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Can Lehman last the week?

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With its stock down more than 40% in pre-market, I am getting the same sickening feeling I had during that week in March when Bear Stearns' stock made its swan dive into an empty swimming pool. As I said yesterday on CNBC's Power Lunch, investors seemed disappointed that Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (NYSE: LEH) had not actually closed any capital raising deals.

Now Lehman -- which lost 7% yesterday -- was down over 40% in pre-market. That's because four analysts "widened loss estimates and cut price targets for Lehman," according to Reuters. And Art Hogan of Jeffries & Co. said that Lehman's best hope -- its plan to auction 55% of Neuberger Berman, may not work. "We are not even sure that the auction process for 55 percent of their asset management group is going to work because the people that win the auction need to find the money to buy it," he told Reuters.

I would not be surprised if Hank Paulson is now wondering why he ever took the job of Treasury Secretary. If Lehman stock keeps dropping 40% a day, there won't be much left by the end of the week. I have to believe that there are all sorts of people on Wall Street wondering whether they simply can't take the risk of continuing to do business with Lehman. And if that happens, Paulson will need to decide whether to let it fail, force a merger or bail it out.

Based on the logic of Paulson's previous bailouts, there's no reason it shouldn't. That's because Lehman's problem is that it holds billions in complex securities whose value could be as much as 95% overstated on its books. It held them due to their former profits and now nobody wants them. If the government steps in to bail out every executive who makes a bad bet -- as it did with its Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM) and Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE) and Bear Stearns bailouts -- why not just let the government take over all money losing enterprises?

And that's not just a moral hazard, it's a catastrophe for American capitalism.

Peter Cohan is President of Peter S. Cohan & Associates. He also teaches management at Babson College and edits The Cohan Letter. He has no financial interest in the securities mentioned.

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Last updated: November 14, 2009: 08:26 AM

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