Stock Market Cafe
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
Stock Market Cafe
No Result
View All Result
Home Trading News

James Cayne, CEO for Bear Stearns Rise and Fall, Dies at 87

by
December 30, 2021
in Trading News
0
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

(Bloomberg) — James Cayne, the cigar-puffing college dropout who parlayed a stint as a professional bridge player into a job as a bond broker on Wall Street, where he led Bear Stearns Cos. to record profits, then to the brink of collapse, has died. He was 87.

Most Read from Bloomberg

RELATED POSTS

Pro Picks: Watch all of Monday’s big stock calls on CNBC

JPMorgan Chase can be sued by Virgin Islands over Jeffrey Epstein sex-trafficking claims

Apple Aims to Prevent Defections to Meta With Rare $180,000 Bonuses for Top Talent

The Senator Who Could Rescue Biden’s Agenda

Covid With Omicron Isn’t ‘Same Disease,’ Oxford Scientist Says

Mercedes Swept Up in China Internet Furor Over Model’s Eyes

How Errors, Inaction Sent a Deadly Covid Variant Around the World

He died on Tuesday at Monmouth Medical Center in Long Branch, New Jersey, days after suffering a stroke, said his wife, Pat.

Until 2007, Cayne, known as Jimmy, was one of Wall Street’s brightest stars. Bear Stearns, the fifth-biggest U.S. securities firm by market value, had seen its profit surge 40% in fiscal 2006 to an all-time high of $2.1 billion, and Cayne — the longest-serving chief executive officer on Wall Street — had received $40 million in compensation.

By the end of 2007, Bear Stearns was staggering from losses in the U.S. subprime mortgage market and shareholders were pressuring Cayne to step down. The firm reported an $854 million fourth-quarter loss that year, the first quarterly deficit in its history.

On Jan. 8, 2008, Cayne ceded the CEO role to Alan Schwartz, a 30-year veteran at the firm, and stayed on as chairman. Two months later, the 85-year-old firm, on the brink of bankruptcy, was sold to JPMorgan Chase & Co. for $10 a share. The stock had traded at about $170 in January 2007.

Playing Bridge

The demise of Bear Stearns took a toll on Cayne’s image and legacy. His predecessor and mentor, Alan “Ace” Greenberg, blamed him for the firm’s collapse, describing Cayne as a “demagogue” and a megalomaniac more interested in playing bridge than in running the firm. Greenberg died in July 2014.

“The way he conducted himself during the crisis? Just horrible,” Greenberg said of Cayne in an interview with Bloomberg BusinessWeek in 2011. “He didn’t study the books, didn’t know what we owned, didn’t call people in and ask.”

The disrespect was mutual: There “isn’t anybody that will tell you he’s an honest guy,” Cayne said of Greenberg, according to William Cohan’s 2009 book “House of Cards.”

Funds Collapse

The crisis began in mid-2007 with the collapse of two Bear Stearns hedge funds that invested in securities tied to mortgages. The funds’ meltdown triggered re-pricing of mortgage-related securities that produced more than $1.7 trillion of losses at banks worldwide, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Throughout July 2007 — as the two hedge funds were careening toward collapse — Cayne spent 10 of the month’s 21 workdays out of the office, mostly on a golf course or playing bridge, the Wall Street Journal reported. When the firm ran out of money in March 2008 and faced a bank run from its hedge-fund clients and short-term creditors, Cayne, still the firm’s chairman, was at a bridge tournament in Detroit.

In an interview, Pat Cayne insisted Bear Stearns had kept her husband in the dark about its worsening finances during the final months of 2007. “He had no clue,” she said.

In 2010, Cayne told the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission that the market’s “unjustified and irrational” loss of confidence in Bear Stearns had become “a self-fulfilling prophecy.” Still, when asked by the panel if he had made mistakes, he said: “I take responsibility for what happened. I’m not going to walk away from the responsibility.”

His own wealth was not spared. By the time he sold his 5.66 million Bear Stearns shares, in March 2008, they were worth $61 million — down from almost $1 billion a year earlier. He dropped off Forbes magazine’s annual lists of the world’s richest people, his net worth having peaked at an estimated $1.3 billion in 2007.

Midwest Roots

Cayne was born Feb. 14, 1934, in Evanston, Illinois, the only child of a patent lawyer, Maurice Cayne, and his wife, Jean, according to Cohan’s book. He studied engineering at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, intending to follow in his father’s footsteps.

He dropped out after three and a half years when he learned he would have to stay another year to retake a French class he had failed. After serving in the Army, he worked as a taxi driver in Chicago.

With his first wife, the former Maxine Kaplan, he moved to Salt Lake City to become a traveling copier salesman for American Photocopier Co., with a territory that stretched to Boise, Idaho.

“I averaged 95 miles per hour,” Cayne told Cohan. After he crashed his car into a telephone pole, a judge restricted him to daytime driving, cutting short his career as a traveling salesman. Back in Chicago, he became a salesman for his brother-in-law’s scrap-iron business, a job he managed to hold even after divorcing his wife.

