Well, the 3Par bidding war saga looks to be coming to an end as HP's final $33 offer has been accepted and Dell has pulled out of the race.

It makes you wonder about the "efficient market" theory, doesn't it? I mean, here is a stock that was trading around $10 and basically flatlined for about a year, only to suddenly increase by more than 300% in a period of three weeks. The market certainly wasn't efficient at pricing 3Par shares.

Here are the latest stats on 3Par at the current near-$33 level:

Market Cap: $2B

Forward P/E: 122

Revenue (TTM) $203M

Price/Sales (TTM): 9.84

Enterprise value/EBITDA: 294

Hmmm. Not sure I'd call that a bargain.

Onto the rest of the news:

 

For the first time in a while, I actually watched the Chairman of the Federal Reserve's testimony before Congress this AM. Not quite as exciting, as, say, a Celtics-Lakers game, but it offered a moderate amount of intersting information.

There are plenty of people in the "I hate Bernanke" club, mostly those of the Austrian "rip the lungs out of the market" economic school, but I believe the jury is still out. There is still hope for Bernanke to change his tune, from Mr. Softy to a harder line.

This morning I sensed for the first time that Bernanke was speaking to the markets, acknowledging firmly that the United States could lead the world out of the recession and fiscal crisis -- if it finds a way to address the enormous budget deficits. He even mentioned specifically that he thought markets would respond positively if Congress showed some will to take on the budget deficits.