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Attorney Christopher Gray Informs Investors of Deadline of May 19, 2008 to File Lead Plaintiff

Attorney Christopher Gray of the Law Office of Christopher J. Gray, P.C. in New York City (newcases@cjgraylaw.com) reminds investors who purchased the common stock of The Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. (NYSE:BSC) between December 14, 2006 and March 14, 2008, inclusive ("Class members"), that the deadline to file a motion to serve as Lead Plaintiff in the securities class action (U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York Docket No. 08-CV-2866 (RWS)) is May 19, 2008. Any Class member may move the Court to be named lead plaintiff by timely filing papers at the U.S. Courthouse, 500 Pearl Street, New York, New York. The court-appointed Lead Plaintiff will be selected by the Court after consideration of the motions filed on or before May 19, 2008.

All Class members have the right to opt out of participating in the class action and file their own individual claims against Bear, Stearns. Additionally, investors who bought Bear, Stearns stock before December 14, 2006 and held same through March 2008, as well as investors who purchased Bear, Stearns securities other than common stock, may also be able to assert individual claims that are not included in the class action by filing their own individual lawsuits. Finally, employees of Bear, Stearns who incurred losses as a result of the drop in the value of Bear, Stearns stock may be entitled to assert certain claims under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) that are not available to non-employee investors.

Bear, Stearns shareholders suffered staggering financial losses as the company's shares lost more than 90 percent of their value from March 13, 2008 to March 17, 2008. On March 13, 2008, Bear, Stearns announced it had received emergency financing from JPMorgan Chase and the Federal Reserve, triggering a dramatic selloff of the company's shares. The bailout news was followed by an announcement on Monday, March 17, 2008, that JPMorgan Chase would acquire Bear Stearns for $2.00 per share. On March 24, 2008 the companies announced that they had modified the merger agreement, with JP Morgan agreeing to offer to Bear, Stearns shareholders $10.00 per share.

The complaint in the class action charges Bear, Stearns and certain of its officers with violations of the federal securities laws and alleges that as a result of defendants' false and misleading statements concerning Bear, Stearns' financial status, Bear, Stearns stock traded at artificially inflated prices during the Class Period.

The Law Office of Christopher J. Gray, P.C. has represented investors in several opt-out securities lawsuits. Research shows that plaintiffs who file opt-out lawsuits and pursue their own cases are generally faring much better than the reported 2.2 percent average recovery obtained for investors in class action settlements in 2006. For example, in the recent AOL Time Warner securities litigation, many opt-out plaintiffs obtained recoveries far in excess of what they would have obtained had they remained class members. Indeed, Oakbridge Insurance Services reported that AOL Time Warner opt-out plaintiffs obtained recoveries that were between 6.5 and 50 times higher than what they would have received in the class action settlement. The University of California, one opt-out plaintiff in the AOL Time Warner litigation, estimated that its net recovery of $200 million was between 16 and 24 times the amount that it would have received through the class action case.

Law Office of Christopher J. Gray, P.C. is not court-appointed lead counsel and does not represent the plaintiffs in the class action, and this news release has not been ordered or approved by the Court. Investors who wish to remain members of the Class but do not wish to seek appointment as Lead Plaintiff need do nothing at the present time.

Investors seeking more information about their legal options in connection with the collapse of Bear, Stearns may contact Law Office of Christopher J. Gray, P.C. at the e-mail address, address, fax number, or telephone number below.

This news release was distributed by PrimeNewswire, www.primenewswire.com

SOURCE: Law Office of Christopher J. Gray, P.C.

