Citigroup Bailout: Feds Offer Massive Rescue Package To Financial Giant

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Huffington Post/NYT/AP/WSJ
First Posted: 11-23-08 04:59 PM   |   Updated: 12-24-08 05:12 AM

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Citigroup

The government unveiled a bold plan Sunday to rescue troubled Citigroup, including taking a $20 billion stake in the firm as well as guaranteeing hundreds of billions of dollars in risky assets.

The action, announced jointly by the Treasury Department, the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., is aimed at shoring up a huge financial institution whose collapse would wreak havoc on the already crippled financial system and the U.S. economy.

The sweeping plan is geared to stemming a crisis of confidence in the company, whose stock has been hammered in the past week on worries about its financial health.

"With these transactions, the U.S. government is taking the actions necessary to strengthen the financial system and protect U.S. taxpayers and the U.S. economy," the three agencies said in a statement issued Sunday night. "We will continue to use all of our resources to preserve the strength of our banking institutions, and promote the process of repair and recovery and to manage risks," they said.

It is the latest in a string of high-profile government bailout efforts. The Fed in March provided financial backing to JPMorgan Chase's buyout of ailing Bear Stearns. Six months later, the government was forced to take over mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and throw a financial lifeline _ which was recently rejiggered _ to insurer American International Group.

Critics worry the actions could put billions of taxpayers' dollars in jeopardy and encourage financial companies to take excessive risk on the belief that the government will bail them out of their messes.

The $20 billion cash injection by the Treasury Department will come from the $700 billion financial bailout package. The capital infusion follows an earlier one _ of $25 billion _ in Citigroup in which the government received an ownership stake.

As part of the plan, Treasury and the FDIC will guarantee against the "possibility of unusually large losses" on up to $306 billion of risky loans and securities backed by commercial and residential mortgages.

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Under the loss-sharing arrangement, Citigroup Inc. will assume the first $29 billion in losses on the risky pool of assets. Beyond that amount, the government would absorb 90 percent of the remaining losses, and Citigroup 10 percent. Money from the $700 billion bailout and funds from the FDIC would cover the government's portion of potential losses. The Federal Reserve would finance the remaining assets with a loan to Citigroup.

As a condition of the rescue, Citigroup is barred from paying quarterly dividends to shareholders of more than 1 cent a share for three years unless the company obtains consent from the three federal agencies. The agreement also places restrictions on executive compensation, including bonuses.

The once mighty company had at one time been the largest U.S. bank by assets.

Citigroup has seen its shares lose 60 percent of their value in the past week, reflecting a crisis of confidence among skittish investors. They are worried all the risky debt on Citigroup's balance sheet will turn into losses as the economy worsens and the markets stay turbulent _ losses that could be nearly impossible to reverse.

Citigroup is such a large, interconnected player in the financial system that if it were to collapse it would cause further damage to already fragile financial and economic conditions. The company has operations stretching around the globe in more than 100 countries.

Analysts consider Citigroup the most vulnerable among the major U.S. banks _ especially after it failed to nab Wachovia Corp., which was bought instead by Wells Fargo & Co. That was a missed opportunity for Citi to gets its hands on much-needed U.S. deposits that would bolster its cash position.

Citigroup was especially hard hit by the meltdown in risky, subprime mortgages made to people with tarnished credit or low incomes. Foreclosures on those mortgages spiked, leaving Citi and other financial companies wracking up huge losses on the soured investments. The company has failed to turn a profit during the past four quarters and has announced plans to slash thousands of jobs.

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The New York Times has more coverage of the "radical" bailout plan:

Federal regulators approved a radical plan to stabilize Citigroup in an arrangement in which the government could soak up tens of billions of dollars in losses at the struggling bank, the government announced late Sunday night.


The complex plan calls for the government to back about $306 billion in loans and securities and directly invest about $20 billion in the company. The plan, emerging after a harrowing week in the financial markets, is the government's third effort in three months to contain the deepening economic crisis and may set the precedent for other multibillion-dollar financial rescues.

