Bear Stearns: A Lesson In Bear Market Bounces

 | Jun 01, 2022 04:07PM ET

On Sunday, Mar. 16, 2008, Bear Stearns was bought by JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM), with support and financial guarantees from the Fed, for $2 a share. It was quite the fall from $170 a year earlier.

Wall Street was in the early rounds of a bout with unprecedented financial instability, and the economy would soon follow. Investors were relieved Bear Stearns avoided bankruptcy in spite of the ominous clouds on the horizon and recent financial instability.

Within hours of the market opening following the Bear Stearns takeover, stocks started rising and didn’t look back for a month.

As shown below, the S&P 500 rallied nearly 15% for a month following the collapse of a significant 85-year-old investment bank. While the market didn’t regain its October 2007peak, animal spirits were rekindled for a brief while.

Investors looked the other way. They assumed whatever killed Bear Stearns was resolved. Despite improving investor sentiment, underlying fundamental conditions continued to worsen. Wall Street’s largest banks took advantage of the short-lived market stability to unload their riskiest positions on unsuspecting investors.