K - Your guess is better than mine lah


The Saudis must park their $$ somewhere. They must have bankers to deal with their cash reserves. They can't park the cash under the sand.
iam802- Yes, C can't possibly fold up. Long C now

"On the Razor's Edge"
Citi is lobbying lawmakers and the Securities & Exchange Commission to reinstate a ban on the short-selling of financial stocks, The Wall Street Journal reported Nov. 20 on its Web site, citing sources familiar with the matter. The company is also seeking a reinstatement of the "uptick rule," which requires investors to wait until a company's stock goes up before short-selling it, according to the Journal.
"We're getting to the critical doomsday question: What happens when a megabank like Citi fails," says Weiss. He says the bank is "on the razor's edge. The biggest banks are not just important to the banking system, they are the banking system. All this starts to get into the neverland of uncertainty. No one really knows what happens next."
Alwaleed Buys Citigroup Stock as Loss Exceeds Buffett (Update2)
By Ben Holland
Nov. 20 (Bloomberg) -- The Warren Buffett of the Gulf is taking a bigger hit from the credit crunch than the original.
Prince Alwaleed bin Talal was lauded by Time magazine as the Middle East’s answer to the Sage of Omaha after a 1991 investment in Citigroup Inc.’s predecessor helped make the Saudi billionaire one of the world’s five richest people.
This year, Alwaleed’s investments aren’t keeping pace with regional benchmarks, let alone Buffett. His Riyadh-based Kingdom Holding Co. has slumped 63 percent -- more than Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All-Share Index or Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. -- wiping out $13 billion in value. Kingdom today said Alwaleed will boost his Citigroup stake, his largest holding, to 5 percent, even after the shares fell more than 80 percent since Jan. 1.
“When people nail their colors to the mast in such an obvious way, if then it all blows up, then that’s very damaging to your reputation,†said Ken Murray, chairman of Blue Planet Investment Management in Edinburgh, who says he shorted shares in Citigroup last year.
Alwaleed and his companies are buying Citigroup shares because the prince believes they are “dramatically undervalued,†Kingdom Holding said in a news release. The combined stake stands at less than 4 percent after recent Citigroup share sales diluted the holding, Kingdom said.
“Prince Alwaleed is fully confident that Citigroup’s universal banking model and global franchise will make it a long- term winner in the financial services industry,†Kingdom said.
The announcement failed to halt Citigroup’s slide. The shares slumped 17 percent to $5.30 as of 10:10 a.m. in New York trading, extending this week’s drop to 45 percent on concern banks will post further losses next year as the economy falters.
Bailout Talks Accelerate for Ailing Citigroup
Billions in Toxic Assets May Be Removed; New Phase for Government Bank Rescue
By DAVID ENRICH, CARRICK MOLLENKAMP and MATTHIAS RIEKER
The federal government was nearing an agreement Sunday night to rescue Citigroup Inc. by helping to remove billions of dollars in toxic assets from its balance sheet, people familiar with the talks say.
The agreement, which was still under discussion and could fall apart, would mark a new phase in government efforts to stabilize U.S. banks and securities firms. After injecting nearly $300 billion of capital into financial institutions, federal officials now appear to be willing to absorb bad assets, on a targeted basis, from specific institutions.
Citigroup is one of the world's best-known banking brands, with more than 200 million customer accounts in 106 countries. Its plunging stock price threatened to spook customers and imperil the bank.
If the government devises a successful rescue plan, it could help bring stability to the entire financial system. If it doesn't, even deeper doubts about the industry's future could spread.
The talks Sunday centered on the creation of what is sometimes called a "bad bank" -- an outside entity designed to hold some of a financial firm's worst assets. That structure would help Citigroup cleanse itself of billions of dollars in weak assets, these people said.
Under the terms being discussed with top Treasury Department and Federal Reserve officials, Citigroup would agree to absorb losses on assets covered by the agreement up to a certain threshold, people familiar with the matter said. The U.S. government would then absorb any additional losses, these people said. One person said the new entity is expected to hold about $50 billion of assets.
That would mean taxpayers could be on the hook if Citigroup's massive portfolios of mortgage, credit cards, commercial real-estate and big corporate loans continue to sour.
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