Law Office of Christopher J. Gray, P.C.
          Christopher J. Gray
          (212) 838-3221
          Fax: (212) 937-3139
          newcases@cjgraylaw.com
          460 Park Avenue, 21st Floor
          New York, New York 10022

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Tags: acquisition   appointment   california   emergency   insurance   law   legal   new_york   nyse   prices   research   retirement   securities   security  

Companies: Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. (BSC)

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Macquarie in a class of its own - Zibb.com

Macquarie Group is the only investment bank that is growing even though its collapse was predicted several years ago. Astute decisions and luck have helped Macquarie avoid the problems associated the US sub-prime collapse. On 18 April 2008, Citigroup reported a first quarter loss of $US5.1bn ($A5.3 billion), its second quarterly loss in a row. Macquarie is expected to report at least a 23% annual profit increase to $A1.8 billion. Even though Macquarie is cashed up it still remains unpopular with investors because of the general downturn in investment banks.

Publication Date: 21 April 2008

MACQUARIE GROUP LIMITED - ASX MQG
QANTAS AIRWAYS LIMITED - ASX QAN
ALLCO FINANCE GROUP LIMITED - ASX AFG
CITIGROUP
AXA ASIA PACIFIC HOLDINGS LIMITED - ASX AXA
WOOLWORTHS LIMITED - ASX WOW
WESFARMERS LIMITED - ASX WES
TELSTRA CORPORATION LIMITED - ASX TLS
QBE INSURANCE GROUP LIMITED - ASX QBE
INSURANCE AUSTRALIA GROUP LIMITED - ASX IAG
RIO TINTO LIMITED - ASX RIO
BABCOCK AND BROWN CAPITAL LIMITED - ASX BCM
MACQUARIE INFRASTRUCTURE GROUP - ASX MIG
BEAR STEARNS
JP MORGAN AUSTRALIA LIMITED
UNITED STATES.  FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD
UBS AUSTRALIA LIMITED
THE GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INCORPORATED
MORGAN STANLEY AND COMPANY INCORPORATED
LEHMAN BROTHERS INCORPORATED
RISKMETRICS (AUSTRALIA) PTY LTD

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Tags: asia   australia   federal reserve   finance   insurance   investment   investment bank   united states  

Companies: Macquarie Group Ltd (MQBKY)

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Legg Mason Value Trust Letter to Shareholders: First Quarter 2008 - Zibb.com

-
    >>

    <<
    LEGG MASON VALUE TRUST
    Investment Commentary
    First Quarter 2008
    >>

    <<
    Fund Performance
    >>

Total returns for the Fund for various periods ended March 31, 2008, are presented below, along with those of a comparative index:

Average Annual Total Returns and Expense Ratio (%)

    <<
                         One     Three    Five      Ten     Since     Expense
                         Year    Years    Years    Years   Inception   Ratio
    >>

    <<
    Primary Class      -23.86    -3.87     6.69     3.91    13.94      1.70
    S&P 500 Stock
     Composite Index *  -5.08     5.85    11.32     3.50    12.81**      --
    >>

    <<
    The performance data quoted represents past performance of the Fund's
    Primary Class and does not guarantee future results. Current performance
    may be lower or higher than the performance data quoted. To obtain the
    most recent month-end information, please visit
    www.leggmason.com/individualinvestors. The investment return and principal
    value of the Fund will fluctuate so that an investor's shares, when
    redeemed, may be worth more or less than the original cost. Calculations
    assume reinvestment of dividends and capital gain distributions.
    Performance would have been lower if fees had not been waived in various
    periods. Performance and expenses of other share classes varies.
    >>

    <<
    The expense ratio represents the Fund's total annual operating expenses as
    indicated in the Fund's current prospectus. These expenses include
    management fees, 12b-1 distribution and service fees and other expenses.
    >>

    <<
    * A market capitalization-weighted index, composed of 500 widely held
      common stocks, that is generally considered representative of the U.S.
      stock market. It is not possible to invest directly in an index.
    >>

    <<
    ** Since inception for the benchmark is as of the closest month-end after
       the Fund's Primary class inception date period.
    >>

Portfolio Manager Commentary

    <<
    Dear Shareholder,
    >>

The credit crisis that I wrote about last quarter culminated this quarter in the collapse and rescue of Bear Stearns, an event that I believe (though no one knows) ended the panic phase of the credit cycle. The economic consequences of curtailed credit, increased risk aversion, deleveraging, lost jobs, falling house prices, and negative equity returns remain, and are likely to take some time to play out. All of those issues have been front-page news for some time, and I believe they are well discounted by the market, which is why stocks have risen since Bear's collapse.

