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Next At The Bailout Trough: Citigroup ?

by @ 7:13 am on November 22, 2008. Filed under Credit Crisis, Economics, Politics, Sub-Prime Mortgage Crisis

It looks like Citigroup will be the next big financial institution to line up at the Federal Government’s bailout trough:

Nov. 21 (Bloomberg) — 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.”

And The New York Times reports that the talks about how to structure a Citigroup bailout have already begun:

With the sharp stock-market decline for Citigroup rapidly becoming a full-blown crisis of confidence, the company’s executives on Friday entered into talks with federal officials about how to stabilize the struggling financial giant.

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.

The course of action, however, remained uncertain on Friday night, these people said, and other options may yet emerge. But after a year of gaping losses and an accelerating decline in share price, Citigroup, which has $2 trillion in assets and operations in scores of countries, is running out of time, analysts said.

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.

The Fed was trying to ascertain whether the tumult in the stock market could escalate into something worse.

So far, these people said, most customers and clients remained committed to Citigroup.

But with Citigroup’s troubles opening a new chapter in the long-running financial crisis, government officials said that the Treasury Department was considering whether to ask for the second half of the $700 billion rescue fund approved by Congress in September

I’d be more outraged by this, but we’ve gone so far down the road to serfdom in the past two months that it’s hard to get upset anymore.

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2 Responses to “Next At The Bailout Trough: Citigroup ?”

  1. c burt says:

    Enough is enough!

    Let Citi Group fail! After all, this company is now owned in large part by the Saudi Arabians (remember Sept. 11 anyone?!).

    A line MUST be drawn somehwere so far as these bailouts are concerned and this company should be where the line is drawn!

  2. SohoSoho says:

    Little by little but faster and faster the US economy
    is becoming the US ecommuny!!!

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