Financial life in a big town

May 11, 2008

Citi CEO Pandit

Filed under: money — Tags: , , — Silver @ 2:49 pm

Citigroup offered some investors an unwelcome dose of deja vu on Friday.

The largest bank in the United States presented its most comprehensive turnaround plan since Morgan Stanley banking and trading veteran Vikram Pandit took over as chief executive in December, but many of its key plans sounded all too familiar.

Pandit said on Friday that Citigroup Inc (C.N: Quote, Profile, Research) businesses would work together, allowing them to squeeze more revenue from individual products by selling them across multiple units. He also said he would cut costs and invest overseas.

If all this sounds familiar, there’s a good reason: it’s exactly what was promised at Citi’s last analyst day in December 2006 by the then-CEO, Chuck Prince, before he was succeeded by Pandit a year later.

“We thought Citi was going to start on a new road, and lo and behold, we’re down the same road again,” said Helena Ocampo, an analyst covering financial stocks at Sentinel Investments, which manages $5.6 billion of assets and owns Citi shares.

Skepticism helped push Citi’s stock down 2.8 percent to $23.63 on Friday, bringing its loss this year to nearly 20 percent.

To be sure, Pandit is making some bold moves credit scores. He said Citi would shed some $400 billion of non-core assets within three years, scale back in businesses like bond trading and ramp up in prime brokerage and electronic trading.

But by and large, Pandit is not proposing massive strategic changes, and is focusing instead on making sure Citi doesn’t see a repeat of the last two quarters, when it posted more than $15 billion of losses. 

Read more

No Comments

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

Powered by WordPress