Citigroup Returning Billions To Investors
Accused Of Fraudulent Securities Sales, Financial Giant Cuts Settlement Deal With Regulators
Citigroup will buy back the securities from tens of thousands of investors nationwide under separate accords with the Securities and Exchange Commission, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo and other state regulators. The buybacks will have to be completed by November.
The nation's largest financial institution also will pay a $50 million civil penalty to New York state and a separate $50 million civil penalty to the North American Securities Administrators Association, which represents securities regulators in the 50 states and the District of Columbia.
The SEC also will consider levying a fine on Citigroup, the agency's enforcement director Linda Thomsen, said at a news conference.
New York-based Citigroup neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing under the settlements.
Cuomo had threatened to charge Citigroup with fraudulent sales of auction-rate securities and with the destruction of key documents.
The $330 billion auction-rate securities market involves investors buying and selling securities backed by municipal bonds, student loans and other debt. The market collapsed in February amid turmoil in the credit markets.
"More than 50 percent of our retail clients' holdings in (auction-rate securities) have been redeemed or auctioned at par since the crisis began," Citigroup said in a statement. "We remain committed to continuing our work on initiatives that will secure the best and fastest route to providing liquidity to our clients."
The federal and state regulators have been investigating marketing of the securities by a number of big banks.
Cuomo's office sued the Swiss bank UBS AG last month over billions of dollars in sales in auction-rate securities, and states including Massachusetts and Texas have filed similar complaints. Massachusetts last week accused Merrill Lynch of fraud in promoting the sale of auction-rate securities.
Interest rates on the securities are set at periodic auctions, on the basis of bids submitted.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





Too bad that it took having a Congressional gun held to their heads to finally "do the right thing".
Typical "Big Business" greed...
American justice, for us, and for them.
Boones Pickens is a thief and an idiot. He''s running ads to hide the fact that the so-called wealth transfer actually was Treasury Secretary Hank the Snake Paulson tricking everybody into turning the Federal Reserve into a SUPER SIV!
All that "money" being handed out to investors is in no comparison of them literaly trading in the mountainous wothless loads of mortgage back and collaterized debt obligations (CDO) for actual cash at the discount window and now through Fannie and Freddie.
You guys are the worse and should be put in jail for your treasonous behaviour!
Sure they will, with the federal reserve and US taxpayer standing by to step in and save citigroup from their bad decisions, it is no sweat off their nose.
Boy was he crazy.
Run the worthless repubs out of office this Nov
Citigroup was CitiCorp, was CitiBank,,, sorry not the Rockefeller Family,,
- by whiskyrokkr August 7, 2008 4:26 PM EDT
- CROOKS!!!!! They need to do some serious jail time.
- Reply to this comment
See all 19 Comments