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    Citi mulls more cuts in securities and banking

    (Reuters) - Citigroup Inc said it may make further cuts in its securities and banking unit in 2012 if revenue does not pick up meaningfully, as the prospect of more layoffs looms large over investment banks globally.

    The U.S. bank, which said last week that job cuts already underway across all its businesses would total about 5,000, invested just under $1 billion in its investment bank last year, as it rebuilt the unit after the 2008 financial crisis.

    But Chief Financial Officer John Gerspach told investors in a conference call on Tuesday that revenues in certain parts of securities and banking in 2011 had been "disappointing and unacceptable" and pointed to more possible cuts.

    "While we are strategically committed to securities and banking, we are not oblivious to the fact that our cost structure cannot be justified by our current revenues," Gerspach said, according to a transcript of the call.

    Gerspach added that while the bank would not rush into decisions around cutting expenses and capacity, it would not delay them "in the name of long-term strategy."

    Last week Citi, the third-largest U.S. bank by assets, reported a 29 percent drop in securities and banking quarterly revenues, excluding the accounting impact of changes in the value of the bank's debt.

    The unit includes investment banking, private equity and hedge fund operations.

    Like many rivals, it was hurt by the euro zone crisis, which battered capital markets in the latter part of 2011, denting trading income and discouraging clients from borrowing and doing deals.

    Citi, which has about 266,000 employees, took a charge of about $400 million in the fourth quarter for severance costs as it slashes jobs. Roughly a fifth of the cuts it has announced so far are to fall in the securities and banking business.

    A big round of redundancies began in Citi's London operation in early December, with bankers in advisory jobs, equities and fixed income laid off.

    Other have also been slashing headcount, particularly in their investment banks, with redundancies announced at major firms already reaching well over 130,000 since the mid-2011, according to a Reuters tally.

    With fourth quarter results among U.S. banks showing another strained three months for trading businesses, and euro zone debt troubles still unresolved, headhunters and bankers have been predicting for weeks that cuts would continue well into 2012.

    Many banks have been accelerating layoffs in the past month, ahead of the annual around of bonus payouts, but more rounds could follow by the end of the first quarter, industry sources said.

    Citi's U.S. rival Morgan Stanley made many of its planned 1,600 layoffs in January, with staff in credit and equities sales and trading hit hard.

    (Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore and Sarah White in London; Editing by David Holmes and Mark Potter)

     

    7 comments

    • Michael  •  29 days ago
      People are catching on to what these types banking operations are about. They make nothing but debt and bonuses for their execs. I'm glad OB wants to come down hard on them. They've robbed us way too much as it is.
    • gary s  •  29 days ago
      i want to see citibank and their mortgage companies fall flat. its their own business operations and choices in the mortgage sector that they are losing on because they force people into forclosure and lose because they wont make any kind of deferments, or modifications on mortgages. due to health issues i fell behind 2 months and they forced me into forcloseure. they will spend billions trying to force people out of their homes but wont put any help on the table, to keep people in homes and help, instead they use threats and force, which will not work when it comes to most people because being in forcloseure any lawyer will tell you dont pay a cent, it takes 2 years or longer to come to finality,. meaning they get nothing and people stay in their homes for free.i on the other hand am still waiting a responce, 6 months later, and even they say they cant take a dime from us, because they forced the forcloseure issue. how that for bad business?
    • Spud McCall  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  28 days ago
      The idea! Banks can't make any money unless they can dupe the public,? The people they commonally referred to as grapes: (you/me/he/she'it); dupe us into believing that they can be trusted to make money with our money! Only unless, and when they exercised FRAUDULANT PRACTISES, loading the "pretend stock" in exchange for real "securities" so they could live the high-life, pay boneses, issue stock options to CEO's, and have their annual shindig in the Bahamas.
      ...
      Funny how playing by the rules levels the playing field. The disenfranchised investment bankers, DIB's will-see-now what it's like to have to work for the money they phissed away that belonged to others who thought they were men of high principle.

      .
    • Spud McCall  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  28 days ago
      The idea! Banks can't make any money unless they can dupe the public? The people they communally referred to as grapes: (you/me/he/she'it); dupe us into believing that they can be trusted to make money with our money! Only unless, and when they exercised FRAUDULANT PRACTISES, loading the "pretend stock" in exchange for real "securities" so they could live the high-life, pay bonuses, issue stock options to CEO's, and have their annual shindig in the Bahamas.
      ...
      Funny how playing by the rules levels the playing field: The disenfranchised investment bankers, DIB's will-see-now what it's like to have to work for the money they phissed away that belonged to others who thought they were men of high principle.
    • Brian Brekke  •  29 days ago
      Banks are a business and like any business if they fail its managements fault not the customers...you could of at least restructured their loans so everyone would be happy...instead greed took precedence over people...then when you lose money you look to your loyal customers and raise fees lower intrest that you pay on deposits all because your CEO has to have an outrageous salary and pension package
    • Brian Brekke  •  29 days ago
      Once again banks are missing the mark....if poor upper management decisions are made penalize those responsible for making those decisions,take away their pension,cut their salaries,dont put it on the customers who did nothing wrong...I mean come on put blame where blame should be placed have some sort of backbone to hold people accountable for their decisions
    • zerosevendeuce  •  29 days ago
      What was saved by bailing out the banks ? Long term unemployment ? Massive foreclosures ? Countless companies going out of business ? Millions living of foodstamps ?
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