Citigroup executives presented a plan to federal officials on Friday evening after a weeklong plunge in the company's share price threatened to engulf other big banks. In tense, round-the-clock negotiations that stretched until almost midnight on Sunday, it became clear that the crisis of confidence had to be defused now or the financial markets could plunge further.

Whether this latest rescue plan will help calm the markets is uncertain, given the stress in the financial system caused by losses at Citigroup and other banks. Each previous government effort initially seemed to reassure investors, leading to optimism that the banking system had steadied. But those hopes faded as the economic outlook worsened, raising worries that more bank loans were turning sour.

More coverage from Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal.

AROUND THE WEB

Michelle Malkin : Citigroup bailout being hatched?

MSNBC: Bush sees more moves like Citigroup bailout

MISH'S Global Economic Trend Analysis : Citigroup Bailout Terms of Agreement

The government unveiled a bold plan Sunday to rescue troubled Citigroup, including taking a $20 billion stake in the firm as well as guaranteeing hundreds of billions of dollars in risky assets. Th...
The government unveiled a bold plan Sunday to rescue troubled Citigroup, including taking a $20 billion stake in the firm as well as guaranteeing hundreds of billions of dollars in risky assets. Th...
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"The agreement also places restrictions on executive compensation, including bonuses."

What! The executives should pay to work there not the other way around.

Why only restriction?

Bonuses should be cut to zero and a huge paycut and I mean huge, the executives salaries should be zero until they pay back every cent to the goverment. Better than that put them in prison.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:31 PM on 11/24/2008
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"racked" - not "wracked"
As in racking up, or accumulating, pool balls or other things accumulated by placing in a rack

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:52 PM on 11/24/2008

Don't worry "my friends" , as J. mcCain would say, this is just an initial step towards socialism. I have never been a Citigroup member nor will I ever be one. However, my taxes, and yours will go towards supporting a bad business practice. Before my time, long ago, businesses were not treated "legally" as persons. It was a time of charters were corporations served their purpose and then left the world/people. Some stayed longer if needed and some were disposed. Charters were controlled by people in communities and cities to serve a special or specific purpose. Now that Corporations are legally sought out as people they can get away with murder. Imagine being as powerful as O.J. Simpson and getting away with murder? Corporations steal, lie, cheat, and destroy lives. One example of bad business practice would be a CEO taking a 15 million dollar yearly bonus and then asking the government for a bailout from people that have no service connection with the company. Everyone knows that if I were the CEO I would redistribute the wealth back into the company. For years this has not been done. If you want a good example of a better ran business look up Dr. James Goodnight of SAS. If all of this info. don't help then atleast understand that we don't need to pump money into a demand that doesn't exist. "Power to the People now give us our magic wand".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 PM on 11/24/2008
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New favorite.

Thank you for the education. We must seriously consider this. I used to live in Denmark a democratic socialist country. They still have businesses, but a lot of very small ones. They have laws that protect them. What did the free market do with all the charm and character of the small businesses that used to be in New York City? Their health care was great. There were no lines. They recycle by washing their bottles. How much money does that save not melting things down and building things up again and how much more green? The bottles are a little more heavy duty and you get the equivalent of 50 cents when you return the bottle. The streets are clean because of this. They have a real effort at a meritocracy. The schools there are amazing. They really don't leave any child behind. The government gives out money to communities for parties. Everybody, come on; you would really love the community this develops.

There were some things I didn't like, but nobody is perfect and the Danes only put up with some these things that Americans would not because they don't know anything to compare it with. Kind of like us not knowing how others live. Here, they have pro pa gan dized to make sure the American people don't know that other people have a better government and as well how really terr ible our corporations have caused things for most of the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:00 PM on 11/24/2008
- tomas0808 I'm a Fan of tomas0808 9 fans permalink

They were flooding my mailbox with credit card offers when I was a student and didn't even have a job. Scum

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:44 PM on 11/24/2008
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Thank you for reminding me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:02 PM on 11/24/2008
- tomas0808 I'm a Fan of tomas0808 9 fans permalink

Watch for the name change. As their scummy behavior comes to light they will be absorbed into another bank. Stay away. I urge anyone with a Citi card to pay it off and go elsewhere, a bank that doesn't try to scam you or aggressively market

