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Strategies & Market Trends : Aardvark Adventures
DAVE 228.78+3.5%Dec 24 12:59 PM EST

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To: ~digs who wrote (5632)9/14/2008 10:23:54 AM
From: Bucky Katt  Read Replies (1) of 7944
 
LOL, that is great!

Barclays PLC, the U.K.'s third-largest bank, is emerging as a leading contender for Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. as discussions continued Sunday in London and New York in what is a highly fluid and pressure-charged environment.

A sale of Lehman to either Barclays or Bank of America Corp. remained dependent on government financial support, according to people familiar with the situation. According to these people, Barclays appeared to be moving more aggressively in trying to find a way to complete a deal.

That, however, would put any proposed deal at odds with the government's reluctance to step in with funding. Discussions are expected to begin again this morning at the New York Fed. Wall Street's top executives attended meetings yesterday before departing in black town cars Saturday evening.

Under a plan that was crystallizing Sunday, either Barclays PLC or Bank of America Corp. would buy Lehman's "good assets", such as its equities business, people familiar with the matter say. Lehman's more toxic, real-estate assets would be ring-fenced into a "bad" bank that would contain about $85 billion in souring assets. The move would avert a flood of bad assets deluging the market, damaging the value of similar assets held by other banks and insurers.

On Saturday, one idea was for Wall Street firms to inject some capital into the bad bank. By Sunday morning, though, this option appeared to be losing support. Unlike when Wall Street firms stepped in to bail out hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management, today's banks are much weaker financially. Some also are loathe to provide financial support at the same time a rival like Barclays has the potential to buy Lehman for a cheap price.
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