Tokyo Mitsubishi says they might be interested by will proceed conservatively and wait until after Lehman announces its third quarter results next week to see what they have to say.
Apparently a trip to the US to perform a due diligence in New York with a look at the books such as the Korean government performed was not in the budget.
T-M says that if the price drops sufficiently after the announcement they may be in a position to make an offer.
We hate to sound cynical, but with all this media posturing about maybe deals we suspect that some folks are fishing for a backstop such as JPM received for Bear, and are using the media to float their trial balloons. Or in the worst case, some insiders are using media leaks to cover the sale of shares prior to the Lehman third quarter results next week.
And the search for a suitable husband for little Lehman by her father Hank goes on far and wide. Stay tuned for the next exciting chapter.
Tokyo Mitsubishi 'interested in buying' Lehman Brothers
Leo Lewis, Asia Business Correspondent
September 3, 2008
The Times
Japan’s biggest megabank, Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ is poised to enter the bidding for a substantial stake in Lehman Brothers, and may even seek control of the ailing Wall Street titan, according to banking industry sources in Tokyo.
Senior sources close to the Japanese group say that the possible acquisition is being treated as a “once in a lifetime” opportunity but that the notoriously conservative bank will proceed with extreme caution. (Buying Lehman with extreme caution. Is that an oxymoron? Or a hint that a backstop from the Fed is required? - Jesse)
Tokyo Mitsubishi, which has ample sources of funding for a multi-billion dollar acquisition, is expected to keep its powder dry until after Lehman announces its third quarter results next week — an event that traders around the world believe could see yet another bout of “kitchen sinking” and another potential dip in Lehman’s share price. (If they are serious about an acquisition they cannot perform due diligence and simply look at the books with Lehman's management as did the Koreans? - Jesse)
Traders believe that, in addition to its ongoing woes, Lehman’s results could result in the bank being probed by analysts and investors over activities related to R3 Capital Partners, a hedge fund. The fund, which was established this spring by a former senior executive at Lehman and which has the bank as a “passive, minority investor”, has become the focus of rising market concern that it may provide yet more bad news for Lehman.
Lehman has consistently said that all its transactions with R3, as an investor and a seller of assets, are at arm’s length. The bank is understood to have sold perhaps as much as $4.5 billion (£2.5 billion) of assets to R3 since May. Traders in Tokyo and Hong Kong said that the next few weeks would show whether R3 represents an Achilles heel for Lehman in the way that hedge funds related to Bear Stearns contributed to that firm’s downfall.
The head of one Hong Kong-based dealing room told The Times that the results announcement was expected to be the turning point for Lehman. From the point of view of Tokyo Mitsubishi — or any other potential bidders — the period immediately after the results could present the same opportunity that is currently on the table but at a much cheaper price.
If Lehman surprises the market with more bad news or fails to convince that it has a decent capital injection on its way, its shares will fall again and that is when the big Japanese bid will come in, said a source at a large Tokyo brokerage. (And what sort of 'put' shall we call this? - Jesse)
The possible emergence of a Japanese-backed capital injection into Lehman comes as the troubled US firm remains locked in negotiations with the state-backed Korea Development Bank over the sale of a possible 25 per cent stake. (A media circus might be a more appropriate description for this entire sorry episode - Jesse)
Chosun Ilbo, South Korea’s largest daily, today reported that HSBC, a trio of US hedge funds and an unnamed Chinese bank may also be eyeing big stakes in Lehman. But a spokesman for HSBC told The Times: "We're not interested in acquiring an investment bank. We're focused on growing in emerging markets, not developing markets." HSBC is not thought to be interested in acquiring any parts of Lehman. (The Chosun Ilbo is either completely inept at checking sources prior to printing major stories, constantly citing sources of interest that later vehemently deny it, or they are complicit in the manipulation of markets through leaked misinformation from anonymous sources. Take your pick. - Jesse)
“Thus, it should be understood that when pro-US figures use the term, 'rules-based international order,' they are not referring to anything analogous to the rule of law. Quite the opposite, they are using Orwellian language to describe a system in which essentially no rules can be established and/or observed, given that the dominant state has the prerogative to violate and/or rewrite “rules” at its whim.” Aaron Good, American Exception