Citigroup
Paulson Says Fund Made More Than $1 Billion In Citigroup Stake
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/24/2011 10:55 -0500Just headlines for now. And so after the great subprime debacle, the latest yard winner for JP is piggybacking on the government's at all costs rescue of the biggest financial zombie in the American financial hierarchy. As a reminder as of the last publicly filed 13F, Paulson held 424 million shares of C, a drop from just over half a billion shares at June 30. In other words, the $2 pick up in Citi shares is the monetary equivalent of having Goldman tell ACA that Paulson was long the equity tranche of something or another.
Citigroup Call On Implications On Foreclosure Crisis: "Just The Tip Of The Iceberg"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/12/2010 17:12 -0500Yesterday, Citigroup's homebuilding team hosted a call with investors in which the guest speaker was Adam Levitin, an associate professor of law at Georgetown University. Far from providing the "all green" call participants had desired, Levitin said that what we have recently seen and heard in the news is “just the tip of the iceberg” and that the foreclosure halt may well cause a "systemic problem", as was suggested on Zero Hedge when the news of the Florida's court involvement was first made public (here and here) a month ago. And since by now everyone knows what the key tension points in this potentially massive development are, we will cut straight to Levitin's somewhat unpleasant conclusions: "Our speaker predicted that more and more lenders are likely to stop their foreclosure processes in both judicial and non-judicial states. He also expects more states’ attorney generals to get involved. At the federal level, it is possible than banking regulators might step in as there is legal and reputational risk for the banks involved. Ultimately, if these issues do in fact escalate, the Administration may try to broker some sort of settlement. If such deal brokering does take place, Levitin believes that “some payment” will be exacted from the lenders and servicers. The Administration could bargain for more mortgage principal write downs." In other words, the endgame will likely end up being the extraction of material concession from the banking syndicate, in the form of systemic mortgage writedowns, with Obama's blessing, which will likely put the 25% of homeowners who are underwater on equal footing with the other 75%. It may turn out that this was the plan all along. And people naively wonder why banks have hundreds of billions in cash stashed on the sidelines...
UBS Collapse Continues As Entire Energy And MLP Americas Banking Team Defects To Citigroup
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/15/2010 08:53 -0500Life at UBS continues to suck, as rumors of defections eventually ceasing are greatly exaggerated. Today we have learned that the entire American UBS energy and MLP investment banking team has defected to Citi. This follows such high profile departures as the firm's healthcare and stock churning teams leaving for Jefferies some time ago, and who knows how many other people. Those who are seeking to get a confirmation from UBS' Stephen Trauber may have to look for him at his new position somewhere in the bowels of 399 Park.
Can't Make This Up: Citigroup Fined For Stealing From The Dead
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2010 11:55 -0500- Finra fines Citigroup Inc over cemeteries
- Finra says Citigroup pays $1.5 million for failures related to scheme to misappropriate millions in trust funds belonging to cemeteries
- Finra says Citigroup pays $750,000 fine, $750,000 disgorged commissions
- Finra says Citigroup does not admit wrongdoing in agreeing to settle
How To Play The Accelerating Greek Contagion From Citigroup
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/23/2010 11:14 -0500We see considerable scope for other, fiscally weak EMU markets to underperform in the current environment. Portugal, another dual deficit economy, has underperformed sharply over the past week, with 10yr spreads to Germany reaching new wides and PGBs now trading around 20bp wider in ASW terms than Irish gilts in the 10yr sector. Spain continues to defy its relative fundamental weakness and remains particularly rich in the EMU space, as shown by our rankings. However, we sense that SPGBs are starting to lose favour and increasingly Spain should be exposed to tighter liquidity conditions as the ECB withdraws its special OMOs. The collapse of the Belgian government has finally been the catalyst for a repricing of OLOs, which in our view have already out-punched their weight relative to core EMU markets, notably Germany. We would also consider shorting OLOs versus the smaller core markets of the Netherlands, Finland and Austria or, indeed BTPs. - Citigroup
The Truth Behind The Government's Citigroup Stock Price Manipulation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2010 12:46 -0500American Banking News investigates the reason for the recent massive surge in financial stocks, to a big extent predicated by the government's desire to push Citi stock price over the $5 critical threshold "participation" barrier. As ABN notes: "The reason behind wanting the share price to go beyond $5 is in relationship to institutional investors, who in many cases are prohibited from investing in any stock under $5 a share. For example, pension funds and mutual funds are some of those I’m referring to here." Nothing surprising there. However, the scathing critique that follows, based on nothing but the truth and exposing the government's endless stock market manipulation gimmicks, deserves a broader audience.
Citigroup CFO Declines To Comment Whether Bank Has Any Outstanding Wells Notice
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/19/2010 11:12 -0500Uh Oh. We will get you more as we see it.