After an awful quarter in which our fund dropped 19.7% compared to a loss of 9.4% for the benchmark S&P 500, we have begun to perform better. In the first few weeks of the quarter, the S&P 500 is up just over 5% and we are up a bit more. Our lead widens if you look back to the Monday the Bear Stearns rescue by JPMorgan was announced. While neither I nor anyone else knows if our period of underperformance is over, it ought to be, if valuation begins to matter more and momentum less in how the market behaves.

To put our results in some context, in our 26-year history, we have outperformed our benchmark 20 calendar years and underperformed 6 calendar years. Since I assumed sole management of the fund, we have outperformed 15 years and underperformed 2 (the last 2 obviously). On a rolling 12-month basis, we have outperformed 60% of the time since inception, and 68% of the time since I took over. Our relative performance this past quarter was the worst in our history, as we trailed the market by just over 1000 basis points. We have had 3 previous quarters where we trailed by over 700 basis points, 2 of which were in the 1989-1990 period which I have previously likened to this in terms of the economic and market backdrop. We have had 3 worse quarters in absolute terms: the quarter the market crashed in 1987, the 9/11 quarter, and the third quarter of 1990.

The reason this past quarter was our worst relative quarter is that we had back-to-back months where we were more than 400 basis points behind the market. Prior to this, we had only had 7 such months in 17 years. From the standpoint of statistics, though, we were due. Without getting into the details of the math, given our historical returns and average volatility, we should have been expected to have 10 such months since 1990, instead of the 7 we had experienced.

Why does this matter? Because when you are doing poorly, the question always comes up: Is this normal and expected, or is something wrong and should changes be made to the portfolio or the investment process? Every investor goes through periods of poor relative results. Remember the Barron's cover story on whether Warren Buffett had lost it in the tech-driven market of the late 1990s? Statistically, our results, while disappointing -- and few are more disappointed than the team here at LMCM, as we are substantial investors in our products -- are consistent with what one would expect given our process, style, and historic results.

That does not mean we are satisfied with those results, or complacent about our investment process. We are not. We are always looking to improve our research methodology, our analytic efforts, and our portfolio construction process. We systematically study the methods and the portfolios of investors with great long term records for insights, and we scour the academic literature in finance, psychology, economics, and decision theory to see if any new research results in those (and other) fields can be adapted in ways that may improve our results. We study our past decisions to see if mistakes were made that can be avoided in the future. We do this whether we are performing well, or poorly.

One of the more common issues clients have raised during this period is that of risk controls, given that we have had several companies suffer dramatic and highly publicized declines, such as Countrywide Financial and Bear Stearns. Are we taking more risk than usual, or is our research not as rigorous as it used to be? Some insight into this can be gleaned by looking at the 1998-2002 period. That period is instructive because it began and ended with financial panics, similar to the credit panic today. In 1998, Russia defaulted on its debt and the hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management collapsed. In 2002, high-yield bonds did likewise, and fears of deflation were rampant. During that period we had 12 stocks that declined more than 80%, including three bankruptcies. The difference between then and now is that we were outperforming then, and are not now. When you are doing poorly, the scrutiny is higher and the questions more pointed, as it should be.

What makes things difficult is that when you look at performance you are observing the results of price changes in the securities held in our portfolio. You are not observing the value of the businesses whose shares you own, merely how the market is pricing those shares at a point in time. Price and value are not only different, it is precisely that they can differ widely that creates the opportunities for value investors to earn excess returns. The greater the difference, the greater the potential return.