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 PM on 11/24/2008

CitiBank says thank you American taxpayer..­. Now, for those of you who are cardholders. beginning this month, if you're one day late on your payment or one cent over your limit, your default rate will now be prime + 23.99% or 29.00%, whichever is higher. This is so sad but so true. CitiBank just announced those terms to their cardholders in the fine print of their latest statements. Thank you Congress for bailing out these land pirates!! Thank you CitiBank for helping the people who are already struggling to make your high interest payments by making it even more difficult for them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:12 PM on 11/24/2008
- Peter007 I'm a Fan of Peter007 32 fans permalink
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I agree. Now that the government is a major shareholder in Citi, they can insist that interest rates be capped at 15% ? Lower ? I think its bad business practice to squeeze people though their credit cards. Its like the mob.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:26 PM on 11/24/2008

25 cents to the dollar is the next step.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:40 PM on 11/24/2008

I use to work for Citibank and they have been doing the penalty for years. Also everybank has the right to check your credit periodically to see if your credit score has slipped. if it has, they have the right to jack your interest rate up to the default rate. so just be careful and stay away from credit card. they are a trap!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 11/24/2008
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With usury like this the whole country should protest by going bankrupt and we could start all over again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:16 PM on 11/24/2008

2 questions;

-who is going to bail out AMERCIA (now it's the State of NY's turn.....)­?
-as soon as the economy turns and these guys start making money, republicans and libertarians will once again start talking about "market deregulation and preventing government from deciding for the people and companies"; what will congress do to make sure this will NEVER happen again?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 11/24/2008
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An amendment to the Constitution?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:47 PM on 11/24/2008
- Peter007 I'm a Fan of Peter007 32 fans permalink
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The government bails out itself. That means it prints money to hand out. It can print as much money as it wants. It never runs out. Yes, that causes inflation. Thats why a dollar from 1915 is only worth 4 cents today in purchasing power. The government can't create wealth, it can only print money. Also, in the world markets, the value of the dollar could drop because they are printing so many of them. Thats why oil prices rose to $147 a barrel and other commodities rose. Investors didn't trust the dollar. Also, the banking system is the most regulated system we have. There are 20 regulator agencies that oversea banking. In fact, the Federal Reserve is the banks bank. and it's partially a government agency in its own right.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 PM on 11/24/2008
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I think you mean that a dollar from today is only worth four cents of what a dollar from 1915 was worth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 PM on 11/24/2008

This had to happen. You can only blow so much hot air into a balloon before it pops. And these policies (or lack of them) are so much hot air with no substance. Finally, enrichment from the bottom up is the only fair and sane thing to do....beca­use it works for everyone. Enrichment from the top down never gets down, as we have seen. So it's back to regulation and common sense. Stop coddling investors and masters of the universe by indulging their every crazy whim to make obscure financial instruments which only serve one purpose: rip offs - period. They knew there was nothing behind the credit swaps...th­e derivatives (because there were no solid wages for these buyers to purchase homes in this price range). They knew but they wanted to inflame the market - and spread the bad instruments around so when the bottom fell out, Europe and other countries - and worse - the American median and under income citizen held the bag. A great article. May we never forget that this is the third time they've gotten away with the great train robbery (#1 is the Great Depression, #2 was the '80's crash of S&Ls)...an­d hopefully this third time (not being the charm) will end the domination of "free market" ideology and sink the supply side koolaid back into the swamp where it belongs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:57 PM on 11/24/2008

I feel like every corporation is run by selfish IDIOTS.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:29 PM on 11/24/2008

All the investors knew the risk ... why are these people being bailed out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:10 PM on 11/24/2008
- Peter007 I'm a Fan of Peter007 32 fans permalink
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There are being bailed out because if they fail, state pension funds will lose big bucks. Billions. State governments are responsible for paying out pensions from these funds so if the bank goes broke, pension funds will crash and retirees won't get their pensions. The government has already guaranteed most pension funds, and they don't have the money to back up that guarantee

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 11/24/2008
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If that is true, then the gov should take over responsibility of those funds with the bail out money and let the banks fail. Use the money to break up the those banks and start the number of small banks that we traditionally had.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 11/24/2008

It seems that one of the main criteria to have a bail out is to BE BIG TO FAIL. What happens to Chapt 11?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:06 PM on 11/24/2008
- Trittydi I'm a Fan of Trittydi 65 fans permalink
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No bailout for blue-collar workers - just for white-collar workers. The senate worries about their money I guess and perhaps know they'd never buy a domestic auto anyway. Nope - they'd only buy from the top of the pile and that ain't American made.

