By Nick Edwards
NEW YORK, Sept 14 (Reuters) - U.S. asset prices sank late Sunday as talks to sell Lehman Brothers <LEH.N> faltered, with the first official transactions of a new business week pushing stock market futures sharply lower in New York and the U.S. dollar sinking in the opening salvos of currency dealing in New Zealand.
"It appears that Lehman will file for bankruptcy and the risk of an immediate tsunami is related to the unwind of derivative and swap-related positions worldwide in the dealer, hedge fund, and buyside universe," Bill Gross, the chief investment officer of Pacific Investment Management Co (Pimco), told Reuters. Pimco oversees more than $812 billion in assets.
U.S. stock futures pointed to a steep opening fall on Wall Street on Monday, with uncertainty about the health of the U.S. financial sector running high, the fate of the 158-year old investment bank Lehman Brothers still unclear. In addition, a takeover of Merrill Lynch & Co <MER.N> and huge asset sales by American International Group <AIG.N> were being talked about in markets [
].S&P 500 futures <SPc2> fell 38 points and the Dow Jones industrial average futures <DJc2> sank 307 points, while Nasdaq 100 <NDc2> futures slid 45 points.
The U.S. dollar fell around a cent versus the euro in opening trade in Sydney and was quoted around to $1.4300 <EUR=> at 2300 GMT, compared with $1.4225 in late U.S. trade on Friday. Againt the yen, the greenback dropped to 105.93/95 yen <JPY=> versus 107.86 yen and the Australian dollar extended gains above U.S. 80 cents <AUD=>.
On Sunday, a rare emergency trading session opened in New York to allow Wall Street dealers in the $455 trillion derivatives market to reduce their exposure to a potential bankruptcy filing by Lehman.
U.S. regulators and bankers were making last-ditch efforts on Sunday to prevent toxic assets from ailing Lehman Brothers spilling into global markets and rupturing investor faith in the international financial system. [
]"The extraordinary trading session held today to facilitate a partial unwind of these positions saw very little trading -- perhaps $1 billion total -- but at much wider spread levels for corporate bonds," Gross said.
While the fate of the U.S. financial system was the focus of most early trading, initial reports that the passing of Hurricane Ike through country's energy production centre had not severely damaged infrastructure in Texas saw benchmark oil prices fall more than to $2 to a six-month low below $99 a barrel.
"The oil market is selling off because the early indications show Ike didn't do as much damage as feared," said Chris Jarvis, senior analyst at Caprock Risk Management. "That said, this sell-off could prove to be a bit premature, since it could be a while before things get back to normal."
The U.S. Coast Guard said it had received reports of damage to offshore facilities in the Gulf of Mexico, but added details were still not available. [
]The U.S. government said on Sunday it loaned a total of 309,000 barrels of strategic crude to two oil refiners having trouble procuring supplies in the storm's wake [
], ConocoPhillips and Placid Oil.Oil <CLc1> fell $2.38 to $98.80 a barrel by 2150 GMT after falling as low as $98.46 -- the lowest since February 26 -- adding to a steady downtrend prices since mid-July's peak of over $147 a barrel as evidence mounts that high energy costs and a weakening economy are cutting deeply into fuel consumption.
SPECIAL TRADING SESSIONS
The New York Mercantile Exchange opened a special energy trading session on Sunday due to increased trader interest about Hurricane Ike, which slammed into the Houston energy hub Saturday leaving a quarter of U.S. oil and refined fuel production idled and millions without power.
But it was the special trading session opened for financial derivatives dealers that sources said was initiated by the U.S. Federal Reserve, that set the wider tone for asset markets.
Trading involved credit, equity, rates, foreign exchange and commodity derivatives with the aim of reducing risk associated with a potential bankruptcy filing by Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
"Trades are contingent on a bankruptcy filing at or before 11:59 p.m. New York time Sunday (0359 GMT)," said the statement. "If there is no filing, the trades cease to exist."
Britain's Barclays Plc <BARC.L>, which had appeared to be the frontrunner to take over Lehman -- excluding its bad mortgage-related assets -- pulled out of the bidding early in the afternoon, according to a person familiar with the matter.
That raised the risk of a Lehman bankruptcy. Lehman hired law firm Weil Gotshal & Manges to prepare a potential bankruptcy filing, the Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday in its online edition, citing a person familiar with the matter.
A turbulent open on U.S. financial markets was expected despite the special session, said Mark Grant, managing director of structured finance at Southwest Securities, based in Dallas.
"The market is going to be spooked. People will be fearful and no one outside a very small group of people knows what Lehman going into liquidation will mean," he told Reuters.