Joins Lebenthal

In 1964, he moved to New York City to try his hand at the professional bridge circuit, finding some success but not enough to see a path to wealth. He landed a sales job at the municipal-bond brokerage Lebenthal & Co. and at a bridge tournament met the former Patricia Denner, whom he later married.

In 1969, seeking a new job opportunity on Wall Street, Cayne attracted the notice of Greenberg, the Bear Stearns boss who shared his passion for bridge. Tapping his bridge-playing network, Cayne quickly landed Loews Corp. co-founder Laurence Tisch as a client — stealing his account from Bear Stearns Managing Partner Salim L. “Cy” Lewis, according to Cohan.

Important clients such as Tisch “solidified Cayne’s reputation as a serious broker, and his political skills were soon driving him to the top of the firm,” Kate Kelly wrote in “Street Fighters,” her 2009 book about the last 72 hours of Bear Stearns.

Ascends Firm

In 1985 Cayne became president of Bear Stearns, the No. 2 job under Greenberg. He added the title of CEO in 1993 but didn’t ascend to the top position until Greenberg relinquished the title of chairman in 2001.

Cayne didn’t abandon card games when he became an executive. In 1992, when he opened the firm’s Beijing office, he played bridge with top Chinese government officials. As late as 2002, he was listed in bridge teams representing the U.S. in international tournaments.

With a card-player’s instincts, Cayne avoided risky bets and throwing good money after bad. Such was the case with Long-Term Capital Management, a hedge fund that almost collapsed in 1998 when it lost about $4 billion amid tumbling world markets. Bear Stearns had handled and processed the firm’s trades, and Cayne personally had invested $10 million.

Cayne’s Refusal

When the Federal Reserve convened a meeting of Wall Street executives to orchestrate a bailout of the fund, Cayne refused to put up more of Bear Stearns’s money. Merrill Lynch & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and about a dozen other banks and financial firms later agreed to pump $3.65 billion into the fund to keep it afloat and prevent a meltdown in the broader financial markets.

When it was his firm’s turn on the precipice a decade later, in March 2008, Cayne again resisted conventional wisdom. Angry at the $2-per-share offer from JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, which Dimon later raised to $10, Cayne for a time held out for bankruptcy as an alternative to the forced sale, according to the accounts by Cohan and Kelly.

Only when he confirmed that bankruptcy would put Bear Stearns’ 14,000 employees out of work immediately did Cayne grudgingly give in.

“It’s like you got a bad grade on your test,” he told Cohan. “That’s it. No appeal. This thing that you spent 40 years building, it’s over.”

In addition to his wife, survivors include their daughter, Alison, and her five children, and Cayne’s daughter from his first marriage, Jennice, and her two children.

(Adds quote from wife on Bear Stearns in 11th paragraph.)

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

Stop With the Covid Excuses, Already—Customers Have Caught On

How to ‘See’ Time: The Secret to Peak Entrepreneur Productivity

How Shopify Outfoxed Amazon to Become the Everywhere Store

The Super League Debacle Forced Manchester United’s American Owners to Listen to Fans

Bright Horizons Is Betting Kids Will Return to the Office, Even If Parents Stay Home

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

ShareTweetPin

Related Posts

Pro Picks: Watch all of Monday’s big stock calls on CNBC

by
March 20, 2023
0

Market Movers rounds up the best trade ideas from investors and analysts throughout the day. The major indexes ended Monday...

JPMorgan Chase can be sued by Virgin Islands over Jeffrey Epstein sex-trafficking claims

by
March 20, 2023
0

In this article DBJPM.BBKA Follow your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNT People inside the offices of JP Morgan Chase in New...

Virgin Orbit scrambles to avoid bankruptcy as deal talks continue

by
March 20, 2023
0

In this article VORB Follow your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNT Virgin Orbit's LauncherOne rocket on display in Times Square, New...

The $17 billion wipeout of Credit Suisse bondholders has not gone down well in Europe

by
March 20, 2023
0

In this article UBSG-CHCSG.N-CH Follow your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNT A branch of Swiss banking giant Credit Suisse behind a...

Bitcoin soars to nine-month high as investors weigh bank risks and interest rates: CNBC Crypto World

by
March 20, 2023
0

CNBC Crypto World features the latest news and daily trading updates from the digital currency markets and provides viewers with...

Next Post

Warren Buffett tells Bernie Sanders he won't intervene in strike at Berkshire-owned company

Goldman Sachs analysts list their favorite stocks for 2022

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

email

Get the daily email about stock.

Please Enter Your Email Address:

By opting in you agree to our Privacy Policy. You also agree to receive emails from us and our affiliates. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

MOST VIEWED

  • Crocs sees fourth-quarter sales up 42%, CEO Andrew Rees says 2021 was ‘exceptional year’

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Biden didn’t accept Putin’s ‘red lines’ on Ukraine – here’s what that means

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The states that won’t tax military retirement in 2022

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Buying a car from the factory sounds expensive, but it can actually save you money. Here’s how to do it.

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Roth TSP vs. Roth IRA: How Do They Compare?

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy
All rights reserved by www.stockmarket-cafe.com
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy

All rights reserved by www.stockmarket-cafe.com