"The simple problem is that Citi, like most banks, remains leveraged to the hilt. Worse, the market’s renewed focus on banks’ assets versus their tangible common equity renders the government’s injections of preferred stock redundant. This is perhaps unfair – preference shares do help to pay the bills. Citi maintains it can, with sound fundamentals, tough out the market’s frenzy, opting for inaction over a kneejerk move. The authorities’ assuming effective control through purchases of common stock is unlikely. An engineered carve-up is less so. Either way, the government is again singled out as the only party in a position to assuage fears. If action is required, it will be theirs."
This is a great assessment. Let's see what happens.
Here's Joe Weisenthal on Clusterstock:
"The market might believe that Citi can't survive the balance sheet writedowns in its future, but at the moment, it's still got the financial characteristics of a vaguely healthy bank. The catalyst here is the stock price, not a bank run."
This is what Lex is saying. But is the decline warranted, or a result of the fear and aversion from risk that is reaching a panic level, and crowding out reasoned analysis? I'm sensing the latter.
"It puts the Feds in an awkward spot, notes CNBC's Charlie Gasparino:
As of Saturday afternoon, the general consensus between officials from Citi and government officials from the US Treasury department and US Federal Reserve is that the government will not takeover Citigroup in the way it took control of AIG—by lending the firm massive amounts of money and in return assuming a huge equity position.
Government officials fear taking over Citigroup would create a precedent: Unlike AIG, Citigroup's balance sheet is relatively healthy, with relatively strong levels of capital particularly compared to most of its competitors.
Still, officials from the Treasury and Citigroup are unsure what it would take to restore confidence in the company, including a possible smaller capital injection or some sort of statement that Citigroup is financially sound.
For that reason, Citigroup officials are continuing to explore possible merger possibilities and a spin off of some of Citigroup's businesses, even as CEP Vikram Pandit publicly stated the sale of the firm's massive and coveted broker business, Smith Barney is off the table, these people say.
To see if there was any panic yet among Citi's retail banking customers, we checked in on the chatter at Twitter. So far, there's very little worrying (unlike the last days of WaMu), instead it's mainly people talking about the Somali Pirates taking over."
Boy do I agree. We're so afraid of risk, maybe we're worried that the Somali pirates will seize Citi and hold it for ransom.
As I said in the comments:
Don the libertarian Democrat (URL) said:
Why bailout a business that might be able to survive?