Equities suffer as Lehman shares fall 45%
By Francesco Guerrera in London and Michael Mackenzie and Greg Farrell in New York
Published: September 9 2008 18:55 | Last updated: September 10 2008 00:43
US stocks suffered their worst fall of the year as a 45 per cent drop in Lehman Brothers shares renewed fears about the health of the global financial system.
The S&P 500 fell 3.4 per cent, reversing the 2.1 per cent gain on Monday that greeted the US government’s takeover of mortgage financiers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac over the weekend.
US Treasuries rallied as investors sought the safety of government debt, reckoning that the weakening US housing market would slow economic growth.
Crude oil futures in New York fell $3.96 to $102.38 a barrel as investors bet that economic sluggishness would reduce the demand for energy.
Lehman said late on Tuesday that it would unveil “key strategic initiatives for the firm†on Wednesday when it announces its third-quarter earnings. It originally had scheduled the earnings report for September 18, but moved it forward to calm investors.
Lehman led the market lower on worries it would be unable to raise capital to bolster its balance sheet before reporting third-quarter earnings. Its shares fell $6.36 to $7.79, giving it a market value of $5.4bn – a fraction of its book value.
- I am very wary when investors says things like "WAH THIS STOCK GOT SUCH A SUCH A NAV, BOOK VALUE ETC ETC....", sure is a good value play whatever play
Standard & Poor’s warned it might downgrade Lehman’s single-A credit rating, saying it was reviewing the bank’s rating because of “heightened uncertainty about Lehman’s ability to raise additional capital, based on the precipitous decline in its share price in recent daysâ€.
Lehman is expected to have suffered billions of dollars in credit-related writedowns in the third quarter. For months, it has been looking at ways to raise capital.
The options have included selling a stake to an investor, selling all or part of its well-regarded asset management unit and spinning off its commercial real estate assets into a “bad bank†structure that could be partly funded by outside investors.
Lehman’s shares fell after a newswire report cited an unnamed Korean government official as saying that Korea Development Bank, a state-run lender, had decided not to invest in Lehman.
Korea’s financial watchdog later denied the report, but bankers close to the situation said Lehman was unlikely to clinch a deal to sell a large stake to KDB before reporting third-quarter results. The two sides have been at loggerheads over the price to be paid for the stake, with KDB balking at the valuation demanded by d**k Fuld, Lehman’s chief executive, according to people close to the talks.
Lehman declined to comment, but people close to the situation said that even if the KDB deal did not materialise, the bank had other options to raise capital.
Among other financial stocks, Washington Mutual fell 19.9 per cent, AIG 19.3 per cent and Wachovia 14.5 per cent.
Additional reporting by Jung-a Song in Seoul
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008