Bear Stearns CEO may remain as JPMorgan rainmaker
By Joseph A. Giannone
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bear Stearns Cos BSC.N Chief Executive Alan Schwartz, forced to sell the hobbled investment bank to JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) in his eleventh week on the job, has been invited to stay on as a senior dealmaker, a person familiar with the situation said.
Formal employment talks have yet to begin, and it is possible that Schwartz may leave the bank, the source said, adding that Schwartz wants to postpone talks on his own plans until more of Bear's 14,000 employees learn their fates, amid speculation that up to half of them could lose their jobs.
Schwartz would likely stay on as a nonexecutive "rainmaker," holding a vice chairman title and charged with generating business from important clients. In that mold, he would resemble someone like JPMorgan Vice Chairman James Lee, one of Wall Street's best known arrangers of bank loan financing.
Schwartz is currently advising software giant Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) on its hostile takeover offer for Yahoo Inc (YHOO.O). He has also represented corporate chiefs at Time Warner and Disney on mergers and other high-profile deals. Schwartz could not be reached immediately for comment.
Nearly a month after its shotgun wedding with Bear, JPMorgan executives continue to learn more about what they will fully acquire by June. Ten days ago, JPMorgan announced the upper tier of investment bank management, with just five Bear executives out of 26 making the cut.
This week, the banks' executives will announce the next round of investment bank management at the investment bank division and continue to review businesses to find areas of overlap.
JPMorgan, which declined to comment on Schwartz, has said it has not yet determined total job cuts.
Schwartz was named Bear CEO in January after long-time chief James "Jimmy" Cayne stepped down to become chairman after presiding over heavy subprime mortgage losses last year. The already weakened bank was brought to its knees last month as clients drained its cash balances, prompting the Federal Reserve to intervene. Continued...
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