Glick Report
  • February 27, 2009 01:22 PM EST by Alexis Glick

    Citi Deal, Treasury's 'Stress Tests' Raise Lots of Questions

    It’s done. It’s finished. It’s now time to put all of the speculation to rest. The government and Citi (C) have sealed a deal. How does it work?

    The $25 billion dollars in preferred shares that the government initially invested will be converted into common equity shares assuming they get an equal number of private investors to do the same. Why?

    1. Preferred shares normally receive dividends. Citi would have had to pay the government $2.5 billion in dividends next year. Very costly in an environment where conserving cash is essential. 

    2. Preferred shares have no voting or controlling rights. A conversion to common equity at the current rate of $3.25 gives the government a 36% stake in the common equity shares of the company. Note the other $20 billion that the government invested will remain as convertible preferred shares with an 8% annual dividend. If conditions deteriorate, the government and Citi will look to convert the remaining investment. 

    3. Usually if a company goes bankrupt the debt holders get paid back first, then the preferred shareholders and then the common equity shareholders. If you think Citi is going to fail you could argue that a shareholder would prefer to retain the preferred shares so that they’ll be in second position if the company fails. The government will not allow Citi to fail. 

    4. The reason the government wants to make sure that private investors match the conversion of preferred shares that the government is willing to consider is because the government wants to protect their investment. If the bigger preferred investors like the Government of Singapore and Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal go along, as Citi has indicated they will, the taxpayer can take a little more comfort in noting that everyone is in it together. 

    5. The current formula assumes other Trust preferred shareholders and preferred shareholders will consider the attractive conversion plan and move into common equity. 

    So if you’re a preferred shareholder this morning and found out that Citi is suspending the dividend on your preferred stock, why stay in preferred shares other than to put yourself in second position if they fail? There’s absolutely no reason. The government has now essentially said that they will rescue this company at all costs. Current common equity shareholders now own 26% of the outstanding shares hence the dilution conversation over the past couple of weeks.

    Long term, what does this say about the Treasury’s plan?

    1. Preferred shares are gone. Common Equity is the new preferred. It does not require them to inject more capital. They get voting rights. Power to shake up boards as they’ll do in Citi’s case and by forcing the institution to match the conversion with private conversions, they protect their investment. 

    2. The BIGGER issue is what happens to the tens of millions of Americans who rely on dividend income. The income funds that invest on behalf of retirees who live off of that income as though it were a social security check. They will be wiped out. 

    3. The FDIC Chair said it herself yesterday when she announced the quarterly FDIC banking report when she said this is the worst climate in its 75 year history. She warned / suggested that financial institutions either suspend or reduce their dividends to conserve cash. This while the FDIC’s insurance fund has been depleted and odds are that they’ll have to double the rate by which they charge banks to inject funds into that insurance program. No mention just yet of tapping into the $30 billion dollar line from the Treasury Department. It is clear from the IndyMac failure, which cost them $10.7 billion dollars that they cannot afford to see a larger institution fail. So what happens….the smaller institutions that are holding up in the wake of this horrible credit environment will be forced to contribute funds when they really need it in order to make sure that the FDIC’s insurance fund remains solvent and prepared to protect deposits while financial institutions collapse. 

    4. Finally, consider for a second this drastic turn to tangible common equity from tier one capital ratios. Two fairly wonky accounting terms but two different ways to look at the health and well being of a financial institution. Clearly the Treasury’s plan and the FDIC’s suggestions yesterday indicate that tier one capital ratios have not proved to be sound measurements of a banks health. Somehow in the past couple of months, the markets, certain investors and our government have determined that tangible common equity is the way to determine a banks health and well being. The problem with that is whose best interests are we considering? This plan ignores the millions upon millions of Americans who rely on dividends. This plan says to all of the financial analysts (so-called experts), the rating agencies and the accounting groups around the world that the benchmark by which we measure a banks health has changed because we forced them to write down assets to a market price when no market existed. So they have record deposits, they have record levels of cash but that’s not good enough because every single month we say to them give us your worst case scenario now. Every time we do that accounting rules force them to take another charge, another loan loss reserve. It’s a sinking hole. 

    As you can see, I’m very frustrated about this. I don’t like seeing the rules change in the middle of the game. You have to ask yourself as a taxpayer now what you prefer to own, preferred shares or common equity shares. Frankly, I prefer to own common equity and participate on the upside. I do not qualify this as nationalization. I would like to think that once the deal with Citi is complete (by the end of April), we could hit rock bottom and begin to rebuild. If this conversion prevents the government from injecting more cash I say we take it. At the end of the day, we need these companies to win. We, the taxpayer, own them. It is in our best interest to see them get healthy. I still prefer removal of toxic assets into an aggregator bank without specific prices attached that hurt the taxpayer or the financial institution and rather a bill to the bank when the assets decline and a shared profit between the two parties on the upside. I want to see if Geithner’s public/private investment works. The details of that plan will determine the fate of these institutions over the next six months.

