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Citigroup, Bank of America
‘Nationalized’ as U.S. Calls Shots
By Ari Levy
Jan. 23 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. government’s decision to
pledge billions of additional dollars with strings
attached to Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. may
be nationalization by another name, according to former
bankers and regulators.
Faced with pressure from lawmakers, banks have shaken up
management, eliminated executive bonuses and staff and
canceled conventions. They’ll be forced to do monthly
reports on how they’ve boosted lending while slashing
quarterly dividends to one cent a share for three years.
“When the Treasury tells a bank to pay a penny a share
vs. its old dividend, you know who’s calling the shots,”
said Jon Bruss, a 40-year industry veteran and founder of
Hartland, Wisconsin-based Fortress Partners Capital
Management Ltd., which invests in banks. “It may not be
de jure nationalization but I think it’s de facto
nationalization.”
While avoiding steps taken by the U.K., which this week
acquired a 70 percent stake in Royal Bank of Scotland
Plc, U.S. regulators are no longer passively injecting
capital into the nation’s biggest banks. Investors have
fled, sending Citigroup and Bank of America down by more
than 50 percent this year, on concern that tougher U.S.
oversight is coming after the government takeover last
year of mortgage financers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
and insurer American International Group Inc.
Citigroup, based in New York, tumbled 56 cents, or 15
percent, to $3.11 yesterday on the New York Stock
Exchange. Bank of America plunged 97 cents, or 15
percent, to $5.71. The 24- company KBW Bank Index has
dropped 38 percent in 2009, following last year’s 50
percent decline.
Government Decides
“Some of these traditional management decisions are being
made by the government,” said Donald Powell, 67, who was
chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. from 2001
to 2005, and now lives in Amarillo, Texas. “Shareholders
don’t have a voice in some of these things that are
occurring.”
After the Treasury’s initial investments in October
failed to adequately shield Citigroup and Bank of America
from mortgage- related losses, the companies returned for
more capital along with protection from hundreds of
billions of dollars in potential defaults.
Citigroup needed $20 billion in November on top of an
earlier $25 billion injection, which still wasn’t enough
to keep the company from splitting apart after posting a
record deficit on Jan. 15. The same day, Bank of America
received $20 billion to cover losses tied to Merrill
Lynch & Co. after the two companies received a combined
$25 billion in October.
Executives Depart
Citigroup replaced Win Bischoff as chairman yesterday,
naming former Time Warner Inc. Chief Executive Officer
Richard Parsons to the post. Two weeks ago, former
Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, who had been a top
Citigroup executive and board member, announced plans to
step down. Merrill Lynch & Co. head John Thain was ousted
yesterday, less than a month after he negotiated the sale
of his company to Bank of America.
William K. Black, former lawyer at the Federal Home Loan
Bank of San Francisco and Office of Thrift Supervision,
says the Treasury could do better by assuming control of
the companies and removing existing management
altogether. By trying to avoid nationalizing the
institutions, the government is wasting money, he said.
“It’s insane to leave it in the control of the people who
have every incentive to cover up the scale of the
losses,” said Black, professor at the University of
Missouri-Kansas City School of Law. “You’re deliberately
negotiating a bad deal for the American people by not
getting an appropriate return for the risk you’re
taking.”
Dividends, Conferences
Investors are getting smaller returns because the banks
have to cut their dividends as part of the bailout
agreements. And the companies are being told how to spend
their money -- especially when it comes to conferences
and other business trips.
SunTrust Banks Inc., an Atlanta-based lender that sold
$4.9 billion in preferred shares to the U.S., eliminated
a sales conference to hold down travel expenses and
reduced compensation for 4,000 managers. AIG, which has
received $150 billion in bailout funds and is now
majority-owned by the government, drew fire from
lawmakers last year for conferences, bonuses and perks.
Citigroup and Bank of America aren’t necessarily headed
toward nationalization, according to Powell, who said
President Barack Obama’s administration is tasked with
developing an “exit strategy” to avoid ending up with
financial control. That may mean converting preferred
shares into common equity and then selling them, he said.
Another former bank regulator, Kevin Jacques, says a
nationalization policy may be preferable to the current
strategy of handling every case differently.
‘Partial Nationalization’
In 2008, Bear Stearns Cos. was bought by JPMorgan Chase &
Co. in a deal arranged by the government, Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc. went bankrupt, Washington Mutual Inc. was
seized and AIG was taken over. That hurts confidence in
the financial system and keeps investors guessing,
Jacques said.
“If you took a nationalization policy, you would at least
create some degree of certainty because now you know the
government is going to stand behind these institutions,”
said Jacques, 49, who was an economist with the Treasury
Department for 14 years before becoming a finance
professor at Baldwin- Wallace College in Berea, Ohio.
Now, “it’s almost like some kind of weird partial
nationalization,” he said.
Original at: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=ayHp841RcKAY&refer=worldwide
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