Lehman survival in doubt

This is all over the news today, but the basic idea is that stockholders and Wall Street were, let’s put it nicely, underwhelmed with the restructuring and rescue plan laid out by Lehman Brothers management on yesterday’s conference call.  I’d be underwhelmed too.  Spinning off a couple of units and dumping debt don’t seem to be enough to rescue a company who is basically worth nothing.

From the AP:

For investors, the strategy seemed long on hope, short on details and raised questions about timing and execution, analysts said. Investors had hoped to see a solid plan in place to offset almost $6.5 billion of losses during the past two quarters.

“Management did not successfully put to rest the issues that had been pressuring the stock,” Goldman Sachs analyst William Tanona wrote in a research report.

More from naked capitalism:

I heard this rumor from two sources, that Lehman is in its final day or two and Goldman is willing to buy the firm, and the second source, who volunteered the information, is sufficiently well plugged in that I trust the reading. This came from a former senior employee:

A couple friends of mine from LEH trading desk called me this a.m. to say that mgmt has taken employees aside to let them know that the end should come in next 24-48 hours. Ratings agencies apparently told them that the steps were not sufficient to prevent a d/g, and LEH mgmt asked them to hold off for a day or so to give them a chance to resolve situation (with sale of company).

Apparently GS is willing buyer, but is buyer of last resort from LEH’s perspective, b/c they would keep very few LEH employees.

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Mortgage 2.0: I wonder if Wachovia will Twitter an FDIC takeover?

Just got this from one of my friends online.  Wachovia is now promoting itself via Twitter and letting everyone know about it.  This image is from their contact page.  I just started following them yet and haven’t gotten anything worth talking about; but I did want to mention that although Wachovia may be in a heap of trouble this is a Web 2.0 first for large banks.  

While it may sound stupid for a company to be on Twitter, it can actually work.  Comcast cable has scored huge PR and customer appreciation wins through their maintenance of their @comcastcares Twitter account.  My colleague gave up on the Comcast dial-in customer service line after 10 minutes but got a response almost instantly through Twitter.  

It begets the question though. Will they Twitter the moment they’re seized by the FDIC and put in to receivership?  Will the FDIC support the Twitter customer service function??  I kid, I kid! Kind of.  You can see if they do or not by following them here.  If they don’t you’ll hear it from me, here.

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