    Citi’s Chief Financial Officer Gary Crittenden joined me in studio this morning and walked through many of these questions and a whole lot more. Look at what he says about profitability, about how we measure institutions from one country to another and if the Treasury’s proposed stress test is similar to the stress test Citi did internally.

jdredd1

I work for Citigroup. This job is for the insurance, and in the current economic times, for a steady paycheck (for as long as it holds out)! The claims the the 'Tarp' funds are being used to stimulate lending are false claims made by our CEO. The truth is that citi has followed the oppisite path. The have tightened the lending and made it so restrictive that people who qualified last year cannot even borrow up to the limit approved last summer. I work my own real estate and construction company (small business). The current times have taken a toll on my business. The large companies such as Citi, Bank of America, and others supported the people who change the banking laws several years and most of these companies hired these people when their tour in government was over (ie: Mr. Reuben) These large companies brought this calamity upon themselves and we (tax payers) are now bailing them out from the place that their greed and corruption put them. The people and companies who carry this Country, the small business owners and family business owners, are the ones who are left in the cold and without any hope for the future. Where is the help for these businesses. We bailout and support the businesses that put us in the position that we are in. They are not going to support the people of this country as they are only interested in their own survival. These top executives will go home to their homes and not have to worry about bills. What about the true Americans?

March 3, 2009 at 12:37 am

Charles Jones

We cannot allow our government to make this mistake. We must tell government what we can do with My Project Plan and we need to do it as fast as we can, we do not have months or years to wait, we must do it right now! Just think about our taxpayers money, think about our banks that have to have accounts, payment slips, and add-on Mortgages so that Consumer's can buy a vehicle for under $100,000, when they may actually need two or more. What does My Project Plan cost, just figure how much a five deck underground parking lot costs with a five floor/eight room per floor with a central storage facility right on top having a short two story large sized gymnasium next to it which is for metal forging and some housing that's triangular with some circular domes which is accessed via tunnels connecting to the facility would cost. Add to that the cost of transport to and from the facility maybe via a train or if there were purchased hybrid air buses then busing would serve employees to come and go each day. Add some more to the cost of food and payrolls and shipment of the components which they make to the 'Conversion Facilities' that are to be managed within each state and employing many people that need jobs, figure about 25-100 per participating state. Now consider that all this effort is going to last beyond ten years because this is now a New industrial Operation in America, not just a Automaker Business anymore which can at anytime close its operations or even down convert its operations to a simple Vehicle Body Production Facility and that would save Taxpayers from a future tab yet unpaid Interest Rates that will eventually drive our economy into its grave and for America to lose as a government like Latvia (unemployment, construction, real estate farming & salaries have been cut by 25 percent) or Iceland both because of International Economics which was driven by the international financial crisis. (2-3)

March 1, 2009 at 1:55 am

WorriedMom

Is it starting to sink in that Obama is not going to usher in an era of prosperity? Obama is nationalizing banking and healthcare and energy and transportation so that the government can control those industries and dictate who gets loans, who has to pay back the loans, who gets what kind of healthcare, what energy sources people will use and how they are allowed to get around. The government will have full access to all your personal health records. You will have a GPS tracking you in your car and "smart grid" monitor tracking what you do in your own house. That is... after the government dictates what house you are allowed to buy and where since it will control mortgages and business loans. Think I'm nuts? I don't blame you. Please keep in mind that EVERY conversion to socialism in the history of the world started by a charismatic leader telling all the folks how he was going to change their lives for the better. Even Hitler was elected and loved by a large percentage of the population for years. They kept believing the speeches and refused to see the reality of what was happening. The faster Americans get over the shell shock and start fighting back the better chance we have to minimize the damage. We need to stop being blinded by the halo and distracted by the sweet speeches and actually SEE what is happening.

February 27, 2009 at 8:51 pm

WorriedMom

Obama doesn't want dividends, he wants control. So far he's nationalizing banking and healthcare and energy and transportation and education so that the government can control those industries and dictate who gets loans, who has to pay back the loans, who gets what kind of healthcare, what energy sources people will use and how they are allowed to get around. The government will have full access to all your personal health records. You will have a GPS tracking you in your car and "smart grid" monitor tracking what you do in your own house. That is... after the government dictates what house you are allowed to buy and where since it will control mortgages and business loans. Your alma mater starts getting out of line... Obama also has sole control of student loans. Think I'm nuts? I don't blame you. Please keep in mind that EVERY conversion to socialism in the history of the world started by a charismatic leader telling all the folks how he was going to change their lives for the better. Even Hitler was elected and loved by a large percentage of the population for years. They kept believing the speeches and refused to see the reality of what was happening. The faster Americans get over the shell shock and start fighting back the better chance we have to minimize the damage. We need to stop being blinded by the halo and distracted by the sweet speeches and actually SEE what is happening.

February 27, 2009 at 7:35 pm

David_The_Great

Alexis, I still not like government to take equity in the private sector. I prefer to go with the government guarantee the toxic assets to sell them off in the long term which the GOP proposed in the House last year.

February 27, 2009 at 7:29 pm

KnightRider007

So has treasury techinically shut out Citi shareholders? That's what I'm reading.

February 27, 2009 at 6:49 pm

about this blog

  • Alexis Glick is an anchor for FOX Business Network. Prior to joining FOX, Glick served as a correspondent for the Today Show and co-anchored the third hour of that program. Before her stint at NBC News, she was the senior trading correspondent for CNBC and reported from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

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