Citigroup Posts $2.5 Billion Loss, Cuts 6,000 Jobs

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MADLEN READ | July 18, 2008 06:56 PM EST | AP

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In this May 9, 2008 file photo, a pedestrian walks past the Citigroup Center building in New York. Citigroup says it posted a $2.5 billion loss Friday, July 18, 2008, and laid off more employees in the second quarter as it struggled with surging loan defaults. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, file)

NEW YORK — Citigroup has become the latest big bank to quell Wall Street's worries about a financial sector implosion, posting a $2.5 billion second-quarter loss that was smaller than expected.

Citi rose nearly 8 percent Friday and helped lift other financial stocks, having joined JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Wells Fargo & Co. in convincing investors that the prognosis for the sector, while gloomy, may not be as dire as the market feared.

But it's hard to get too enthusiastic about clearing a low bar. It was Citi's third straight quarterly loss and neither JPMorgan nor Wells Fargo managed to notch a profit gain compared to last year. Meanwhile, the brokerage Merrill Lynch & Co. reported a wider-than-expected quarterly loss. And next week, Wachovia Corp. and Washington Mutual Inc. are anticipated to reveal losses, too, with Bank of America Corp. expected to report a steep profit decline.

"I don't think anyone's breathing too easily right now," said Prakash Shimpi, who works in the risk management practice at Towers Perrin. Determining the dollar value of certain assets backed by debt is still a tricky process, he said, even a year after the crisis began.

Citigroup, the nation's largest banking company by assets, lost the equivalent of 54 cents per share in the April-June period. In the same timeframe last year, the bank earned $6.23 billion, or $1.24 per share.

The shortfall was tamer than the 66-cent-per-share loss that analysts, on average, were expecting, according to Thomson Financial.

Citigroup Inc.'s securities and banking division wrote down the value of its assets by $7.2 billion, before taxes, and an asset revaluation cost its consumer lending business $745 million. Those write-downs totaling about $8 billion are significantly lower than write-downs taken in the first quarter and in last year's fourth quarter.

However, credit costs jumped to $7.2 billion as more consumers defaulted on their loans _ implying that while losses in the credit markets are decelerating, losses from actual defaults in Citigroup's mortgages, home-equity loans, auto loans and credit card lines are mounting. The $7.2 billion in credit costs included $4.4 billion in credit losses and a $2.5 billion charge to bulk up reserves for future loan losses.

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Citigroup, like other banks, is bracing for mortgages and credit cards to bring more hefty losses. Default rates continued to rise on these loans, and Chief Financial Officer Gary Crittenden said that credit card loss rates could soon rise to their highest levels ever.

"I think we have two to four quarters left," Crittenden said in an interview, referring to rising credit card losses. "Because of the mix of our business, it's possible that the peak will be higher than it was in the past." He said Citigroup's credit card exposure right now includes more risky, but higher-yielding, cardholders than in previous downturns.

Citigroup has failed to turn a profit for three straight quarters, losing a cumulative $17.4 billion during that period after writing down its assets by about $46 billion. Its shares have tumbled 65 percent over the past year, and recently hit their lowest point since the day Citicorp and Travelers combined in October 1998.

Citigroup stock rose $1.38, or 7.7 percent, to $19.35 Friday.

Citigroup's results were helped by asset sales, moderating expenses, and record revenues in transaction services, interest rate and currency trading, and commodities.

Deutsche Bank analyst Mike Mayo upped his rating on Citigroup stock from "sell" to "hold," and raised his price target for the stock from $14 to $20. Mayo said Citigroup's credit quality is not so different from its peers, and that its revenues were stronger than he expected _ which should help Citi turn a profit soon even if there are further write-downs.

The bank has raised about $40 billion over the past several months by shedding businesses, lowering its dividend and selling stock.

And during the second quarter, Citi lopped off $99 billion from its total assets, which now stand at $2.02 trillion. Back in May, Chief Executive Vikram Pandit said the bank would shrink its then-$2.2 trillion in balance sheet assets by about $400 billion to $500 billion over the next few years.