My friend Jeremy Hosking, who has delivered around 400 basis points per year of excess return over two decades at Marathon (in London), corrected me recently when I spoke about our underperformance. "You mean, your deferred outperformance," he said. I thought it a clever line, but it contains an important point. For investors who are trend followers, or theme driven, or who primarily build portfolios around forecasts, or who employ momentum strategies, price is dispositive. When they do badly, it is because prices moved in a direction different from what they thought. For value investors, price is one thing, and value is another. When prices move against us, it usually means that the gap between price and value is growing, and our future expected rates of return are higher.

This is especially the case in momentum-driven markets, such as we have been in for the past two years. In such markets, price trends persist, and wide gaps open up between price and value. That is why fertilizer stocks such as Potash can go from the $20s to the $200s in two years, and why Microsoft can bid over 60% more than where Yahoo! was trading and still be getting a great deal.

We looked at when momentum does well, and when valuation does well. Momentum strategies typically dominate when there is perceived distress, such as the past year or so in credit and financials and this year in equities globally (in the first quarter, not a single S&P sector was up), or there is euphoria, such as tech in the late 90s or commodities and materials today, or when valuation spreads between industries are narrow, as has been the case for most of the past two years. So it's been a great time for momentum and a lousy time for value. According to Birinyi Associates, the single worst strategy you could have followed in the first quarter would have been to buy the worst stocks of 2007. Momentum in action, just negative momentum.

I am often asked, how long do we have to wait before the fund starts to do better? The real answer here is the same as it is about most such forecasts: no one knows. I am reminded of the story Nobel Prize winner Ken Arrow tells about his experience trying to make long-range weather forecasts for the military during World War II. He told his superiors that his forecasts were so unreliable as to be useless. The word came back that the General knew his forecasts were useless, but needed them anyway for planning purposes.

For planning purposes, here is my forecast: I think we will do better from here on, and that by far the worst is behind us. I think the credit panic ended with the collapse of Bear Stearns, and credit spreads are already much improved since then. If spreads continue to come in, the write-offs at the big financials will end, and we may even have some write-ups in the second half instead of write-downs. Valuations are attractive, and valuation spreads are now about one standard deviation above normal, a point at which valuation- based strategies usually begin to work again, and momentum begins to fade (there is no evidence of the latter yet, as the old leaders continue to lead). Most housing stocks are up double digits this year despite dismal headlines, a sign the market had already priced in the current malaise. I think likewise we have seen the bottom in financials and consumer stocks, but not necessarily the bottom in headlines about the woes in those sectors. Although the economy is likely to struggle as it did in the early 1990s, the market can move higher, as it did back then.

The wild card is commodities. If commodities break, or even just stop their relentless rise, equity markets should do well. If they continue to move steadily higher, they have the potential to destabilize the global economy. We are already seeing unrest in many countries due to the soaring prices of rice and other grains. Oil has rallied $30 per barrel in the past 8 weeks on no fundamental news, save only the same stories about fears of supply disruptions. The typical fundamental drivers at the margin, such as global economic growth, miles driven, and seasonality, would all suggest prices similar to those that prevailed in early February. But none of that has mattered. I agree with George Soros that commodities are in a bubble, but it also appears he is right when he describes it as one that is still inflating, and we still have the summer driving and hurricane season with which to contend.

The weak dollar is another culprit in the commodity cycle. Oil began to rise in earnest when the dollar index broke down sharply in February. The Fed could help a lot by halting its interest rate cuts. Real short rates are now negative. It is not the price of credit that is the problem, it is its availability. If the Fed stopped cutting rates, that would help the dollar, which in turn ought to stall the commodity price rises, and thus also help the inflation picture. More technically, the Fed, in my opinion, needs to focus on the value of collateral and not on the price of credit. It appears they are beginning to do this, which is a very healthy sign. This is a topic for another letter, but anyone interested in it should consult the work of John Geanakoplos, a distinguished economics professor at Yale and an external faculty member at the Santa Fe Institute, who has written extensively on this issue, and presented to the Fed on it as well. He and Chairman Bernanke were grad students together at MIT.

