Citibank is teetering on the edge, with its shares trading under $2 as of Friday, and, almost as importantly, with the bank's alleged/perceived/unacknowledged solvency issues becoming part of the political culture.
Today, regulators, Treasury officials and bank executives are working through a plan that would inject the bank with billions in new capital. At the same time, they're asking Wall Street to calm its collective nervous system. The government won't pull Citibank into receivership, but a jittery stock market might force their hand.
"All these Jim Cramers crowing about the free market need to put up or shut up," the official said.
Citigroup's
market capitalization is around $11.25 billion dollars right now, and
its shares trading at around $2.15 cents. The government already owns
$45 billion worth of Citigroup preferred stock -- about 25% of the
bank's overall equity.
The government proposes to convert its
preferred stock into common equity, which poses a problem: it'll be
very hard for the government to retain less than 40% ownership stakes
when the conversions are complete; the conversion price would have to
be around $20 dollars per common share, which is almost ten times as
much as a common share is now worth. In theory, the government can
set an arbitrary conversion price, but that level of intervention would
be precarious. So -- the government wants to talk up the price of
Citigroup stocks and it can talk up the price a bit.
A Citigroup
official said that the company and the government are working on the
specific convertible formula. Because the conversion terms would dilute
the existing pool of stock, "The question we're trying to answer is
whether this is something that would need shareholder approval," the
Citigroup official said. An annual meeting is scheduled for April.
If
all of this internal maneuvering smacks of government control over
Citigroup, that's because the government essentially has the leverage
it needs right now. And this informal arrangement is mutually
beneficial. The government gets to restructure the bank without
acquiring majority ownership stakes; Citigroup remains private and gets
to rebut claims that it is insolvent. They can take more government
money if they're worried about the stress tests, but as of today, the
government considers Citibank well capitalized.







And how many people should trust mere assurances that Citibank is well capitalized? I wouldn't encourage anybody to trust these assurances.
I would feel it is far better to assume the reverse. If the government tells me that Citibank is well capitalized, then that is point one that Citibank is not well capitalized.
Government bank regulators will use that line over and over again until the day (and probably a month thereafter) when Citibank collapses into bankruptcy.
Why is the US and world financial system in the sorry condition it is?
Perhaps someone is willing to tell us.
http://www.meltdownthebook.com/
Neither I. Citibank is moving towards liquidation.
''The government proposes to convert its preferred stock into common equity, which poses a problem: it'll be very hard for the government to retain less than 40% ownership stakes when the conversions are complete; the conversion price would have to be around $20 dollars per common share, which is a almost ten times as much as a common share is now worth.''
At the current state of global financial crisis? I think the government is owning the company as part of economic movement towards socialism.
http://www.murphyabovethelaw.com/