Tag Archives: Michael Corbat

The Right Way to Think About Citigroup

By John Grgurich, The Motley Fool

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It wasn’t all that long ago that I was positively bearish on Citigroup , lumping it in with Bank of America as a financial leviathan still deeply damaged from the banking crisis, still far from turning the corner back into operational normalcy, and therefore not a safe, profitable place for investors to put their money.

Citi is still a leviathan, but it is turning that corner more quickly than I’d previously thought possible — quickly enough to convince me to buy a few shares as a sort of test run. Here’s a quick overview of how I think the bank is still currently viewed by investors and how I think it should be.

A glass half empty
Of the big four banks, B of A was unarguably damaged the worst in the financial crisis, but Citi wasn’t far behind. Both banks overindulged in the housing boom, and ended up with massive amounts of toxic mortgage debt on their books.

Citigroup put its bad assets into a “bad bank” called Citi Holdings, which moved the toxic debt off the main balance sheet but didn’t absolve the superbank — or its investors — of the responsibility to deal with it. In the most recent quarter, Citi Holdings cost Citigroup $1.1 billion in losses. In the first half of 2012, the losses totaled $2.02 billion.

Also, since the financial crisis, I think the leadership at Citigroup has mainly been at a loss as well. Vikram Pandit, the bank’s former CEO who came on in 2007, needs to be given credit for stabilizing the bank at what was undoubtedly its moment of extreme crisis (and repaying $45 billion in federal bailout money ), but also needs to take the blame for not maximizing the superbank’s significant assets.

One example of this is the sale of the remainder of Morgan Stanley Smith Barney back to Morgan Stanley last fall. It’s generally thought that Citi botched the deal, coming around too easily to Morgan Stanley‘s lowball valuation of the joint enterprise. The superbank ended up losing $2.9 billion on MSSB.  

A glass half full
The good news regarding Citi Holdings is that the bad bank’s balance sheet and losses are both on the decrease.

In the fourth quarter of 2011, Citi Holdings‘ net loss was $1.3 billion, but was just $1.1 billion a year later. And total assets in the bad bank were $156 billion for Q4 2012, 31% lower than for Q4 2011. Finally, the continuing resurgent housing market means poorly performing assets might get even more of a boost in the right direction moving forward.

As for leadership, it’s no secret that Pandit is now gone — replaced in a coup engineered by Citigroup chair Michael E. O’Neill last October — but exactly how his successor would behave is no longer a secret.

Michael Corbat was O’Neill’s handpicked replacement for Pandit and is a well-regarded 30-year veteran of Citi who took over the bank’s global wealth-management …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Citi Statement on 2013 CCAR Planned Capital Actions

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Citi Statement on 2013 CCAR Planned Capital Actions

NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Citigroup today announced that the Federal Reserve Board (FRB) has advised Citi that it has no objection to the planned capital actions requested by Citi as part of the 2013 Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review (CCAR).

The planned capital actions include a $1.2 billion common stock buyback program through the first quarter of 2014 and the maintenance of current common stock dividends ($0.01 per share per quarter). Any repurchases of common stock and common stock dividends remain subject to approval by Citigroup’s Board of Directors.

For more information on Citi’s release of certain disclosures required by the rules of the FRB in connection with the 2013 annual supervisory stress tests, please visit Citi’s website at www.citigroup.com/citi/investor.

Michael Corbat, Citi’s Chief Executive Officer said, “We are pleased that Citi will be able to return additional capital to shareholders. Over the past several years, we have rebuilt Citi’s capital base and strengthened our balance sheet as well as shed assets and businesses not core to our strategy. We remain focused on our clients and allocating our resources to where they can provide the best returns and generate consistent, high-quality earnings.”

Citi

Citi, the leading global bank, has approximately 200 million customer accounts and does business in more than 160 countries and jurisdictions. Citi provides consumers, corporations, governments and institutions with a broad range of financial products and services, including consumer banking and credit, corporate and investment banking, securities brokerage, transaction services, and wealth management.

Additional information may be found at www.citigroup.com | Twitter: @Citi | YouTube: www.youtube.com/citi | Blog: http://new.citi.com | Facebook: www.facebook.com/citi | LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/citi

Certain statements in this press release, including those regarding Citi’s 2013 CCAR planned capital actions, are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the rules and regulations of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. These statements are based on management’s current expectations and are subject to uncertainty and changes in circumstances. Actual results and capital and other financial condition may differ materially from those included in these statements due to a variety of factors, including but not limited to obtaining required approvals, satisfactory market conditions and any other conditions that may be included in any Citi stock repurchase program, as well as those factors contained in Citi’s filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, including the “Risk Factors” section of Citi’s 2012 Annual Report on Form 10-K. Precautionary statements included in …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Will This Big Bank Be Embarrassed Again?