"While there is still much to do, we are encouraged by our progress in delivering on our commitment to the re-engineering efforts," Pandit said in a statement.

Shimpi said banks, as they have been, will continue to bolster their risk management and tighten up their underwriting standards _ from consumer loans to corporate loans to debt securities.

"These kinds of standards are tried and shrewd and old. We need to find our way back to some of them," Shimpi said.

Still, there is only so much that banks can do to prevent losses from a crumbling credit environment.

"We have to recognize that defaults and losses are part of the fabric of the lending business," Shimpi said. "You can't get away from it."

NEW YORK — Citigroup has become the latest big bank to quell Wall Street's worries about a financial sector implosion, posting a $2.5 billion second-quarter loss that was smaller than expected. ...
NEW YORK — Citigroup has become the latest big bank to quell Wall Street's worries about a financial sector implosion, posting a $2.5 billion second-quarter loss that was smaller than expected. ...
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I am so happy that I bank with a credit union and a local small bank......­..Stay away from these mega banks..... you are a nobody....­.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 PM on 07/18/2008
- NABNYC I'm a Fan of NABNYC 99 fans permalink

These financial institutions use insider information, manipulate the market, bribe the politicians, cheat on their taxes, loot the businesses of the country, act as cheerleaders to pressure CEOs to send jobs out of the country to be done by slave, prison, and child labor, pressure Congress for more visas to throw more Americans out of work; cheerlead to have health care and pensions eliminated for workers, to get a corrupt judiciary to say that any worker can be fired at any time for any reason, to eliminate overtime for the receptionist, to loot their own companies. To in every way use every ounce of their being to destroy this country, corrupt the government, and guarantee their own business will end up insolvent because of the obscene "bonuses" they pay to themselves.

Most of these people should be in prison for what they've done. Unfortunately Congress has cheered them on in everything they've done. The more likely result is that this group of crooks will get to keep all the money they've stolen, they'll probably get big jobs in the next administration, and my tax money will be stolen from me and given to these companies to keep them afloat.

And the headline in all of Murdoch's papers will be something about a "Welfare Queen" widowed mother of 3 who used food stamps to buy some Pepsi for her kids. Ah yes, justice in America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 PM on 07/18/2008
- biwee I'm a Fan of biwee 13 fans permalink

Murdock, Weil, Rubin, Prince, Addington, Feith, Wolfowitz, Kristol, Redstone,
Krauthammer, Perle, Bolton, Foxman, Pelosi, Boxer, Feinstein, Frank,....­.......

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 PM on 07/18/2008
- biwee I'm a Fan of biwee 13 fans permalink

Weil walked out with billions. Prince left with tens of millions. What does Rubin do to earn his millions?? None of the criminals will lose their job. The big losers are the shareholders. Cox is the most incompetent head of the SEC ever.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:31 AM on 07/18/2008

I wrote a letter to the SEC and Cox two years ago asking them to address the runaway executive compensation issue. His response- "we do not feel this is an area of our concern".
Nah..letti­ng the boards hire thier friends and giving out sweetheart comp deals is of no harm whatsoever.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:41 AM on 07/18/2008

Remember Cox's big talk on naked short selling?
Now it appears as though the SEC will exempt the major brokerage firms from the rule..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 07/18/2008

Fuuny how a year or so ago there was an article on Huffpo saying these thieves were receving HUGE bonuses and going out and buying exotic cars with them.
How's that working out for them now? We should not have to bail them out. They have mismanaged their affairs and should suffer the consequences. After all, the government doesn't bail us out when we fail.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 AM on 07/18/2008
- SaulGood I'm a Fan of SaulGood 33 fans permalink

but, but, but....it'­s all in their heads, right? bunch of whiners.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 AM on 07/18/2008
- Moshe I'm a Fan of Moshe 206 fans permalink
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Dear Fellow Americans:

Clearly, our economy is rotting down from the top, so the only way to fix it is for us to start now in building it up from the bottom.

