Finance & EconomicsPartially True
Bear Stearns collapse / JPMorgan rescue (Mar 2008)
Bear Stearns, the fifth-largest US investment bank, collapsed over the weekend of 14-17 March 2008 following a liquidity crisis rooted in its two failed hedge funds — the High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Fund and the Enhanced Leverage fund, which had imploded in June 2007 after heavy exposure to subprime mortgage securities. JPMorgan Chase acquired Bear Stearns at $2 per share (later raised to $10), backed by a $30 billion Federal Reserve emergency lending facility (Maiden Lane LLC) — the first major use of the Fed's Section 13(3) emergency powers since the Great Depression. Hedge fund managers Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin were charged with securities fraud and acquitted at trial in November 2009. "Naked short selling" conspiracy theories attributing the collapse to coordinated market manipulation are not supported by the evidence.