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Dog-faced pony soldier
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ANOTHER bailout!
Yep, the feds are now handing $300,000,000,000 of your money to Citigroup for them to continue making lousy investments and decisions.
How long do we expect they can really keep this up? - - - - - http://money.cnn.com/2008/11/23/news/companies/citigroup/index.htm?postversion=2008112400 - - - - - Citi dodges bullet Government will guarantee losses on more than $300 billion in troubled assets and make a fresh $20 billion injection. NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The U.S. government on Sunday announced a massive rescue package for Citigroup - the latest move to steady the banking giant, whose shares have plunged in the past week. Citigroup shares rose 56% in premarket trading Monday. The plan has two key features: First, the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) will backstop some losses against more than $300 billion in troubled assets. Second, the Treasury will make a fresh $20 billion investment in the bank. The government has already injected $25 billion into Citigroup as part of the $700 billion bailout passed by Congress in October. In return for the latest intervention, the government will receive an additional batch of preferred shares - $20 billion for its direct investment and $7 billion as compensation for the loan guarantees. Citigroup will pay an 8% dividend rate on those shares. In addition, the government will get warrants, or the right to purchase $2.7 billion worth Citigroup shares in the future. The government will impose restrictions as well. Citigroup will be prohibited from paying out a dividend of more than a penny per share for the next three years and will face limits on executive compensation. Plus, Citigroup will be expected to adjust mortgages for troubled borrowers, using procedures similar to those the FDIC implemented at IndyMac, which it took over last summer. "With these transactions, the U.S. government is taking the actions necessary to strengthen the financial system and protect U.S. taxpayers and the U.S. economy," Treasury, Federal Reserve and the FDIC said in a joint statement. Under the terms of the Citigroup rescue package, the bank would be on the hook for the first $29 billion in losses on the covered assets, which includes mostly loans backed by residential and commercial mortgages. It would cover 10% of losses above that amount, with the government shouldering the rest. Despite the massive rescue effort, regulators did not push for a management change at Citigroup. In recent days, there had been speculation that Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit could step down. There had also been talk that the company was considering replacing Chairman Sir Win Bischoff, although the company denied such reports. Citigroup has been one of the hardest hit financial firms since the mortgage market first started to unravel in the fall of 2007. Over the past four quarters, the company has recorded close to $21 billion in losses. Investors seemed encouraged by news of the Sunday night rescue. Major European markets jumped at the open, with Citi shares climbing 35% in Frankfurt. U.S. futures were pointing to a higher open Monday. A scary week Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Timothy Geithner, president of the New York Fed, were both involved in the weekend talks over Citigroup's fate, according to government officials. Geithner is expected to be nominated to be Treasury Secretary by President-elect Barack Obama. There had been concerns that letting another major financial institution fail would have disastrous consequences for both the U.S. economy as well as the global financial system. The bank had more than $2 trillion in assets as of the end of the third quarter and has operations in more than 100 countries. Last week, fears about Citigroup's fate rattled equity markets around the globe and sent shares of the 196-year-old firm plummeting to levels not seen in over a decade. Citigroup shares lost close to two-thirds of their value for the week, even as the company announced plans to layoff more than 50,000 workers and as its largest individual shareholder upped his stake. By the close of trading on Friday, Citigroup (C, Fortune 500) shares had dipped below $4 a share, and were down 87% for the year. The most recent slide in Citigroup stock comes on the heels of news earlier this month that the Treasury Department was abandoning its initial rescue plan to buy troubled assets from banks - Citigroup had been seen as a major beneficiary of that strategy. Instead, as part of the $700 billion bailout package that was signed into law in early October, Treasury has focused on making direct investments in banks. In exchange for equity stakes, the agency has injected $25 billion into Citigroup and an additional $100 billion into eight other major U.S. financial institutions. Despite the recent events, many industry experts had stressed that Citigroup is relatively healthy. Two veteran banking analysts - Mike Mayo of Deutsche Bank and Ladenburg Thalman's Richard Bove - both advised clients last week that Citigroup could survive substantial loan losses.
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A car, a 911, a motorbike and a few surfboards Black Cars Matter |
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Cars & Coffee Killer
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: State of Failure
Posts: 32,246
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I expect to have a definitive answer in four years.
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Some Porsches long ago...then a wankle... 5 liters of VVT fury now -Chris "There is freedom in risk, just as there is oppression in security." |
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Friend of Warren
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Lincoln, NE
Posts: 16,491
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At least I finally know someone this bailout money is going to help. He works in a local Smith Barney office (admin type not stock broker) which is owned by Citigroup. And figured he was going to be packing his boxes today and be out of a job. Still sucks to see all this money being thrown around with no means to have it paid back.
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Kurt V No more Porsches, but a revolving number of motorcycles. |
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Work in Progress
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Don't forget too that Citi is getting TARP money as well.
It is my opinion that the Government has to do this. I don't think many but a handful of people want to see the world where these banks fail. What I wish we would learn going forward (that I don't expect to happen) is that if you are too big to fail, you are too big. I am sure those sneaky bankers are already working on a new unregulated product, like credit default swaps, that they can blow way out of proportion and set up the next round of banking stress in 10 - 20 years.
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"The reason most people give up is because they look at how far they have to go, not how far they have come." -Bruce Anderson via FB -Marine Blue '87 930 |
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Did you get the memo?
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Wichita, KS
Posts: 32,389
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Where does the line start for my bailout? Surely that's next, everyone else has gotten their piece.
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Registered
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: dfw tx
Posts: 3,957
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I've heard the Colleges are lining up next....
