Click
Chat
 
Du kan vedhæfte PDF, JPG, PNG, DOC(X), XLS(X) og TXT-filer. Klik på ikonet, vælg fil og vent til upload er færdig før du indsender eller uploader endnu en fil.
60
Vedhæft Send
DANMARKS STØRSTE INVESTORSITE MED DEBAT, CHAT OG NYHEDER

Jeg tror på Bankrally i denne uge


3153 23/2 2009 13:31
Oversigt

De finansielle aktier har fået royake tæsk her de sidste uger. De er handlet ned primært på frygt for at Citi og BAC bliver nationaliseret. Nu taler man om at Citi får en equity investering på op i mod 45 mia dollars mod ejerskab. Så der bliver nok IKKE tale om nationalisering. Jeg tror vi får en afklaring i løbet af ugen, mandag eller tirsdag, og så tror jeg vi får et massivt rally i bankaktierne. Vi har set BAC gå 40% op før. Det tror jeg sker igen. Mine Barclays er oppe 8%, men et stykke fra toppen endnu.



23/2 2009 14:08 03155



Citi presses US to take 40% stake
By Francesco Guerrera in New York and Krishna Guha in Washington
Published: February 23 2009 00:40 | Last updated: February 23 2009 11:05
Citigroup is pressing the US government to agree on a new capital injection that would increase the authorities’ stake in the troubled bank to about 40 per cent but stop short of an outright nationalisation.

The talks come after Citi’s shares slumped last week as investors feared it would be nationalised. Citi insiders said they expected a decision on the company’s future in the coming weeks but warned that it would have to come earlier if its shares fell again in the next few days.

EDITOR’S CHOICE
On Wall Street: Nationalisation is most likely way out of US banking mess - Feb-20

Fears for BofA and Citi rattle markets - Feb-21

In depth: US banks - Jan-14

Citi’s German-listed shares jumped €0.40 or 29 per cent at €1.91 in morning Frankfurt trading. The US-listed shares fell 22 per cent to $1.95 on Friday.

People close to the situation said Citi executives had been in discussions with regulators at the weekend over a plan that would enable the government and other shareholders to convert up to $75bn of preferred shares into common stock.

According to its proponents, the injection of common stock would bolster Citi’s capital base while at the same time allaying market fears of a nationalisation. Under the plan, first revealed by the Financial Times last week, Citi could also try to raise fresh equity with a public share offering. The aim would be to keep the government stake to no more than 40 per cent or at least below 50 per cent, said people familiar with the plan.

People familiar with the plan said it would hinge on the price at which the government and other shareholders, which include sovereign wealth funds and Prince Al Waleed, convert their shares as well as how many of its $45bn-worth of shares the government converts.

However, the US Treasury has so far not expressed an opinion on the idea and it is unclear whether the government would agree to convert its preferred shares into Citi’s common shares without demanding a controlling stake.

Top government officials – who are trying to establish a more strategic and less ad hoc response to the crisis – are anxious to avoid the type of Sunday night crisis announcement that became a staple of Hank Paulson crisis management at the Treasury last year.

They apparently believe that the market response to White House and Treasury statements on Friday reaffirming the administration’s commitment to private ownership of financial institutions buys them some time to come up with a way forward.

The Treasury said secretary Tim Geithner would “preserve a financial system that is owned and managed by the private sector”.

Citi declined to comment. The Treasury was not available to comment.

The authorities indicate a strong preference for supporting banks in private markets wherever possible – not least because of the potential international disruption that could ensue if a large global bank failed. But Treasury did not rule out nationalisation in all circumstances.

Most analysts believe that even if the authorities reject full nationalisation of Citi via the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation the government will end up taking a substantial stake in the bank.

Private sector executives and foreign government officials complain that Treasury is still not staffed up with enough mid and senior level officials to develop and communicate policy at the pace required by the crisis.

Additional reporting by Julie MacIntosh in New York



23/2 2009 15:19 03161



Citi presses US to take 40% stake
By Francesco Guerrera in New York and Krishna Guha in Washington
Published: February 23 2009 00:40 | Last updated: February 23 2009 11:05
Citigroup is pressing the US government to agree on a new capital injection that would increase the authorities’ stake in the troubled bank to about 40 per cent but stop short of an outright nationalisation.

The talks come after Citi’s shares slumped last week as investors feared it would be nationalised. Citi insiders said they expected a decision on the company’s future in the coming weeks but warned that it would have to come earlier if its shares fell again in the next few days.

EDITOR’S CHOICE
On Wall Street: Nationalisation is most likely way out of US banking mess - Feb-20

Fears for BofA and Citi rattle markets - Feb-21

In depth: US banks - Jan-14

Citi’s German-listed shares jumped €0.40 or 29 per cent at €1.91 in morning Frankfurt trading. The US-listed shares fell 22 per cent to $1.95 on Friday.

People close to the situation said Citi executives had been in discussions with regulators at the weekend over a plan that would enable the government and other shareholders to convert up to $75bn of preferred shares into common stock.

According to its proponents, the injection of common stock would bolster Citi’s capital base while at the same time allaying market fears of a nationalisation. Under the plan, first revealed by the Financial Times last week, Citi could also try to raise fresh equity with a public share offering. The aim would be to keep the government stake to no more than 40 per cent or at least below 50 per cent, said people familiar with the plan.

People familiar with the plan said it would hinge on the price at which the government and other shareholders, which include sovereign wealth funds and Prince Al Waleed, convert their shares as well as how many of its $45bn-worth of shares the government converts.

However, the US Treasury has so far not expressed an opinion on the idea and it is unclear whether the government would agree to convert its preferred shares into Citi’s common shares without demanding a controlling stake.

Top government officials – who are trying to establish a more strategic and less ad hoc response to the crisis – are anxious to avoid the type of Sunday night crisis announcement that became a staple of Hank Paulson crisis management at the Treasury last year.

They apparently believe that the market response to White House and Treasury statements on Friday reaffirming the administration’s commitment to private ownership of financial institutions buys them some time to come up with a way forward.

The Treasury said secretary Tim Geithner would “preserve a financial system that is owned and managed by the private sector”.

Citi declined to comment. The Treasury was not available to comment.

The authorities indicate a strong preference for supporting banks in private markets wherever possible – not least because of the potential international disruption that could ensue if a large global bank failed. But Treasury did not rule out nationalisation in all circumstances.

Most analysts believe that even if the authorities reject full nationalisation of Citi via the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation the government will end up taking a substantial stake in the bank.

Private sector executives and foreign government officials complain that Treasury is still not staffed up with enough mid and senior level officials to develop and communicate policy at the pace required by the crisis.

Additional reporting by Julie MacIntosh in New York



TRÅDOVERSIGT