That means: 1) Getting your own personal/family fiscal ship in order; 2) Exercising personal responsibilty in all that you do, and in doing so, setting a positive example for your children; and 3) Distinguish between needs and wants, so you can stop spending unnecessarily, and start payng off debt and saving. We don't need all the junk. We do need to start saving for our futures.

Oh yeah, and in November and at every opportunity thereafter, boot the rat-bastards that made this economic disaster possible from our offices of public trust. Those that have so shamefully failed us don't deserve to remain there and they are dangerous to our collective futures.

The purpose of government is to protect the life, liberty, and property of the People, so that the People can focus on caring for the families, their communities, and building social and economic progress.

Each of us needs to do our part, and we need people in our offices of public trust that will do their part.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:10 AM on 07/18/2008

Remember when Citigroup was thumbing its nose at federal prosecutors? This is the price of arrogance. A few made buckets of money, but the rest of us lost. We need to prosecute these executives.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 AM on 07/18/2008
- aturner18 I'm a Fan of aturner18 6 fans permalink
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That's capitalism!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 AM on 07/18/2008
- JoeBlough I'm a Fan of JoeBlough 60 fans permalink
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So when are we going to bail them out as well?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 AM on 07/18/2008

I know this is a rhetorical question but are any of the insightful higher-ups included in the 6,000 laid off, and if so, were they given golden parachutes? Lead parachutes would be must more appropriate but that's just wishful thinking.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 AM on 07/18/2008

Well, they ordered the golden parachutes from China, but they turned out to be lead...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 07/18/2008
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When auto workers lose their jobs I care. When paper-pushing pencil neck geeks lose their jobs, the hell with them, let them go dig some ditches somewhere.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:34 AM on 07/18/2008
- MTiffany I'm a Fan of MTiffany 8 fans permalink

And Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit and the other top Citigroup executives are going to take how much of a pay cut? I'm guessing zero to "we-deserv­e-more." Because we should all know by now: they can't control earnings, the market does, so it's not their fault that the company lost money on their watch; and they're all entitled to earn lots of money, because, well, why else would they have taken those jobs if they weren't entitled to make money regardless of how poorly they performed? I mean, really.

And besides, the down market is all somehow Bill Clinton's fault. Everybody knows that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:33 AM on 07/18/2008
- ROBOT8 I'm a Fan of ROBOT8 17 fans permalink
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IF YOU ARE LATE ON YOUR PAYMENT 1) YOU'RE CHARGED A LATE FEE 2) YOU'RE INTEREST RATE IS INCREASED 3) YOUR CREDIT IS DAMAGED ..........­..........­..........­.....SINCE WHEN DOES ONE MISTAKE = THREE STRIKES???­??????????­?? 1 DOES NOT = 3 CITIGROUP CAN GO GET@#@%$&^­*&^(*)(*&)­&)&(*^^&+

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:26 AM on 07/18/2008
- vippy I'm a Fan of vippy 67 fans permalink

Agree even with all their thievery they experience this type of loss now. Serves them right.
Citibank is one of those who launders the drug money in Mexico. And still this happens.
Someone needs to do an audit on them, and a CEO should only draw an agreed salary for
there is no job that deserves a bonus on top of a good salary. It seems we compensate the
incompetent. Lee Iacocca had to give his money back and got a paycut when Chrysler was
bailed out. Now those thieves get to keep their million dollar bonuses. What a slap in the face
of us people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 AM on 07/18/2008
- HeIsTheOne I'm a Fan of HeIsTheOne 206 fans permalink
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They're all going to line up with their hands out...Fann­ie, Freddie, GM, ML, Citi, etc.

Time to chop their hands off before they drag us down into the abyss Bushie and his friends have created.

"Profit is private and individual. Loss is public and social" from the eloquent OkieMon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 AM on 07/18/2008
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