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Mary Wells | 03/17/2008 12:47 pm

My Friend 'T' at Bear Stearns Is Breaking My Heart

Mary Wells
My Friend "T" at Bear Stearns is breaking my heart. There are about 14,000 employees at Bear Stearns in shock now. "T" and so many of his fellow workers have their total wealth tied up in company stock that is now almost as worthless as the value of their houses. JPMorgan Chase is not able to hire 14,000 new employees! So the workers at Bear Stearns are looking at each other wondering, "You? Me?" Ace Greenberg has been going into his office there every day for years and years and years. It must be tough for him to go to the office and talk to those employees. I have friends at Lehman Brothers, too, looking around, they say, as if they had just heard a warning of a tornado.

The Fed did a big thing last night to help provide a cushion. And you will see most American banks becoming more transparent in their reports to provide more faith and confidence in the truth that there will not be a collapse and people can feel secure. We should remember when we envy the big bonus earners in some financial institutions that it is a business of peaks but also pot holes.

Confidence will return sooner or later but, in the meantime, let’s take a minute to feel for our friends at Bear Stearns and other investment banks like them, down the road, waiting for a tornado. The workers at Lehman Brothers have seen their stock reduced 40% and sliding—that is a big stomach ache for anyone who has everything tied up in the company he or she works for and has counted on.

One of the bankers I talked to said that, although he very much sympathized with the employees at failing financial companies, he had no mercy for some of the leaders, the heads of some of the investment banks and hedge funds and mutual funds that are in such trouble. He says many of them knew what they were doing and were, in effect, running gigantic schemes like Charles Ponzi’s by narrowly focusing on mortgage finance—suggesting it was worth more than it was. He said the big American banks that have large depository bases are trying to help the others—partly because they are worried about the reactions throughout the world to the United States which, politically, have been bad enough.

Some of the most admired hedge funds have major problems and have discovered that even strong political connections and banking connections are no help to them. As my friend said, "It’s a different ball game now. The old game is over."

It is one thing to see all this on your computer or television screen or read it in the paper. It is another thing to know "T," who has a lot of fairly worthless company stock he believed in.

21 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Star Lawrence
Living paycheck to paycheck with TWO or more jobs!
By Star Lawrence on 03/19/2008 12:12 pm
Marie McConnell
I feel sad for those involved but there are many many other people who don’t have jobs right now. Maybe the CEO and bank presidents and VP should take a major pay cut and there might be enough money to keep things going. Greed is ruling this country. The little guy is getting hurt.
By Marie McConnell on 03/18/2008 5:48 pm
Deborah G
The current mortgage debacle is another sad commentary on how irresponsible folks at all levels can be. Loaners lent to folks who really stretched to qualify, and sometimes they knew it. Some borrowers stretched to borrow more than they could handle to ‘flip’ and make more money. Middlemen facilitated the process and benefit as well. Obviously, this wasn’t true of all; but, responsibility and accountability are virtues sadly missing.
By Deborah G on 03/18/2008 7:24 pm
simmy sussman
THE PEOPLE WHO WERE INVOLVED IN SELLING THIS GARBAGE KNEW THEY WERE IN A PONZI SCHEME AND CONTINUED TO DO THIS. AM I TO OFFER THEM SYMPATHY BECAUSE THEY GAMBLED AGAINST THE PUBLIC AND LOST AS THEIR OWN PENSIONS AND OR STOCK WENT SOUTH? THE REPREHENSIBLE BEHAVIOR OF RISK AVERSE TACTICS ALWAYS LEADS TO LOSS. THIS TIME THE LOSS IS NOT JUST THE SUCKER PUBLIC AND IT’S SAD AND DANGEROUS FOR ALL OF US. PICKING OUR JOBS AND BEHAVIOR ON THOSE JOBS IS IMPORTANT, AND IT’S ALSO WORTH NOTING THAT PICKING A CHURCH, TEMPLE,SYNAGOGUE, TO BE A CONGREGANT OF ALSO TAKES RESPONSIBILITY. IF WE DON’T LIKE WHAT WE HEAR AND WHAT’S GOING DOWN, THEN WE SHOULD GO ELSEWHERE. THE EMPLOYEES WITH JOBS THAT HAD NO RESPONSIBILITY IN THIS AND WERE THE LESS FORTUNATE IN THIS SITUATION, ARE THE ONES TO SYMPATHIZE WITH.
By simmy sussman on 03/18/2008 7:35 pm
Bella Mia
I read that 70% of the defaulted mortgages contained fraudulent information. These crisis always come back to the integrity of the company management, and in the case of mortgages, the integrity of the borrowers. Until we have a greater emphasis on choosing people, and working with people with the greatest integrity, these problems will continue to multiply. And that means demanding total integrity in our political leaders as well. By integrity I mean 24/7, not just at the office 9-5. “A double-minded man is unstable in all his ways.” James 1:8
By Bella Mia on 03/18/2008 11:42 pm
ono ivans
Don’t blame it all on hedge funds. The problem was with sub-prime lending, the lickspittles who gamed them, and the blind fools who bought them.
By ono ivans on 03/21/2008 12:42 am