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Bear Stearns

The Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. was an American investment bank, securities trading, and brokerage firm that failed in 2008 as part of the global financial crisis and recession. After its closure it was subsequently sold to JPMorgan Chase. The company's main business areas before its failure were capital markets, investment banking, wealth management, and global clearing services, and it was heavily involved in the subprime mortgage crisis.

Company type

Public

May 1, 1923 (1923-05-01)

March 16, 2008 (2008-03-16)[1]

Acquired by JPMorgan Chase

JPMorgan Chase

Alan Schwartz, former CEO
James Cayne, former chairman & CEO
David Robert Malpass, chief economist for the last six years before its failure

In the years leading up to the failure, Bear Stearns was heavily involved in securitization and issued large amounts of asset-backed securities which were, in the case of mortgages, pioneered by Lewis Ranieri, "the father of mortgage securities."[2] As investor losses mounted in those markets in 2006 and 2007, the company actually increased its exposure, especially to the mortgage-backed assets that were central to the subprime mortgage crisis. In March 2008, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York provided an emergency loan to try to avert a sudden collapse of the company. The company could not be saved, however, and was sold to JPMorgan Chase for $10 per share,[3] a price far below its pre-crisis 52-week high of $133.20 per share, but not as low as the $2 per share originally agreed upon.[4]


The collapse of the company was a prelude to the meltdown of the investment banking industry in the United States and elsewhere that culminated in September 2008, and the subsequent global financial crisis of 2008–2009. In January 2010, JPMorgan ceased using the Bear Stearns name.[5]

: 1949–1978

Salim L. Lewis

: 1978–1993

Alan C. Greenberg

: 1993–2008

James Cayne

: 2008

Alan Schwartz

Primary dealer

Bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers

Bear Stearns Merchant Banking

William Cohan, , 2010.

House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street

JPMorgan Securities home page

Frontline: Inside the Meltdown Analysis—The Bear Stearns Rescue

The New York Times Timeline of Bear Stearns' history

Bloomberg: JPMorgan Chase to Buy Bear Stearns for $240 Million

J.P. Morgan Buys Bear in Fire Sale, As Fed Widens Credit to Avert Crisis - WSJ