There will be blood.....

NEW YORK - With a deal in place to save Bear Stearns from bankruptcy, the company's shares traded above the offer price Monday even as investors began turning a critical eye to other investment banks amid worries about how far the credit contagion could spread.

Despite the weekend agreement for JPMorgan Chase & Co. to buy Bear Stearns for a fraction of its value last week, worries that other banks had sizable exposure to troubled credit markets sent global markets tumbling. The uncertainty was evident on Wall Street, where the Dow Jones industrials sank by more than 100 points.

At Bear Stearns' 47-story headquarters in midtown Manhattan, many employees said they still couldn't believe that the nation's fifth-largest investment bank is — essentially — out of business. Employees said there was no meeting to inform employees about what was happening.

"It's my first job out of school. I thought it was a big company — it would be good experience," said Ki Byung, who works for a division of Bear Stearns. "Now after a couple of months something like this happens."