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Citi may book $10 bn gain on Morgan Stanley deal

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BLOOMBERG New York
Last Updated : Jan 29 2013 | 3:33 AM IST

Citigroup Inc may book a gain of as much as $10 billion by selling control of its brokerage to Morgan Stanley, helping to replenish capital depleted by the biggest losses in the bank’s history, a person familiar with the talks said.

The pretax gain would come from writing up the value of Citigroup’s Smith Barney unit to a new price set by the deal, said the person, who declined to be identified because the talks are confidential. The gain of $5 billion to $6 billion after taxes would flow into Citigroup’s capital, a loan-loss cushion so eroded that the New York-based bank had to get $45 billion of rescue funds last year from the US government.

“You’re selling out the future to get through the crisis of the present, and unfortunately they don’t have a lot of other choice,” David Trone, an analyst at Fox-Pitt Kelton Cochran Caronia Waller in New York, said in a January 9 interview.

The worst banking crisis since the Great Depression forced Citigroup Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit, 51, to abandon his pledge not to sell Smith Barney. For the past decade, the unit has been at the center of the bank’s plan to provide bond- underwriting, savings accounts and investment advice under a single umbrella. Former US Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, 70, who joined the company in 1999 and had opposed calls to break it up, said on Friday he plans to quit the board.

Citigroup spokesman Michael Hanretta declined to comment. Jim Wiggins, a spokesman for Morgan Stanley, didn’t return calls seeking comment. Citigroup fell 1 per cent to $6.68 in German trading on Monday; Morgan Stanley rose 0.9 per cent to $19.24.

Talks on the plan to combine Smith Barney with Morgan Stanley’s brokerage in a $20 billion joint venture progressed over the weekend, another person briefed on the talks said. The deal may be announced as soon as mid-week, this person said.

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Under the plan being considered, Morgan Stanley would pay $2 billion to $3 billion to Citigroup to obtain 51 per cent of a venture that would combine both firms’ retail brokerage arms, people familiar with the plan said.

The new firm, tentatively named Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, would have about 22,000 brokers, exceeding the network created by Bank of America Corp’s January 1 takeover of Merrill Lynch & Co, which have about 20,000 brokers between them.

Citigroup posted $10.4 billion of net losses in the first nine months of 2008, putting the bank on track to post its worst year since predecessor City Bank of New York was founded in 1812. Beleaguered by writedowns on mortgage-related bonds, losses on commercial real estate loans and costs related to the bankruptcy of chemicals maker LyondellBasell Industries AF, Citigroup probably lost another $5.82 billion in the fourth quarter, Sandler O’Neill & Partners analyst Jeff Harte estimated in a January 9 report.

That figure doesn’t include a $4 billion one-time gain that Citigroup expects from the sale, completed last month, of its retail banking operations in Germany. That unit was also sold by Pandit in an effort to free up capital.

Citigroup, which has 352,000 employees and 200 million customers and does business in more than 100 countries, was pieced together through acquisitions during a 17-year span by former Chairman Sanford “Sandy” Weill, who stepped down from a full-time role in October 2003.

Pandit, hired in December 2007 following the ouster of Weill’s handpicked successor, Charles O “Chuck” Prince, vowed to conduct a “dispassionate” review of Citigroup’s business mix, and whether the company was too big to manage, as some analysts and investors contended.

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First Published: Jan 13 2009 | 12:00 AM IST

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