currency indicators."
The Dow Jones industrial average (DJI:^DJI - News) dropped 114.39 points, or 0.96 percent, to 11,836.70. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (^SPX - News) shed 23.44 points, or 1.82 percent, to 1,264.70. The Nasdaq Composite Index (Nasdaq:^IXIC - News) tumbled 44.78 points, or 2.02 percent, to 2,167.71.
In a fresh sign of faltering confidence in the U.S. economy and financial system, the dollar sank to its weakest against the yen since 1995 and slumped against the euro.
The "fire sale" of Bear has put U.S. banks at risk as it will result in valuation adjustments that could result in a drop of stock prices by as much as 50 percent, Oppenheimer & Co analyst Meredith Whitney wrote.
Elsewhere in the financial sector, mortgage insurer PMI Group Inc (NYSE:PMI - News) reported its biggest-ever quarterly loss, mainly due to losses on its investment in bond insurer FGIC Corp. It also slashed its dividend by more than 70 percent.
Shares of PMI dropped 11.3 percent to $5.05, after hitting a lifetime low of $4.82 earlier in the session.
The New York Federal Reserve Bank reported an unexpectedly steep drop in its manufacturing survey and a rise in prices paid. It was the worst reading of business conditions in the state of New York since the index was launched in July 2001.
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