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Found 4 results

  1. so based on 1.67, we already lost 50% of our investment. And now all the investment is in common stock which is SUPER risky. This is CRAZY. I think this investment in citigroup must be the WORST ever for GIC. U can still argue that investing in prefered stock has less risk due to the 7% dividends and all the downside protections.... but now we end up with 50% paper loss + HUGE risk increase..... I noticed the ST report is so stupid. They used the US$2.5 price to calculate and say paper loss is only around twenty something percent. And then at the end of the article they say citi share price drop to $1.5. Why they don't use the latest price to calculate the GIC loss????????
  2. Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp.../346712/1/.html Citigroup to slash US$400b in assets Posted: 09 May 2008 2310 hrs NEW YORK : Citigroup, the US bank hardest hit by the sub-prime mortgage crisis, said Friday it plans to slash its assets by some 400 billion dollars over the next two to three years. The banking giant made the disclosure in slides posted on its website that cover the presentation it was making to investors and analysts Friday. Citigroup noted that the vast majority of the assets to be shed are within its consumer banking and securities banking operations, 63 percent and 34 percent, respectively. The assets disposal would represent about 20 percent of the company's total assets of 2.2 trillion dollars. The bank said it wanted to focus on stability and growth, citing its unique global presence and a "large footprint in (the) fastest-growing areas in the world." The financial services colossus said it was targeting net revenue growth of around 10 percent for its core operations within a two- to three-year timeframe. Citigroup broke down this outlook, saying it was targeting net revenue growth of 9.0 percent for its global wealth management business and 7.0 percent for its global credit card business. The bank also targeted revenue growth of 8.0 percent for its consumer banking business, 9.0 percent for its securities and banking business and 14 percent for its transaction services business. "The company hopes that this will allow them to put capital back in its core business, which will then increase the firm's return on equity," Briefing.com analysts wrote in a note to clients. Shares of the company, a component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, slipped 0.08 percent to 24.28 dollars around 1514 GMT in New York. Citigroup's stock is down roughly 17.5 percent since the start of 2008. On April 18, the company posted a net loss of 5.1 billion dollars for the first quarter and said it would cut an additional 9,000 jobs as it struggles with bad bets on sub-prime, or high-risk, mortgages. It was the second quarterly loss for Citigroup, which took a total 13.9 billion dollars in write-downs for the January-March period. Citigroup is the US bank hardest hit by the sub-prime crisis that erupted in August, wreaking havoc on financial markets and leading to a credit squeeze that is stifling growth in the global economy. Citigroup has been plagued by mounting losses from sub-prime mortgage investments amid the worst US housing slump in decades. The bank has raised billions of dollars to shore up its finances, including almost seven billion dollars from a state-controlled Singapore investment fund. Its top investors include the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation Pte Ltd, the Kuwait Investment Authority, Prince Alwaleed bin Talal bin Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia and former Citigroup chief executive Sanford Weill. - AFP /ls
  3. Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/sin.../322733/1/.html Posted: 15 January 2008 1951 hrs SINGAPORE: The Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC) may soon have a bigger stake in US-based Citigroup. GIC will pump in US$6.88 billion (S$9.8 billion) into Citigroup, which is one of the world's largest banks. This is part of Citigroup's bid to raise US$12.5 billion of capital. GIC's investment is being done through a financial instrument called convertible preferred securities. This will effectively give GIC some degree of protection if Citigroup's stock price should fall. But such a prudent investment with lower risk will also mean that GIC will see relatively lower returns.
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