Morgan Stanley: Not Out of the Woods
Amidst all the enthusiasm about the Dow rising 5% in its opening minutes, it's worth noting that Morgan Stanley stock is up a disappointing 60%.
I'm serious. At $15 a share, Morgan Stanley is still trading at only half its book value: it's not even back to where it was on Wednesday. And this is after the bank sealed its deal with MUFG -- a deal which gives the Japanese preferred stock which converts at $25.25 per share, and which came with the clear imprimatur of Treasury.
What this means is that Morgan Stanley is still not out of the woods. MUFG's $9 billion is welcome, but the market still expects further capital to come from Treasury -- and expects Paulson's Treasury to drive a hard bargain. Looking at the magnitude of the sums which the UK is injecting into its systemically-important banks, there's still a good chance that Morgan Stanley will be, effectively, nationalized.
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This article has 17 comments:
- marvinthemartiansdog
- 5 Comments
Oct 13 11:42 AM- PastTense
- 93 Comments
Oct 13 11:48 AM- phat cat
- 25 Comments
Oct 13 11:51 AM- zermux
- 11 Comments
My Website
Oct 13 11:53 AMYour irresponsible article, from last week, that MS would not last through the weekend was wrong. I believe that this fear mongering article is also wrong.
Maybe you should be lookiing for a job at Moodys - they also publish views that are almost criminal.
- marvinthemartiansdog
- 5 Comments
Oct 13 12:07 PMI was long from 7.65 and sold for double this morning. But I am still curious what you mean exactly or are you just ranting?
- Pete1981
- 1 Comment
Oct 13 12:56 PM- jim collins
- 19 Comments
Oct 13 01:03 PM- TPoise
- 32 Comments
Oct 13 01:39 PMFelix will of course take the glass-half-empty approach to anything with Morgan Stanley. After predicting their collapse over the weekend (and every day last week as well), we see a big rally and a closing on the $9b deal. And now he is saying "too little, too late." What's next? "Oh, Morgan Stanley doesn't have enough vowels in its name. Therefore it will be nationalized!"?
Get a clue!
- who
- 86 Comments
Oct 13 02:41 PM- kris23
- 66 Comments
My Website
Oct 13 03:48 PM- tojm
- 3 Comments
Oct 13 06:23 PM- tojm
- 3 Comments
Oct 13 06:24 PM- phat cat
- 25 Comments
Oct 13 09:49 PM- TPoise
- 32 Comments
Oct 14 12:19 AM- RE.porter
- 33 Comments
My Website
Oct 14 09:10 AMDon't worry, you'll catch on soon enough - and then it will be time for me to sell those Friday purchases.
Welcome to a world of reality...
- User 60186
- 2 Comments
Oct 14 09:13 AM- ashizashiz
- 26 Comments
My Website
Oct 14 10:13 AMThere is a great Star Trek episode from the late 1960s entitled “Specter of the Gun”. Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Scotty and Chekhov are compelled to fight Wyatt Earp and his gang in a showdown at the O.K. Corral. Curious aliens have, of course, orchestrated the battle: some kind of a moral psychodrama. Anyway, in this episode Mr. Spock develops a “knock-out” gas from ingredients found in Doc Holiday’s office. The protagonists logically figure that if they can render the Earp Gang unconscious, then they won’t have to fight them at the O.K. Corral. (And as we know, the Earp’s defeat the Clanton’s at the gunfight at the O.K. Corral. And as Mr. Spock so aptly points out, “history cannot be changed.”)
All are certain that the gas will work; but just to be sure, Scotty volunteers to be the test subject for the agent. Spock, for one, is spellbound, when the potion fails to work. “Fascinating” he quips. Spock goes on to explain the enormity of this paradox. “The potion” he explains, “must work. By all laws we know, it simply cannot fail. And yet it has failed”. Spock goes on to theorize that a massive manipulation of the crew’s brain patterns must be occurring. He also explains that this knowledge, if used correctly, can save the crew from certain demise at the O.K Corral.
Back to 2008. At some point, the massive manipulation of our brains, orchestrated by Spanky Paulson and all of his uber-wealthy cronies, will end. Reality will intrude. The global economy MUST crash because there are simply too many dollars "worth" of worthless assets gathering dust in the safes and hard drives and account ledgers of the world's financial instutions. Tens of Trillions of dollars worth! And no amount of mass hypnosis (in the form of 'pundits optimism'), or empty words (in the form of government guarantees on EVERYTHING), or spin can change reality. Get that? Reality cannot be changed.