July 21, 2008 2:09 PM
- Text
Citigroup's Brief Legacy of Legacy Assets
(MoneyWatch) One of the striking things in Citigroup's earnings announcement was its sale of "legacy assets." Legacy assets? What're those?
It turns out that Citi has been using the term since about May of this year. While "legacy assets" pops up on a New York Times item from 2000 (talking about telecoms), the only other uses in the newspaper all relate to Citi in 2008. According to Bloomberg's David Wilson, some other bankers have also started using the term recently ?€"- something in the air at the country club, perhaps.
As far as I can tell, a legacy asset is something you owned until very recently, having just sold it. You could call them former assets or sold assets. But the term also implies that these are assets acquired by some former CEO, who never should have bought them or built them in the first place.
Citi says: "Total assets declined by $99 billion since first quarter 2008; approximately two-thirds from legacy assets." I suppose that means it sold $66 billion in assets and just flat out lost $33 billion.
It's a handy phrase. But an odd one. A legacy is usually (not always) something helpful. George Bush's dad went to Yale. That made him a legacy, which is nice. As president, Bush may be burnishing his legacy, which usually means a positive image. Of course, it's also possible to have a negative legacy.
The way Citi and current boss Vikram Pandit uses the term strikes me as false and wrong. First of all, nearly all the bank's assets are legacy assets in that Pandit did not acquire them. Second, aren't the legacy assets responsible for most of the revenues as well? Still, I doubt you'll hear Pandit say that 98 percent of earnings came from legacy businesses. No, the au courant CEO knows that the good assets that the bank still owns are not "legacies" -- they're his.
It turns out that Citi has been using the term since about May of this year. While "legacy assets" pops up on a New York Times item from 2000 (talking about telecoms), the only other uses in the newspaper all relate to Citi in 2008. According to Bloomberg's David Wilson, some other bankers have also started using the term recently ?€"- something in the air at the country club, perhaps.
As far as I can tell, a legacy asset is something you owned until very recently, having just sold it. You could call them former assets or sold assets. But the term also implies that these are assets acquired by some former CEO, who never should have bought them or built them in the first place.
Citi says: "Total assets declined by $99 billion since first quarter 2008; approximately two-thirds from legacy assets." I suppose that means it sold $66 billion in assets and just flat out lost $33 billion.
It's a handy phrase. But an odd one. A legacy is usually (not always) something helpful. George Bush's dad went to Yale. That made him a legacy, which is nice. As president, Bush may be burnishing his legacy, which usually means a positive image. Of course, it's also possible to have a negative legacy.
The way Citi and current boss Vikram Pandit uses the term strikes me as false and wrong. First of all, nearly all the bank's assets are legacy assets in that Pandit did not acquire them. Second, aren't the legacy assets responsible for most of the revenues as well? Still, I doubt you'll hear Pandit say that 98 percent of earnings came from legacy businesses. No, the au courant CEO knows that the good assets that the bank still owns are not "legacies" -- they're his.
Latest Now in MoneyWatch
- Ohio unemployment hits 3-year-low
- Jill on Money: Retirement investing, allocation, long term care
- Could "web-lining" be dangerous?
- Insurers respond cautiously to contraceptive plan
- Judge: Legally, breastfeeding not related to pregnancy
- Budget deficit drops to $27 billion in January
- Why the Powerball Jackpot is part of my investment strategy
- Is the new VW Beetle diesel worth the money?
- Consumer sentiment highlights risks to recovery
- Valentine blues? 10 best cities to be single
- December trade deficit widens to $48.8 billion
- Alcatel-Lucent returns to profit in 2011
- 6 things never to say in a performance review
- $26B mortgage deal: Who gets the money?
- Friendly's CEO steps down
- Quarterly loss hits $3.3B at Postal Service
- Greeks rail against cuts as EU demands more
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- At least 7 dead in Kosovo avalanche
- Clooney, Pitt, Streep due at British film awards
- Arab League considers revival of Syrian mission
- Iraq opens new oil export terminal in Persian Gulf
on Facebook
- Whitney Houston 1963-2012
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- Remembering Whitney Houston 1963-2012
on CBS News






