Fed Loans May Give Lehman Breathing Room Bear Lacked

By Scott Lanman and Steve Matthews
Enlarge Image/Details

Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Access to Federal Reserve loans means Lehman
Brothers Holdings Inc., which lost half its value the past two days,
may have breathing room that Bear Stearns Cos. lacked before its
abrupt collapse.

The program instituted in the aftermath of the Bear Stearns debacle,
the Primary Dealer Credit Facility, could be used for funding while
officials, regulators and executives find alternative sources of cash,
Fed watchers said.

``The PDCF could be used to keep Lehman operating until a broader
solution was found,'' said Brian Sack, a former Fed research manager
who's now senior economist at Macroeconomic Advisers LLC in
Washington. ``The challenge is figuring out what the broader solution
is.''

Lehman, plunging on concern it lacks sufficient capital, can borrow
overnight from the central bank, with escalating costs if it keeps
using the program. Because it's a stopgap, speculation may mount that
the government will again intervene to prevent a large financial
company from failing, after the Bear Stearns rescue and takeovers of
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

``Given what was done with Freddie and Fannie and Bear Stearns, it's
hard to distinguish why Lehman is not too big to fail as well,'' said
Robert Eisenbeis, chief monetary economist at Cumberland Advisors, and
a former research director at the Atlanta Fed. ``My guess is that
everyone will blink again and Lehman too will be saved. We are in for
a rough ride.''

Talking to Officials

The Fed is getting updates on Lehman's capital and leverage positions
from its examiners, who have been reviewing the company's finances and
those of other major investment banks since the formation of the PDCF
in March. Treasury officials are ``in regular contact with market
participants,'' spokeswoman Jennifer Zuccarelli said.

Lehman today reported a $3.9 billion third-quarter loss and said it
plans to sell a majority stake in its investment- management unit.

Fed spokeswoman Michelle Smith in Washington declined to comment
yesterday.

New York-based Lehman, the fourth-biggest U.S. securities firm,
tumbled 45 percent yesterday in New York trading after talks about a
capital infusion from Korea Development Bank ended. The shares have
lost 88 percent this year.

The cost of buying protection against default on Lehman debt surged
1.5 percentage points to 4.75 percentage points, credit- default swaps
showed, according to broker Phoenix Partners Group.

No Repeat

Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said he wanted to avoid an episode similar to
the Bear Stearns rescue in March, when the central bank agreed to lend
$29 billion to secure the investment bank's takeover by JPMorgan Chase
& Co. That was part of an agreement crafted in part by New York Fed
President Timothy Geithner, after consultations with Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson.

``The financing we did for Bear Stearns is a one-time event,''
Bernanke said in April. ``It's never happened before and I hope it
never happens again.''

The PDCF offers the 19 primary dealers that trade Treasuries with the
New York Fed access to direct loans at the same rate as commercial
banks, now 2.25 percent. Dealers can submit collateral including
Treasuries and asset-backed debt, corporate bonds and municipal bonds
with investment grades.

For seven of the past nine weeks there has been no borrowing from the
PDCF, with average weekly balances of $3 million and $9 million for
the other two. The Fed releases its weekly borrowing statistics each
Thursday at 4:30 p.m. New York time.

In July, the Fed extended the PDCF through Jan. 30 because of
``continued fragile circumstances in financial markets.'' It was
originally set to end as soon as this month.

`Help a Lot'

The PDCF ``should help a lot'' for Lehman, former Fed Governor Lyle
Gramley said. If Bear Stearns had had access to the funding, it's
``conceivable'' the firm might not have been pushed into its
acquisition by JPMorgan, said Gramley, now senior economic adviser at
Stanford Group Co. in Washington.

Both Bear Stearns and Lehman suffered from the collapse of the
mortgage-backed securities market in the wake of a record surge of
delinquencies on U.S. home loans. The crisis then spread to other
markets, including for some types of student-loan and municipal debt.

Lehman is trying to raise capital and dump devalued real- estate
assets after $8.2 billion in writedowns and credit losses in the past
year.

For the Fed, the Bear Stearns and PDCF lending marked the first
extension of credit to nonbanks since the Great Depression, using
emergency authority in ``unusual and exigent circumstances.''

Fed Discontent

Any Fed rescue of Lehman may deepen criticism among some current and
former central bankers about the danger of moral hazard -- where firms
take on more risk in anticipation of government aid if their bets go
wrong. Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker and his Philadelphia
counterpart Charles Plosser both raised those concerns in June.

``The Fed has shown a willingness to lend liberally,'' said Gerald
O'Driscoll, a former vice president of the Dallas Fed and now a
scholar at the Cato Institute in Washington. The Bear Stearns lending
``left markets unsure what the Fed would do in the future. Each time
you do it, you reinforce the view that it will be done again,'' he
said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Scott Lanman in Washington at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Steve Matthews in Atlanta at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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