Today's Trading

Lehman, Merrill and AIG roil small caps

SMALLCAP MARKETPLACE
Jennifer Schonberger | Sep 15, 2008 12:00pm EDT
Rating: Unrated

After opening sharply lower, small caps continue to be rattled by Lehman Brothers’ weekend bankruptcy filing, Bank of America’s (NYSE:BAC) surprise acquisition of Merrill Lynch (NYSE:MER) and AIG’s unstable liquidity position. 

At 12:00 p.m. ET all indices remained in the red, though the Russell 2000 has come off its session lows. The small-cap index is down 14.12 or 1.96%, to 706.14, the Dow plunged 302.64, or 2.65%, to 11,119.35 and the tech laden Nasdaq fell 31.36, or 1.62%, to 2,224.67.

Financial jitters remain off the charts as stocks crumbled in light of the Federal Reserve’s decision to allow investment bank Lehman Brothers (NYSE:LEH) to fail. After a drawn out uphill battle against overexposure to subprime loans and a 94% plunge in share price this year, Lehman Brothers will close its doors.

“The U.S. government can’t and should not bail out every large financial institution that’s out there,” said BMO Capital’s Andy Busch. “Lehman had a lot of time to do everything in their power to show that this didn’t happen and they made the decision not to. The United States made the right decision not to be involved with that. At some point they needed to make the critical decision to do something like this … this doesn’t necessarily mean it’s a bottom to be formed for financial stocks, though it certainly takes us one step closer to that point. The ultimate harbinger is when housing prices end up bottoming.”

In line with Bank of America’s (NYSE:BAC) historical strategy, the financial services goliath bought strained, 94-year old Merrill Lynch for $50 billion in a surprise transaction over the weekend. The addition of Merrill gives the Charlotte, N.C.-based bank exposure to roughly every slice of the financial services industry. Shares of Merrill bolted 19% midday, while Bank of America's shares sold off 16%.

The future of Merrill and Lehman’s employees remains undecided. “The biggest losers in all this are the employees of Lehman, people who had had their life . . .

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