Saturday, August 22, 2009

The New CITI


It is clear that banks such as Citi and Bank of America were on the brink of collapse during the Great Recession of 2008.


Citi received $45 Billion in Tarp funds and subsequently converted the government's preferred stock into common stock. The government now owns 34% of Citi common stock. There has been a huge increase in common shares outstanding as a result of the combined government and private $58 Billion preferred stock exchange offer. All of the preferred holdings were converted into common stock thereby diluting common shareholders and eliminating the payment of preferred dividends. This conversion has dramatically improved Citi's capital base as it now has a higher tangible book value than most big financial institutions.


Citi has split itself into two banks- the retail and investment bank and Citi Holdings. Citi Holdings consists of the household lending arm and other asset pools of capital. The big question has been whether these so called 'toxic assets' will pay off. Based on tangible book value, Citi is cheap with a strong capital base. It is relying on its' global trading and investment banking business to create profits. Fundamentals have improved as credit quality has stabilized and consumer credit delinquencies have steadied.


Random thoughts....Bank of America is in a similar position as Citi but is stronger because of the acquisition of Merrill Lynch last year....the Dow Jones is down close to 20% in the last twelve months...look for the market to test 9,700 on the Dow and 1100 on the S&P within a few months....September, 2009 will be here in days as people try to forget the Lehman collapse of last September.....remember that the market is a leading indicator and it is pointing to a strong first half of 2010....the real estate market will be on the upswing in 2010 as party talk will include the discussion of 'jumbo mortgages'....


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