Showing posts with label chuck prince. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chuck prince. Show all posts

Monday, November 26, 2007

Fire Sale At Citigroup...Citigroup to Get $7.5 Billion Infusion From Abu Dhabi

When you have to increase your capital with your share price at multi year lows you know that they don´t do it for charity reasons...... Nice dilution but probably the only way to stay solvent..... Now it should be clear why they are still pushing for the "Superfund" . They are simply not able to follow HSBC. I assume this time there will be no congressional hearing related to sovereign wealth funds.......Nice to see that some "experts" still focusses on the dividend.... ;-). I assume this time even FOX Business News will get it right...... :-)

Kein gutes Zeichen wenn man sichn neues Geld zu Zeiten besorgen muß wenn die Aktien auf Mehrjahrestiefs notiert. Auf gut deutsch "Denen steht das Wasser bis zum Hals". Schöne Verwässerung für die Altaktionäre aber wohl die einzige Möglichkeit solvent zu bleiben. Nun sollte auch dem letzten klar werden warum Citigroup auf Biegen und Brechen den "Superfund" pusht und nicht wie HSBC diese Gesellschaften wieder in die Bilanz aufnimmt. Ich denke das es diesesmal kein Störfeuer von der US Politik geben wird....Besonders lustig zu sehen das einige der Experten sich immer noch mit der Dividende befassen..... Ich denke diesesmal wird sogar FOX Business News richtig berichten.... :-)

Nov. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Citigroup Inc., the U.S. bank searching for a new chief executive as it faces at least $8 billion of writedowns, agreed to sell as much as 4.9 percent of the company to the government of Abu Dhabi for $7.5 billion.


Citigroup will sell equity units to the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority that convert into common shares, the New York-based lender said today in a press release.

``This investment, from one of the world's leading and most sophisticated equity investors, provides further capital to allow Citi to pursue attractive opportunities to grow its business,'' Win Bischoff, Citigroup's acting CEO, said in the statement. It helps ``strengthen our capital base,'' he said.

> It´s about time..... Wird aber auch dringend Zeit.......

Charles O. Prince III ( deaf & ingorant CEO Prince ) was forced to step down as Citigroup's chief executive officer Nov. 4 after the biggest U.S. bank said losses on subprime mortgages and related securities may cut fourth-quarter net income by $5 billion to $7 billion. The lender said at the time that it planned to shore up capital. The company's shares, which have fallen about 44 percent this year, sank to $30.70 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading today, the lowest price in five years.

Time for a review of the buybacks in 2006 Financial Highlights 2006 pdf


....our return of cash to shareholders through our $7 billion stock buyback in 2006 ( Stock was between $ 45 and $ 55....)

> Well done! Eine Meisterleistung!

ADIA, the sovereign wealth fund of the government of Abu Dhabi, is buying equity units that convert into Citigroup shares at prices ranging from $31.83 to $37.24 per share, on dates ranging from March 15, 2010, to Sept. 15, 2011, the U.S. bank said. The units will pay 11 percent annual interest.

> Here is a more detailed look via the FT Junk Citi

Citi is paying a higher interest rate than companies that borrow on the high-yield, or junk-bond, market; currently they pay roughly 9% for straight bonds. Typically, convertible bonds pay lower interest rates than straight bonds, although a particular bond’s structure could affect the interest rate paid......

Even after the spurious tax argument, it is difficult to see how this funding can be costing much less than 9 per cent.

Abu Dhabi, one of the United Arab Emirates, will have ``no role in the management or governance of Citi, including no right to designate a member'' of the company's board, according to the statement.

FT Alphaville has some more thought on The stealthy rise of the sovereign wealth fund

Von FT Alphaville gibt es ein paar mehr Gedanken zum The stealthy rise of the sovereign wealth fund

More insights from Mish , Naked Capitalism and the "Peter Schiff" of bank analysts Meredith Whitney


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Monday, November 5, 2007

Citi Has Found Another $11 Billion....But Has No Plans To Reduce its Dividend level....LOL!

Thank god they don´t cut the dividend.... What a farce.... Maybe they will pimp this at CNBC and try to dance around the $ 11 billion overnight "adjustment" like the former deaf & ingorant CEO Prince. Maybe someone should tell MBIA & Co that their view on billions of CDO´s with only a low single percentage haircut is looking more and more like David Lereah during the years 2003-2006 . Maybe this guy is running their internal "models".......

Gottseidank wrd die Dividende nicht gekürzt......Da kann man natürlich leicht über die 11 Mrd $ an zusätzlichen Abschreibungen hinwegsehen. Es würde mich nicht wundern wenn es die Crew bei CNBC schafft die Dividenstory als Headline zu promoten. Besonders freut mich zudem das der ehemalig taube und ignorante CEO Prince inzwischen Geschichte ist. Evtl. sollte mal einer die letzten Abschreibungen von Citigroup mit denen von MBIA & Co ins Verhältnis setzen. Deren Sicht der Dinge mit Abschreibungen in niedrigen einstelligen Bereich sieht immer mehr wie ein verspäteter Aprilscherz aus . Evtl. ist ja dieser Typen für die Berechnung der Schadenmodelle zuständig.....

Citi announced on Sunday night it was currently facing writedowns of between $8bn and $11bn, on top of the dismal numbers already reported in its Q3 statement.

What is truly shocking, however, is the speed at which these losses have been realised. Barely a month ago, Citi’s pre-Q3 trading statement, warned that it expected to realise $1.3bn on subprime-related writedowns. Which means that figure has now increased at least sixfold. To put it another way, on average Citi’s subprime-linked assets lost more that $2bn in value each week.

Citi has now disclosed it’s estimated total subprime exposure. Of the $55bn total, some $11.7bn is in its lending and structuring business and a staggering $43bn lies in exposures to collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) - huge baskets of mortgage securities.

CDOs have seen prices crash in the past two weeks, as rating agencies have slashed ratings on hundreds of mortgage backed securities. As FT Alphaville reported last week, banks could be expected to reveal more writedowns as the market tanked.

Of the $11.7bn subprime exposure Citi estimates it has in its lending and structuring business, $2.7bn lies in a “warehouse inventory” of unsold CDOs, $4.2bn in actively managed subprime loans intended for securitization and $4.8bn in financing transactions which have subprime collateral.

Of the remaining $43bn exposure, Citi estimates it has $18bn in CDOs: $10bn of which is in high grade tranches, almost $8bn in mezzanine tranches and some $200m in CDO squared structures. The remaining $25bn, says Citi, is in exposure to subprime CDOs through commercial paper. But Citi does not say what issues that CP: whether it is through off balance sheet vehicles, such as SIVs, is unclear.
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