Despite moving higher over the past month, the U.S. market and most others around the world are down for the year, and fear and risk aversion still predominate. Yet valuations in general are not demanding, interest rates are low, and corporate balance sheets, especially in the U.S., are in excellent shape. That sets the stage for what should be an improving environment for investors in stocks and in spread credit products, if not in government bonds where risks are high and opportunities low, in my opinion. With most investors being fearful, I think it makes sense to allocate some capital to the greedy side of that pendulum, and that means putting cash to work in equities.

Our portfolio, in my opinion, is in excellent shape, despite, or more accurately because of, its performance. Prices have declined substantially more than business values. On the Monday Bear Stearns opened for trading after its sale to JPMorgan, the stock of the latter increased in value by the rough difference between the price agreed to (then $2 per share) and the mark-to- market book value of Bear Stearns, about $90 per share including the value of their building. While the price of Bear was around $2, the market understood the tangible value was about $90, all of which accrued to JPMorgan's shareholders. While the press focused on our ownership of Bear Stearns, our position in JPMorgan was nearly three times larger. Many of our top 10 holdings sell at less than half our assessment of their intrinsic business value (defined as the present value of their future free cash flows), an unusually wide discount.

It is this assessment that makes us confident our, and your, investment will deliver results more consistent with the past 26 years than with the past two.

As always, we appreciate your support and welcome your comments.

    <<
    Bill Miller
    April 23, 2008
    >>

All investments are subject to risk including possible loss of principal. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

    <<
    Top Ten Holdings as of March 31, 2008
    >>

Amazon.com Inc. (6.5%), The AES Corp. (6.4%), JPMorgan Chase and Co. (5.0%), Aetna Inc. (4.9%), UnitedHealth Group Inc. (4.5%), Yahoo Inc. (4.4%), eBay Inc. (4.2%), General Electric Co. (4.0%), Sears Holding Corp. (4.0%), and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (3.5%). These holdings do not include the Fund's entire investment portfolio and may change at any time.

The views expressed in this commentary reflect those of Legg Mason Capital Management, Inc. (LMCM) as of the date of the commentary. Any views are subject to change at any time based on market or other conditions, and LMCM, Legg Mason Value Trust, Inc., and Legg Mason Investor Services, LLC (LMIS) disclaim any responsibility to update such views. These views may differ from those of portfolio managers and investment personnel for LMCM's affiliates and are not intended to be a forecast of future events, a guarantee of future results or investment advice. Because investment decisions for the Legg Mason Funds are based on numerous factors, these views may not be relied upon as an indication of trading intent on behalf of any Legg Mason Fund. The information contained herein has been prepared from sources believed to be reliable, but is not guaranteed by LMCM, Legg Mason Value Trust or LMIS as to its accuracy or completeness.

An investor should consider a Fund's investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses carefully before investing. For a free prospectus, which contains this and other information on any Legg Mason Fund, visit www.leggmason.com/individualinvestors. An investor should read the prospectus carefully before investing.

Legg Mason Capital Management, Inc. and Legg Mason Investor Services, LLC are Legg Mason, Inc. affiliated companies.

Legg Mason Investor Services, LLC distributor, Member FINRA, SIPC

SOURCE: Legg Mason Capital Management, Inc.

SOURCE: Legg Mason Value Trust, Inc.

SOURCE: Legg Mason Investor Services, LLC

Mary Athridge of Legg Mason Capital Management,  Inc., +1-212-805-6035 Web Site:
http://www.leggmason.com
http://www.leggmason.com/individualinvestors

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Tags: bonds   book   business   capitalization   commodity   construction   consumer   corporate   debt   distributor   dividends   dollar   economic growth   economy   environment   equity   federal   fertilizer   finance   forecasts   government   housing   hurricane   index   interest rates   investment   literature   london   market   mortgage   oil   prices   products   psychology   rates   research   rice   russia   S&P   statistics   weather   yield  

Companies: Legg Mason, Inc. (LM)

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Oakland Sues Major Financial Firms for Bid-Rigging, Conspiring to Cheat Taxpayers - Zibb.com

On Wednesday, April 23, the City of Oakland filed a federal antitrust lawsuit against national financial firms such as AIG Financial Products, Bank of America, Bear Stearns, JPMorgan Chase, Wachovia Bank and others.

