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Citigroup stake sold by US govt for $10.5 billion

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Bloomberg New York
Last Updated : Jan 21 2013 | 6:57 AM IST

The US Treasury Department sold its remaining stock in Citigroup Inc for $10.5 billion, bringing the country’s third-biggest bank a step closer to independence from the government following a $45 billion bailout in 2008.

The Treasury said it disposed of 2.4 billion shares at $4.35 each, compared with yesterday’s closing price of $4.45 on the New York Stock Exchange. The sale raises the profit for taxpayers on the government’s stake to about $6.85 billion.

The sale helps Citigroup exit the 2008 bailout, which was provided to keep the New York-based bank from collapsing as its stock sank below $5 and some depositors started withdrawing their money. Citigroup also had to get $301 billion of government guarantees on its riskiest assets, making the bailout the biggest among US banks.

“We’re seeing a form of governmental handcuffs being released,” Bill Bradway, founder of banking consultant Bradway Research LLC in Framingham, Massachusetts, said before the announcement. “Citi will be basically disentangling itself from direct ownership from the government, and the government is cashing out.”

Citigroup shares declined 0.5 per cent by 9.43 am in German trading. They have rallied 34 per cent this year, though remain down about 92 per cent from their December 2006 high of $56.41. Bank of America, the biggest US bank by assets, has declined 23 per cent this year while JPMorgan Chase & Co, the second-biggest, fell about 4 per cent.

“We had an opportunity to lock in substantial profits for the taxpayer and avoid future risk,” Tim Massad, acting assistant secretary for financial stability, said in the government statement.

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The Treasury said its average price for selling 7.7 billion Citigroup shares was $4.14. The government acquired the shares at a conversion price of $3.25.

The US has been winding down bank-bailout and emergency-lending programmes while trying to recoup the money it provided to bolster private companies including General Motors Co and American International Group (AIG).

The Treasury received $13.6 billion from last month’s initial public stock offering by Detroit-based General Motors, and still holds about 33 per cent of the automaker. The government said in September it plans to convert $49.1 billion of AIG preferred shares into common stock that would eventually be sold in the open market.

The US government stake in Citigroup came from converting $25 billion of bailout money last year into common stock at $3.25 a share. The 7.7 billion shares equated to a 27 per cent stake.

“Citi is pleased that the US Department of the Treasury (UST) has finalised plans to exit from its remaining holdings of Citigroup common stock,” Jon Diat, a spokesman for the New York-based bank, said in an e-mailed statement. “We are very appreciative of the support provided by the UST during the financial crisis.”

The Treasury still owns warrants on 465.1 million Citigroup shares, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp holds $800 million of the bank’s trust-preferred securities on behalf of the Treasury, according to a regulatory filing.

In October, the Treasury sold another $2.2 billion of the trust preferred, which Citigroup had delivered to the government as compensation for the asset guarantees. The bank also paid about $3 billion of dividends to the government on its preferred shares.

Because of the new stock Citigroup issued to raise capital and satisfy the government, the number of shares outstanding ballooned to about 29 billion from about 5.5 billion, diluting shareholders by more than 80 per cent.

This week’s offering may help lure back investors who were worried that the stock might be pressured by the Treasury’s sales or leery of investing alongside the government, said Gary Townsend, president of the investment firm Hill-Townsend Capital LLC in Chevy Chase, Maryland.

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First Published: Dec 08 2010 | 12:02 AM IST

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