So much for their bleating voices pretending to care about middle America.
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    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 PM on 11/24/2008

The perfect solution for the GOP; kill the American auto industry because it is unionized; prop up the financial sector because it is not unionized. I just wonder if this was intentional or just dumb luck.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:00 PM on 11/24/2008
- Trittydi I'm a Fan of Trittydi 65 fans permalink
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It's intentional. This is COMPLETELY about union-busting.
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    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:39 PM on 11/24/2008

Why don't we see these guys in front of a bunch of senators? Why don't they have to submit their own plan for recovery? Then lets talk about private planes and bonus pay. Why weren't these folks vetted as the Big 3 were??????????? where is the fairness in all this?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 PM on 11/24/2008
- Trittydi I'm a Fan of Trittydi 65 fans permalink
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It doesn't exist.
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    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:06 PM on 11/24/2008
- Peter007 I'm a Fan of Peter007 32 fans permalink
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You don't seem to understand. The banking system is a part of the government. The banks help create money for the government. The federal reserve is part bank, part government entity. The government needs the banks to survive. Look at the money in your wallet. Its not real money, its a Federal Reserve Note. An IOU. The Federal Reserve is a quisi-private company. Its the banks bank. The government needs to sell Treasury Bills and notes to get money, Taxes aren't enough. Banks sell the Treasury Bills and notes. Congress only needs the car industry for votes at election time. Don't worry. Michaigan voted for Obama so the money will be there. Congress is role playing now. There're trying to look responsible. Its a good show.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 PM on 11/24/2008
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Why do we need so many middle men?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 PM on 11/24/2008

you are so right. this has nothing to do with the white collar vs. blue collar workings. if the banks fail so goes the whole country. The banks are tied into every single industry in this country. If the banks arent lending then there goes the food supply as well. I work for a major food corporation and why in the world do you think prices are going up? We will increase prices again come mid december just to cover the cost of small businesses tanking due to the credit freeze.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:45 PM on 11/24/2008

I have a soultion: dissolve all debt and start over -- for everyone.

If companies get bailouts when they fail, why should I pay my bills?

If the government keeps spending my tax dollars on bailouts I disagree with, why should I keep paying my taxes?

I'm starting to believe the only solution to this capitalist quagmire is socialism: nationalize everything, dissolve all debt, burn every dollar. What's China going to do, invade us?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:55 PM on 11/24/2008
- Trittydi I'm a Fan of Trittydi 65 fans permalink
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Too early in the day.
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    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 PM on 11/24/2008
- Peter007 I'm a Fan of Peter007 32 fans permalink
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Sounds like you watched the movie Fight Club with Ed Norton. His plan was to bomb all the credit card companies and credit reporting companies so everyone could start with a clean slate. Good flick..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:26 PM on 11/24/2008
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My solution is similar to yours. Absolve 20% on home owners debt up to two homes. Absolve credit card debt by 60%.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 PM on 11/24/2008
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Credit cards should not be able to charge more than 10%.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:00 PM on 11/24/2008
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OK so after shedding 50k jobs last, we bail them out this week, Citibank is going to hire 1,000 employees in the Philippines. http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/News_By_Industry/Citi_to_hire_1000_people_in_Philippines_next_year/articleshow/3752477.cms
WTF!!! Some one should put a stop to this!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 PM on 11/24/2008

Okay, this is treason. Plain and simple.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:55 PM on 11/24/2008
- Trittydi I'm a Fan of Trittydi 65 fans permalink
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Well it should be - especially in this economic climate. Hopefully, we'll see some of the egregious laws that encourage these practices change.
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    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:37 PM on 11/24/2008
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