Citigroup Picks Up Where Goldman Ends: Tells Clients To Go Long EURUSD, i.e., Is Now Selling Its EUR Stash
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/13/2010 15:48 -0500A month ago Goldman told its clients to go long the EURUSD with a 1.35 stop. The stop was triggered within a week. Then the firm flipflopped and followed up with a diametrically opposite call. That call was also stopped within a few days. Goldman learned its lesson. But not Citi: the nationalized firm, whose stock, together with that of bankrupt Ambac, has just issued a long EURUSD call at 1.359. The call by technical analyst Aron Gera, proposes a stop at 1.349. In other words it is now Citi's turn to offload its EUR book. Gera's recommendation is based on technical analysis, which, in the form of momentum chasing, is all that seems to work these days. Aron thinks the EUR could surge to an 11-week high, even as the GBPUSD could jump as high as 1.5966 alongside EUR strength.
Paulson & Co Dec. 31 2009 13-F Released, Major Additions To Citigroup And Suntrust, Six New Names In Top 20 Holdings
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2010 18:14 -0500Paulson & Co's December 31, 2009 13-F was just released. The disclosure for the fund's equity long (shorts are not disclosed, neither are credit cash nor CDS and other holdings) reveals $19.8 billion in positions. The fund's top position continues to be GLD at a value of $3.4 billion (unchanged from September 30). Notable is the addition of 206.7 million shares to the fund's Citi position which is now worth approximately $1.7 billion. Other notable financial additions include SunTrust Bank, in which Paulson added 28.8 million shares, Wells Fargo, a new 17.5 million position worth $472.3 million, JPMorgan common, in which the fund added 5 million shares to 7 million for $291 million, as well as JPM Warrants worth $250 million (a new position). Other new positions in the top 20 include Comcast (44 million share), XTO Energy (10 million shares), IMS Health (18 million shares), and Pfizer (15.6 million shares). A primary reduced holding is the fund's exposure in Bank Of America - Common stock, which declined by 8.8 million shares to 151 million, or $2.27 billion. This was offset by the purchase of 13.8 million BAC "Units" worth $205 million.
S&P Revises Outlooks on Citigroup, Bank Of America To Negative From Stable
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/09/2010 10:07 -0500Standard and Poor's whacks Citi and Bank of America, revising its outlook on both firms from Stable to Negative, cites "increased uncertainty about the U.S. government's willingness to provide additional extraordinary support to highly systemically important financial institutions in a way that will benefit debt holders."
So Much For The Whole Stock Bonus Theater: Citigroup Employees Can Sell Their Bonus Shares In The Open Market... In APRIL
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/27/2010 12:29 -0500More smoke and mirrors for the peasantry, courtesy of Wall Street, this time coming from Citigroup. Remember all that hoopla how banks are making payments in stock almost entirely, and how no Citigroup employee would get more than $100,000 in cash? Well, turns out the stock portion of compensation is just as liquid: it has been revealed that Citigroup employees can sell stock received as part of their bonuses as early as April. Hopefully by then the CNBC watching sheep will have forgotten all about Wall Street's record bonuses year and everyone can get on with their lives.
Citigroup: KIA'd
Submitted by Marla Singer on 12/09/2009 20:53 -0500
In the wake of the crumbling of certain sandcastles in the sky, sovereign wealth funds in the middle east have baited our analytic gaze over the last month or so. It takes very little, therefore, to prompt us to take careful notice now just about whenever one is mentioned. Today, the Kuwait Investment Authority (hereinafter the "KIA") and its brutal body-blow to Citi demand our attention.
Citigroup is ALREADY Being Broken Up ... But Not Enough
Submitted by George Washington on 11/08/2009 01:28 -0500"Simon Johnson, an MIT professor and former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, reckons there should be caps of roughly $100 billion on the assets of financial institutions and "serious criminal consequences" if firms are caught trying to get around such limits."
Britain to break up the taxpayer owned banks: Citigroup Beware
Submitted by inoculatedinvestor on 11/01/2009 12:12 -0500So, it looks like Lloyds and RBS are going to get broken up into smaller, more manageable pieces by the Brits. I think it is clear that something similar is needed in the US to dismantle the banking oligarchy. Could it happen here? Well, maybe the follow the leader dynamic that occurred during the misguided attempt to ban short sales will play out in this case as well.
Chris Whalen Discusses Citigroup's Earnings And Prospects
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2009 09:41 -0500The Institutional Risk Analytics Managing Director nails the banks' consistent beating of analyst expectations: financials keep "coming in better on non-recurring items." Indeed, once the government's "non-recurring" subisidy of free "money ends," and such by-now forgotten business lines as investment banking have to pick up, what then?
Additional observations from Whalen include bank subsidies, consumer credit trends, bank reserves, loss rates, non-performing assets, the regional versus the TBTF duel, and the reconciliation of Citi's positive net income and its EPS loss, and an outlook on a "disappointing" Q4.





