Citigroup weighing up sale of all or part of group
Citigroup executives are pondering the sale of all or part of the company following losses of 50% of its market value
Citigroup executives are pondering the sale of all or part of the company following losses of 50% of its market value
Citigroup executives are
understood to be weighing up the sale of all or part of its operations,
including the Smith Barney brokerage, the credit card unit and the tranaction
services unit after its stock lost 50% this week, Wall Street Journal
said late Thursday, citing sources familiar with the issue.
The bank has lost more than one-quarter of its value on mounting concern over
the capacity of the bank to withstand billions of dollars of potential losses
and despite new support from its biggest individual investor, Saudi Prince
Alwaleed bin Talal, who plans to increase his stake in Citigroup from 4% to 5%,
The Washington Post reports.
Internal discussions are said to be at a preliminary stage, and a formal
board meeting is set for today, but Vikram Pandit, Citi chief executive, is
reportedly reluctant to sell units.
Citigroup is not commenting on the report, maintaining it has a ‘very strong
capital and liquidity position’ and a strategy which is expected to generate
benefits ‘over time’.
Further reading:
Citi CFO issues new writedowns warning
Read
The Wall Street Journal story
Read
The Washington Post story
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