Shares
of Citigroup fell another 20% today to $3.77 and touched a new low at $3.05. Billed
as "too big to fail" Citigroup May Get
Government Rescue.
Citigroup
Inc. will probably get rescued by the U.S. government after a crisis in
confidence erased half its stock-market value in three days, investors and
analysts said.
Citigroup has more than $2 trillion of assets, dwarfing companies such as
American International Group Inc. that got U.S. support this year. Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke may
favor a rescue to avoid the chaotic aftermath of Lehman Brothers Holdings
Inc.’s bankruptcy in September.
“There is no question that Citi is in the category of ‘too big to
fail,’” said Michael Holland, chairman and founder of Holland
& Co. in New York, which oversees $4 billion. “There is a
commitment from this administration and the next to do what it takes to save
Citi.”
While Citigroup executives say the company has adequate capital and liquidity
to ride out the crisis, its tumbling share price may shake the confidence of
creditors, clients and rating agencies. A similar scenario played out at
Lehman, when Chief Executive Officer Richard Fuld declared the firm was
“on the right track” five days before the firm went bankrupt.
“The market may be implying some sort of regulatory
intervention,” Jason Goldberg, a former Lehman analyst who now works at
Barclays Capital in New York, wrote in a note to clients today. “In
situations where the government has stepped in, the equity holders have not
fared well.”
Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit told employees today that he doesn’t plan
to break up the company, aiming to reassure workers as the stock resumed its
skid.
Citigroup Claims
Adequate Capital
Assuming one believes Citigroup has adequate capital, exactly why should the
Fed care what its share price is? No one seems to care that Fannie Mae is
trading at 30 cents. So, if Citigroup is well capitalized why can't it just
keep lending and otherwise go on its merry way? And if it really does have
adequate capital, it would be a screaming buy. Finally, If share price is a
concern simply announce a reverse 10-1 split and the stock will be trading at
$40 in a jiffy.
So I do not buy this "well capitalized" story and with talks of a
rescue it seems no one else does either. Earlier today the board had an
unscheduled meeting to discuss the bank's options. The market was unimpressed
as Credit Risk Rose on
Citigroup Breakup Speculation.
Balance
Sheet Blues
"Investors right now aren't convinced that we're done seeing dead
bodies on the Citigroup balance sheet," said William Fitzpatrick, an
equity analyst at Optique Capital Management Inc. in Milwaukee, which
oversees about $1 billion and doesn't own Citigroup shares. "That's what
the sell-off is, concern over more and more losses over the next couple of
quarters."
Concern over its balance sheet is indeed one of the issues. Credibility of
Citigroup management is another issue. I discussed both yesterday in Citigroup Blames
Short Sellers For Collapse and previously in Citigroup's Town
Hall Meeting.
Citigroup, Under
Siege
The New York Times is reporting Citigroup, Under
Siege, Holds Talks With U.S.
In a
series of tense meetings and telephone calls, the executives and officials
weighed several options, including whether to replace Citigroup’s chief
executive, Vikram S. Pandit, or sell all or part of the company. Other
options discussed included a public endorsement from the government or a new
financial lifeline, people involved in the talks said.
My Comment: A public
endorsement? If it comes from Paulson it just may panic everyone.
After
a board meeting early Friday morning, Citigroup’s management and some
board members held several calls with Henry M. Paulson Jr., the Treasury
secretary, and with the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Timothy F. Geithner, who later emerged as President-elect Barack Obama’s
choice to be Treasury secretary.
As Citigroup’s stock sank during the day, falling 68 cents to close at
$3.87, the Federal Reserve was carefully monitoring how much money
corporations and other customers were withdrawing from the bank, people
involved in the discussions said.
As Citigroup’s
fortunes diminished on Friday, Mr. Pandit, the company’s embattled
chief executive, went on the offensive. He worked the phones and held a
companywide call to shore up the confidence of anxious employees.
Later
in the day, the company held a similar call with large corporate customers. On
Sunday, Citigroup plans to run full-page advertisements in major newspapers
that acknowledge “our financial markets have been tested in
unprecedented ways,” but argue that the company has a broad range of
businesses and enough management expertise to pull through. In a nod to the
company’s slogan, the text concludes: “That’s why now, more
than ever, you can feel confident that Citi never sleeps.”
My Comment: Now there's a waste
of money. If you have to advertise you have no problems, the ad may as well
say "We have serious problems" because that is what everyone who
reads the ad will know.
One
maneuver that Mr. Pandit has championed is for the Securities and Exchange
Commission to reinstate the “uptick rule,” which prevents
short-sellers from betting against companies whose stock price is falling. Mr.
Pandit has been lobbying the S.E.C. for the past week, as have other Wall
Street chiefs.
Mr. Pandit and others have suggested that Citigroup is a victim of short-sellers,
which some have blamed for speeding the demise of other financial companies
this year.
In September, Richard X. Bove, an analyst at Ladenburg Thalmann, predicted
that short-sellers would turn their attention to larger and larger financial
companies, including Citigroup, which he said at the time was strong enough
to withstand the pressure. “They’re going to hit a company that
is too well grounded, too well capitalized, and I think that will be
Citigroup,” he said.
My Comment: Pandit and Bove are
both fools if they think short selling has anything to do with Citigroup's
woes. Short interest is a mere 2.7%.
“The
reason you have to ‘save’ Citibank is you cannot allow this
hysteria,” said Peter J. Solomon, chairman of the Peter J. Solomon
Company, a small investment bank.
My Comment: Add Peter J.
Solomon to the ever growing list of clowns who think that failing companies
need to be bailed out.
“If
there’s a flight from Citi’s stock, that’s unfortunate, but
I don’t think that’s the government’s business,” said
David M. Walker, the president of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation and a
former United States comptroller general.
David Walker and Ron Paul are
among the very few in government positions or recently out of government
positions who have a clue as to the complete fiscal insanity that is wrecking
our nation.
Timothy Geithner, president of the New York Federal Reserve and Obama's Choice For Treasury Secretary has been involved in
the meetings with Citigroup. Unfortunately Geithner is just another Keynesian
clown who thinks that problems can be solved by throwing money at them. I am
very disappointed in Obama's choice.
With that in mind, let's see what the weekend brings in regards to Citigroup.
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
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