By David Hanson, The Motley Fool

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Since Michael Corbat was named CEO of Citigroup in October of last year, he has emphasized his intent to cleanse the global behemoth of its struggles stemming from the financial crisis and implement a numbers-driven approach to right the ship he has sailed on for his entire 30-year career. Corbat is supposedly aiming to use scorecards to gauge the performance of the bank’s upper management, and tomorrow at 4:30 p.m., Corbat will receive his first scorecard: the results from the Federal Reserve‘s annual stress tests.

Crushed under pressure
Despite being at the helm of the recovering bank for only four months, investors will not show any patience if the bank fails to meet minimum capital requirements under the Fed’s “severely adverse scenario,” as it did last year. Despite posting a Q3 2011 Tier 1 common ratio of 11.7% at the time of the last stress tests, the highest ratio among Bank of America , Wells Fargo , and JPMorgan Chase , when the harsh hypothetical economic conditions were applied, Citi’s Tier 1 common ratio crippled to below 6%. The main driver of the theoretical deterioration was losses in Citi’s consumer credit card and mortgage portfolios. This year, the conditions in the Fed’s most drastic scenario include:

  • Real GDP decline by between 4%-5% by the end of 2013
  • Unemployment rises another 4% from current levels
  • Housing and commercial real estate decline more than 20%
  • 50% decline in equity prices over the course of the hypothetical recession

As previously mentioned, although Citi has built stronger capital ratios throughout 2012, investors will be watching how those ratios stand up when the global economy is waning.

Source: Citigroup Quarterly press releases.

Good things come to those who wait
The most important thing for Citigroup investors may be patience. Unlike the three other major U.S. banks, Citigroup is much more of a global institution with only around 30% of its revenues coming from North American operations. Therefore, a Citi recovery is not as a correlated with a continued U.S. economic recovery as success at Wells Fargo is. It hasn’t been all bad news for the bank as allowance for credit losses as a percentage of total loans has declined for nine consecutive quarters as high quality loans are bought onto the books.

The results set to be released tomorrow are based on how the institution would fare under the adverse scenario based on its current capital deployment plan, which for Citi is a $0.01 quarterly dividend. While investors will surely use these stress tests results as a measurement of the bank since last year, forward-looking shareholders will undoubtedly be placing a greater emphasis on the Fed’s release of the Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review (CCAR) results next Thursday, March 14.

Stay the course, Michael
Banks’ submissions for the CCAR incorporated planned strategies to return capital to shareholders. As a forward-looking mechanism, the market responds to future strategy changes. Michael Corbat is undoubtedly eager to leave his mark on the company …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Media Digest (3/5/2013) Reuters, WSJ, NYT, FT, Bloomberg

By 24/7 Wall St.

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China will lean on consumer spending to expand its economy. (Reuters)

Facebook Inc. (NASDAQ: FB) faces more lawsuits over its initial public offering. (Reuters)

The White House says it believes people should be able to unlock their cell phone for use on more than one network. (Reuters)

Pew reports that debt among young people has dropped to a multiyear low. (WSJ)

The Chinese government drops annual GDP growth goals to 7.5%. (WSJ)

Citigroup Inc.’s (NYSE: C) new CEO, Michael Corbat, is more likely to track the performance of individual senior executives. (WSJ)

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will combine some operations. (WSJ)

A senior General Motors Co. (NYSE: GM) executive says the company will keep its Opel operations in Europe. (WSJ)

The CEO of H.J. Heinz Co. (NYSE: HNZ) could make $200 million if he leaves the company after a buyout. (WSJ)

Theft of oil from Nigerian pipelines starts to sharply cut production. (WSJ)

Royal Dutch Shell PLC (NYSE: RDS-A) will build LNG plants in Louisiana and Canada. (WSJ)

The chief of Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA) says the return to service of the 787 will depend on how fast the FAA approves a potential fix. (WSJ)

Bond yields on Spanish and Italian debt narrow because of stability in Spain and instability in Italy. (WSJ)

Facebook creates an ad system that could take business from Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG). (WSJ)

Congress accuses key J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) executives of roles in the bank’s $6 billion loss. (NYT)

Hess Corp. (NYSE: HES) will sell its gas stations as investors pressure it to restructure the company. (NYT)

Apple Inc.’s (NASDAQ: AAPL) shares reach a 52-week low as Google’s reach an all-time high. (FT)

Boeing defends its decision to keep the battery used in its 787 Dreamliner. (FT)

European Union finance ministers may ease budget restraints to cure the fallout from austerity. (Bloomberg)

Pearson PLC (NYSE: PSO) executives tell the Financial Times that a number of positions will be cut. (Bloomberg)

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Press Digest Tagged: AAPL, BA, C, FB, GM, GOOG, HES, HNZ, JPM, PSO, RDS-A

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance