IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Bear Stearns takes more bad loan writedowns

Investment bank Bear Stearns Cos. will take a $1.2 billion writedown in the fourth quarter related to weakness in its credit portfolios, Chief Financial Officer Samuel Molinaro Jr. said Wednesday.
/ Source: The Associated Press

Investment bank Bear Stearns Cos. will take a $1.2 billion writedown in the fourth quarter related to weakness in its credit portfolios, Chief Financial Officer Samuel Molinaro Jr. said Wednesday.

Molinaro said the writedown will lead the company to post a loss during its fiscal fourth quarter, which ends Nov. 30.

Molinaro, presenting at the Merrill Lynch Banking and Finance Conference in New York, said Bear Stearns latest round of writedowns should "suffice" in accurately valuing products such as subprime mortgages and collateralized debt obligations. The $1.2 billion writedown is net of any hedging gains, Molinaro added.

In July, two Bear Stearns-managed hedge funds worth billions of dollars, and heavily invested in subprime mortgage securities, collapsed as defaults increased and the bank could not find takers to purchase the distressed securities. That helped trigger the credit crisis that swept the markets this summer.

Bear Stearns has been "working hard" to reduce its exposure to the subprime mortgage and collateralized debt obligation markets, Molinaro said.

CDOs are complex financial instruments that combine slices of varying assets and debt. Many CDOs are backed by subprime mortgages _ loans given to customers with poor credit history. As those mortgages have increasingly defaulted, banks are being forced to write down the value of bonds and CDOs backed by the loans.

As of Nov. 9, Bear Stearns had about $884 million in exposure to CDOs remaining on its books, and negligible exposure to subprime mortgages, Molinaro said.

Bear Stearns took about $850 million in writedowns during its fiscal third quarter, as banks took more than $40 billion in total writedowns in quarter. The fourth quarter is shaping up to be as bad or worse than the previous quarter, as banks already have announced billions more in writedowns.

Britain's HSBC Holdings PLC said Wednesday it would take a writedown of $3.4 billion for its exposure to the U.S. mortgage market.

Bear Stearns' writedowns have been relatively smaller than its investment banking competitors. Morgan Stanley said earlier this month it would take up to a $6 billion writedown in the fourth quarter related to its exposure to the beleaguered subprime mortgage market.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc., considered the best risk manager among investment banks, said earlier this week it would not have to take further writedowns on mortgage-related losses. It took about $2.4 billion in writedowns during the third quarter.

Merrill Lynch & Co.'s nearly $9 billion in third-quarter writedowns cost its chief executive his job. One analyst predicts Merrill Lynch could have to take an additional $10 billion in writedowns during the fourth quarter.

Shares in Bear Stearns rose $6.63, or 6.6 percent in premarket trading, to $107.50.