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Citigroup to shed nearly $500B in assets

By MADLEN READ,
AP
Posted: 2008-05-09 12:36:47
NEW YORK (AP) - Citigroup Inc. said Friday it aims to shed about $500 billion in assets and grow revenue by 9 percent over the next few years, as it tries to rebound from massive losses tied to deterioration in the mortgage and credit markets.

The plans are the most concrete yet by Vikram Pandit, nearing his five-month anniversary as the bank's CEO, to prove himself a capable turnaround specialist at a company that many claim was struggling long before the housing market collapse.

The bank's plans to wind down its $2.2 trillion in assets to approximately $1.7 trillion were part of an investor day presentation at one of Citigroup's Manhattan offices.

These so-called "legacy assets" included yet-to-be-named noncore businesses, as well as assets in Citigroup's securities and consumer banking segments, including mortgages and other real estate-related holdings.

Already, the bank has written down assets tied to soured debt by some $38 billion since last summer. It has also announced plans to reduce its residential mortgage assets by $45 billion over the coming year, and has recently sold businesses including CitiCapital, CitiStreet and Diners Club. All of those write-downs and sales are included in the larger $500 billion figure.

The anticipated rise in revenue will derive largely from cutting costs - which Chief Financial Officer Gary Crittenden said will mean more job reductions. Citi has so far lowered its work force by 13,200 people since last summer.

Citigroup has been under heavy investor scrutiny over the past year as the value of its stock tumbled. Many Citigroup holders have been angling for a large-scale overhaul of the company's structure.

Those shareholders' hopes, however, are dwindling, with executives apparently largely keeping the bank's major parts intact.

Pandit did emphasize, "Our structure is different." But he also said, "We believe the right model is a global universal bank."

Citigroup executives pointed out several shortcomings at the bank that need to be fixed. And it introduced a new slogan as part of its revamping efforts: "Citi never sleeps."

But the road to recovery is going to be a difficult one.

Most analysts believe that while the bulk of the bank's write-downs are through, there are still at least some more to come. In a note Thursday, Deutsche Bank analyst Mike Mayo estimated that Citigroup's $29 billion bucket of mortgage investments and related structured products has the potential to result in another $15 billion write-down.

And given that Citigroup has $63 billion in exposure to home equity loans, $150 billion to mortgages, $21 billion to auto loans, and other exposure to consumer loans such as credit cards, Mayo estimated that the bank will have to build up its reserves by an additional $5 billion.

Amid substantial turmoil in the credit markets, Citigroup generated $13.22 billion in revenue during the first quarter - 48 percent less than the $25.46 billion it generated during the first three months of 2007.

Citigroup shares were unchanged at midday Friday. The stock is down 17.5 percent in 2008 and 55.1 percent over the last 12 months.

AP Business Writer Stephen Bernard in New York contributed to this report.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
05/09/08 12:36 EDT
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8 comments

Pllc15 04:07:34 PM May 09 2008

For you old timers, Citigroup was the premier banker in the olden days. Established in 1812. They were known as the First National City Bank of NY in th 50's. Then they expanded outside NY and became known as Citibank and Citicorps when expanded into credit cards. Their downfall was merging with Traveler's Insurance to become Citigroup. They got too big. Only way for mega companies to manage themselves is using computers with management software from MSFT in the near future.

Boyadj45 03:51:49 PM May 09 2008

thats the legacy of prince and his protege who shoild be doing time in the soon to be reopened alcatraz hilton, might as well send hank greenbertgf and spitzer there too

Wrpmandu 03:22:49 PM May 09 2008

Whatever they cut, wherever they cut it, the bottom line is the top management salary and bonuses that add up to millions every year. Why don't they cut THAT?!!

Jamcarr3 03:01:04 PM May 09 2008

CITI AND BOFA NEED TO SHUT THEIR DOORS AND CEOS AND MANAGEMENT NEEDS TO BE FINED BILLIONS AND SENT TO JAIL WITH BUBBA FOR 100 YEARS.

Kamdajani 02:29:37 PM May 09 2008

CITI AND AIG TRILLIONS OF DOLLARS LOSSES TO DESTROY THE DOW

APEXWS 01:57:37 PM May 09 2008

Citibank sucks.

Kamdajani 01:56:22 PM May 09 2008

CITI BANK STOCKS TO HIT 3 DOLLARS A SHARE AND THE DOW TO RETREAT TO 10000 POINTS .SELL SELL SELL CASH OUT BEFORE YOU BURN MORE MONEY IN THE STOCK MARKET.HAPPY LANDING.

Jmills499 12:58:34 PM May 09 2008

Citi never sleeps???

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