City Attorney John Russo held a press conference to announce the lawsuit, which charges the companies with conspiring to gouge taxpayers in Oakland and other American cities through illegal price fixing and bid rigging.

The lawsuit alleges that financial companies and brokers agreed among themselves to give cities artificially low bids for Guaranteed Investment Contracts, which cities use to earn interest on municipal bond funds. By conspiring to avoid competitive bidding, financial companies were able to give cities abnormally low interest rates, thereby cheating taxpayers out of a legitimate rate of return.

This alleged collusion among competitors is a clear violation of federal and state antitrust laws, which prohibit any agreement by companies to fix prices, rig bids or allocate specific customers.

"Local governments, including Oakland, are starved for resources to hire police, to pay school teachers, to maintain roads and to fund essential programs," City Attorney Russo said. "Financial industry executives are making obscene amounts of money while their companies conspire to gouge cities with unfair and uncompetitive bids. How much is enough?"

Oakland has purchased hundreds of millions of dollars worth of Guaranteed Investment Contracts from defendants named in the suit. Estimated damages to the City of Oakland are in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. Across the country, cities, counties, school districts and other public entities have been overcharged in the tens of millions of dollars, if not more. Similar lawsuits have been filed against financial firms by the State of Mississippi, the Charlestown County School District and other local governments in southern states.

Oakland's lawsuit was filed as federal authorities in the Department of Justice, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Internal Revenue Service conduct an unprecedented investigation into bid rigging in the municipal bond market.

In February, Bank of America announced it would cooperate with the Department of Justice investigation in return for amnesty from antitrust prosecution. Bank of America also agreed to a $14.7 million settlement with the IRS relating to the company's role in providing Guaranteed Investment Contracts.

Oakland has bought Guaranteed Investment Contracts from at least two companies that have received subpoenas as part of the federal investigation. Authorities also served subpoenas on at least a dozen other companies that have been involved in bidding for Guaranteed Investment Contracts with Oakland.

The San Francisco law firms of Lieff, Cabraser, Heimann & Bernstein and Moscone, Emblidge & Quadra are working on Oakland's lawsuit at no cost to the City.

Reporters who wish to receive a copy of the complaint are welcome to contact Brandan DeCoteau of Lieff Cabraser at bdecoteau@lchb.com or (415) 956-1000.

SOURCE: Lieff, Cabraser, Heimann & Bernstein

Oakland City Attorney's Office
Alex Katz, 510-238-3148 or 510-599-6874 (Cell)
akatz@oaklandcityattorney.org

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Tags: amnesty   antitrust   bank   bond   conference   federal   interest rates   investigation   investment   law   lawsuit   local   market   mississippi   money   police   prices   revenue   teachers  

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Time to put the Fed back in its box - Zibb.com

The US Congress needs to restrain the activities of the Federal Reserve Board. The central bank's mission is to prevent inflation so that the value of the US dollar is preserved. It has become the lender of last resort, but its criteria for assistance are unclear. It should not be trying to manipulate economic growth rates or unemployment. Its policy should not encourage the sale of US debt held by foreigners. Originally published in "The Washington Post".

