The 6am cut - Alphaville by email

Most Popular Posts

  1. Hedge fund Tuesday
  2. What killed the Ospraie?
  3. Draaisma: "We're in the dull phase"
  4. Further reading
  5. Further reading
  6. Show more...
  7. Show less...
  8.  

Blogs we're reading

Classified Jobs

Director of Finance and Corporate Services
Recruiter: NSPCC
Head of Operational Rigour
Recruiter: Barclaycard International
Head of Customer Service - Savings
Recruiter: Nationwide Building Society
Business Analyst
Recruiter: Credit Suisse
Head of Finance
Recruiter: ESCP-EAP
Group Chief Accountant
Recruiter: Misys
Lead Economist, Development Research Department
Recruiter: African Development Bank
Finance Manager
Recruiter: London 2012

Site Navigation


Principal content

Citi takes big hits across the board: 60 per cent drop in Q3 income

Citi wasn’t due to report Q3 earning until the middle of October. But a statement today prepared the ground for the announcement of big losses - with a fall on the scale of the hapless Bear Stearns.

Citi currently estimates that it will report a decline in net income in the range of 60% from the prior-year quarter, subject to finalizing third quarter results.

That huge loss has been realised from two hits from LBO debt and subprime mortgages.

Throughout the credit crunch, banks have been quick to point out that they hold few, or no subprime assets. Most casualties so far have thus been victims of contagion. No such luck for Citi.

Instead, there’s just huge amount of LBO debt and subprime mortgage securities stuck on the bank’s balance sheet - making it the most direct casualty of the credit crunch to date.

Citi lost $1.4bn on holdings of LBO debts:

Write-downs of approximately $1.4 billion pre-tax, net of underwriting fees, on funded and unfunded highly leveraged finance commitments. These commitments totalled $69 billion at the end of the second quarter, and $57 billion at the end of the third quarter. Write-downs were recorded on all highly leveraged finance commitments where there was value impairment, regardless of the expected funding date.

And Citi are still having difficulty syndicating. As FT Alphaville observed earlier Monday, bank’s are having to brook significant losses on sales where they can make them - so there could be more pain for Citi to come.

As for Citi’s subprime debt, it too is stuck on the bank’s books: “warehoused” for use in future securitizations. Here the bank reports $1.3bn in losses:
Losses of approximately $1.3 billion pre-tax, net of hedges, on the value of sub-prime mortgage-backed securities warehoused for future collateralized debt obligation (”CDO”) securitizations, CDO positions, and leveraged loans warehoused for future collateralized loan obligation (”CLO”) securitizations.

Note that Citi, a touch coy here, hasn’t disclosed the total amount of subprime securities they hold - only the $1.3bn loss on them they’ve realised so far.

But those losses aren’t just coming from toxic debt products. Citi has also lost $600m through their fixed income trading operations because of “market volatility”. And a massive $2.6bn hit has been taken because of an increase in global “credit costs”. The charge was:
Due to continued deterioration in the credit environment, organic portfolio growth, and acquisitions. Approximately one-fourth of the increase in credit costs was due to higher net credit losses and approximately three-fourths was due to higher charges to increase loan loss reserves.

While other banks have been nimble on their feet and hedged their way around big losses, Citi’s results look nothing short of an out and out embarrassment. UBS was quick to direct senior figures towards the job pages and announce changes and cost cutting. Surely heads will also roll at Citi? We suspect that all that troubling talk of a Citigroup break up to unlock shareholder value could gain ground again - fast.

RSS Feed

Comments

  1. Oct 01   21:46 Posted by KH [report]

    NewsVisual had an interesting article on the management at Citigroup. They created an interactive map of the Board of Directors and showed other companies they are involved in http://www.newsvisual.com/newsvisual/2007/10/management-expe.html . The industries vary from finance, to food, to engineering, to entertainment. With all of this experience I think Citigroup will manage to bounce back from today’s loss relatively quickly.

This post is closed to further comments.