Older guys may remember one of Ronald Reagan's themes was 'Government should not be in the business of picking winners and loser's. Wow, how far have we strayed from that concept?
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Registered
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Colorado, USA
Posts: 8,279
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Yep, colleges and universities are next.
It's the government "privatize profits, socialize risk" policy in action again. The colleges and universities were doing great during the stock market rise, they had their endowments invested, sometimes in hedge funds, and were banking big money. Of course, when they were raking in $$$ hand over fist, that was all theirs, and they were brilliant. But when a LOSS occurs, of course our government needs to step in with taxpayer money. Good thing our government has big printing presses. |
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abit off center
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Yep, reward failure. We are all winners, everyone gets a trophy..
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______________________ Craig G2Performance Twinplug, head work, case savers, rockers arms, etc. |
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AutoBahned
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Do I still have to pay off my Citi credit card?
BTW - they just raised the interest rate - it now STARTS at 20%. Anything over 18% used to be illegal in many states. |
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Registered
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I looked at some studies of past financial crises - how much money governments spent to stabilize and rebuild from those crises. I forget the numbers, but as a % of US GDP, $700BN is much less than is typically spent.
In other words - expect the govt to spend a lot more money to support the financial system and the economy, before we turn the corner. At least a couple trillion $. Is it money well-spent? Well, we saw what damage the Lehman collapse did to the credit markets, and we've now seen what damage the credit markets are doing to the real economy. C is many times larger than Lehman, so you can probably guess at the damage if C collapses. We're talking that worlds' largest bank, by assets (this might be outdated info, but anyway it is damn big).
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211 What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”? |
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Cars & Coffee Killer
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: State of Failure
Posts: 32,246
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Quote:
We've put all of our economic "eggs" in a few, very large baskets.
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Some Porsches long ago...then a wankle... 5 liters of VVT fury now -Chris "There is freedom in risk, just as there is oppression in security." |
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Oh, by the way, the deal is actually govt injects $20BN capital into C, C issues govt preferred stock and warrants, govt guarantees $300BN of C assets (C takes first $30BN of loss and 10% of subsequent, govt takes 90% of subsequent), govt controls C's executive compensation.
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211 What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”? |
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Cars & Coffee Killer
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: State of Failure
Posts: 32,246
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Time for some TR-style Standard Oil breakups.
The market is hurting from the lack of competition. Oh, and these stupid mergers need to stop being approved too.
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Some Porsches long ago...then a wankle... 5 liters of VVT fury now -Chris "There is freedom in risk, just as there is oppression in security." |
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"O"man(are we in trouble)
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: On the edge
Posts: 16,452
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This is a case where the right hand doesn't know what the left hand is doing. Billions are being handed out and there is NO end in sight.
Last edited by widgeon13; 11-24-2008 at 01:13 PM.. |
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Driver
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Sweet. 'Cause knowing my luck, I'm at the end of the handout line. Keep it comin' baby. I want to make sure I get my fair share, too.
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1987 Venetian Blue (looks like grey) 930 Coupe 1990 Black 964 C2 Targa |
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Cars & Coffee Killer
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: State of Failure
Posts: 32,246
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So is this fiscal version of "the stranger"?
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Some Porsches long ago...then a wankle... 5 liters of VVT fury now -Chris "There is freedom in risk, just as there is oppression in security." |
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Registered
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Summerville, SC
Posts: 2,057
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Quote:
The government would have had to pay a few trillion in FDIC insurance. (People with non-FDIC funds would have lost chunks of money. The FDIC payouts would have created severe inflation.) It would have been a horrible summer. BUT, if the government had let all the "bad actors" in the economy fail when the market was ready to expel them (in March, with Bear's collapse), we would now be beginning to enter a real recovery. Instead, the government has keep (and with the Citi bailout, is "keeping") all the "zombie" financial companies "alive." The economy needs to "vomit" the poison (the bad debt and bankrupt businesses) out of the system in order to have a recovery. The government is keeping the poison in the economy creating a long-term debilitating situation that will take decades to recover from. The government's actions is driving us into another Great Depression. |
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Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,189
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Banks have slowed their production of massive amounts of new cash (new loans, derivatives) and now our Govt is looking to supplement those "new cash" shortfalls. (note the recent strengthening of the dollar ...the deflation.) The problem is, where to infuse it all. Can they push new money into the system fast enough to stave off bigger deflation?
Yep, we are now rewarding the least responsible.
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Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2˘ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() |
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Registered
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Quote:
Then most likely LEH MER GS MS would have failed too, also numerous commercial banks including C. Similar results globally - Barclays, RBS, UBS, CS, many German banks, etc. Essentially a near-global collapse of banking system, triggering appx $4.2 trillion of FDIC guarantee payments, while another $2.6 trillion of uninsured deposits would be lost (end 2007 data). Most money market funds would have collapsed, so that's $4 trillion or so of investors' money gone (early 2008 data). Equities would have collapsed, of course. More than they have. Credit to consumer and businesses would have shut down, full-stop. You can see how much damage a tightening of lending standards is doing to the economy right now, imagine the damage from a sudden -70% to -90% decline in lending? Global trade, state/local govts, other areas of economy would have been slammed. And the Federal govt's own ability to fund its operations - maybe even to pay the FDIC guarantees - would have been in danger. Since China, Japan, and other buyers of treasuries wouldn't be happy that the US govt decided to fiddle while America burns. Under your scenario, the Second Great Depression would have started in spring 2008.
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211 What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”? |
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"O"man(are we in trouble)
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: On the edge
Posts: 16,452
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