Publication Date: 28 April 2008

UNITED STATES.  FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD
BEAR STEARNS
JP MORGAN CHASE AND COMPANY
DEMOCRATIC PARTY (UNITED STATES)

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Tags: bank   congress   dollar   economic growth   federal reserve   inflation   policy   rates   unemployment   united states  

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News and Blogs

Total : 266 View more »

2010 - An Electric Car Odissey (at Seeking Alpha)

seekingalpha.com

...Authority: Capabilities, Contraints and Confidence U.S. Monetary Policy: Defending the Status Quo JPMorgan, Bear Stearns: More Smoke from Wall Street Can Gazprom Realistically Meet Its Natural Gas Projections? Full list of...

http://seekingalpha.com/article/77153-2010-an-electric-car-odyssey

A Fall Guy in the JPMorgan / Bear Stearns Deal?

abovethelaw.com | May 14, 2008

Add RSS RSS Home Hot Topics Archives Community Subscribe Send Tips A Fall Guy in the JPMorgan / Bear Stearns Deal? Wednesday, May 14, 2008 3:30 PM - By David Lat Bear Stearns BSC Above the Law blog.jpg ...

http://abovethelaw.com/2008/05/musical_chairs_a_fall_guy_in_t.php

JPMorgan to Build Out High-Speed Data Fabrics

www.wallstreetandtech.com

...JPMorgan to Build Out High-Speed Data Fabrics Bear Stearns and JPMorgan both recently signed on with low-latency data...May 16, 2008 Before their recent merger, JPMorgan and Bear Stearns were on the same page about how to manage data...

http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/feed/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=207800707&cid=RSSfeed_WST_All

JPMorgan CEO: Recession is just beginning

www.msnbc.msn.com | May 12, 2008

...to the 1982 recession than the very mild recessions we had in 2001 and 1990." Also incomplete is JPMorgan's acquisition of Bear Stearns Cos., the toppling investment bank that JPMorgan offered to buy in March. "I want to make it perfectly...

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24584344/

JP Morgan’s integration of Bear Stearns nears end game - Financial News Online US

www.financialnews-us.com | May 12, 2008

...About Us Search JP Morgan s integration of Bear Stearns nears end game David... Last week, JP Morgan closed Bear Stearns private client services...One headhunter said JP Morgan retained some of Bear Stearns equity analysts in...

http://www.financialnews-us.com/?page=ushome&contentid=2450608995

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Focus Capital Markets

...American talent to London and the Far East. Focus continues to act as a special hiring advisor to firms such as JP Morgan Chase, Bear Stearns and many of the worlds leading Hedge Funds. By forming quality, long-term relationships with the data...

http://www.focuscapital.com/

David Fry's Daily Market Outlook - Seeking Alpha

seekingalpha.com

...Boyz" network [Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS), Morgan Stanley (MS), Citigroup Inc. (C), <b>JPMorgan</b> & Chase Co. (JPM), <b>Bear</b> <b>Stearns</b> Companies Inc. (BSC) and so forth] are publicly traded companies. Notorious hedge fund managers...

http://seekingalpha.com/article/22846

Retention deal from JPMorgan calms Bear brokers - InvestmentNews

www.investmentnews.com

...Given the shotgun marriage of the freewheeling Bear Stearns to JPMorgan, the deal at first appeared to be too skimpy...said. Recruiters say it's critical that JPMorgan retain Bear Stearns' independence and service level to satisfy...

http://www.investmentnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080331/REG/560901168

Home

...area. We count firms such as Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse First Boston, Lazard Frères, JP Morgan Chase, Bear Stearns and other equally prestigious organizations among our satisfied clients. RTFM Consulting Inc. is the...

http://www.rtfmconsulting.com/

Target F3Q06 (Qtr End 10/28/06) Earnings Call Transcript - Seeking Alpha

retail.seekingalpha.com

...Gregg Steinhafel - President Analysts Jeff Klinefelter - Piper Jaffray Charles Grom - <b>JP</b> <b>Morgan</b> Christine Augustine - <b>Bear</b>, <b>Stearns</b> Bob Drbul - Lehman Brothers Mark Rowen - Prudential Equity Group Greg Melich - Morgan...

http://retail.seekingalpha.com/article/20579

 

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