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April 17, 2009 4:01 PM

Citi Stock Flirts With $1 As Market Slides

(CBS/AP)  Shares of Citigroup Inc., once the most powerful U.S. bank, briefly fell below $1 a share Thursday.

The stock fell to 97 cents in late morning trading, down 16 cents or 14.2 percent from Wednesday. It was back over a dollar, if only barely, in the afternoon.

New York-based Citi has lost more than 85 percent of its value so far this year, and is down more than 95 percent from a year ago as the bank was pummeled by the financial market crisis.

The major market indicators extended their slide to levels not seen in more than a decade Thursday, as investors contended with more disheartening economic data, fresh concerns about the stability of General Motors Corp., and ongoing uncertainty about the financial system.

The market is also extremely anxious ahead of Friday's February jobs report that is likely to show the loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs. Even some positive news, including some better-than-expected retail sales and factory orders, was not enough to stoke investor confidence.

These reports failed to show a significant improvement and so the market gave back its big gain from Wednesday, said Doreen Mogavero, president of brokerage Mogavero, Lee & Co.

"The economic data is still obviously a huge worry," she said. "I don't think anyone thinks we're in the clear because the market was up yesterday."

Stocks fell initially after China deflated investors' hope that it would take new steps to stimulate its economy, but the discouraging economic data sent stocks even lower. The hope that China would unveil more government spending to help its economy was a major factor behind the market's bounce Wednesday, which sent the Dow Jones industrials up nearly 150 points. The rally followed a five-day pummeling that left the market at its lowest levels since 1997.

In afternoon trading, the Dow fell 268.02, or 3.90 percent, to 6,607.82, a low not seen since April 1997. The Standard & Poor's 500 index dropped 26.78, or 3.76 percent, to 686.09. The S&P has not traded below this level since October 1996. The Nasdaq composite index fell 47.15, or 3.48 percent, to 1,306.59.

Even if it closes below $1, Citigroup's shares will remain on the New York Stock Exchange. Last week, the NYSE relaxed its listing rules to allow stocks that fall under a dollar to still be listed and traded on the exchange.

The exchange said the change was warranted given the "current period of unusual market volatility and decline."

Ordinarily, an NYSE-listed company's shares cannot remain below $1 for more than 30 consecutive days. If that happens, the company gets about six months to prove to the NYSE it can boost its stock price.

Citigroup used to be not only the largest bank by assets, but also by market capitalization, which has now been decimated by the stock's decline. At the start of 2007, its market cap was riding high at around $270 billion. But by March 2008, it had fallen below the $100 billion mark. Now, it's at $6.2 billion.

As the recession deepens, the problems facing Citigroup - souring loans and the impact of the recession - are only getting worse.

On Friday, the government agreed to exchange up to $25 billion in emergency bailout money given to Citigroup for as much as a 36 percent equity stake in the company. The government, along with other private investors, will convert some of their $45 billion in preferred stock into common shares. If the maximum amount of preferred stock is converted, current common stockholders will see their ownership stake fall to about 26 percent.

The deal between the Treasury Department and the bank is the third rescue effort in the past six months.

The problem is the market knows Citigroup received no new capital last week. The conversion to common stock will create a wider equity base aimed at keeping investors calm as the economy deteriorates - but Citigroup still has $45 billion in Troubled Asset Relief Program funding, the same amount as it did before. The switch to common stock will help boost Citigroup's "tangible common equity," Wall Street's and Washington's new favored gauge of banks' health.

Citigroup, criticized for years for being too multi-tentacled, has already sold off several businesses over the past several months.

It has also split into two parts: Citicorp and Citi Holdings - effectively undoing the merger that created the company in 1998. Citicorp holds the company's "core" businesses like retail banking, investment banking, credit cards and transaction services, while Citi Holdings runs the company's riskier assets, the consumer finance franchises and asset management.

Citigroup, which hasn't turned a profit since the fall of 2007, will face its next test in April when it reports first-quarter earnings.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 29 Comments
by GODSnLIBERALS March 8, 2009 4:32 AM EDT
The current President certainly didn't get us into this mess - that draft-dodging, pseudo born again christian, baseball team managing, failed oilman, ex-governor from Texas (better known as "Dubya The Dunce") did. We can thank the GOP for foisting that idiot upon this once-great country.

The "wrong direction" would be continuing to go in the same direction that we've been going up until now. Obviously, it's time for a change, and that means striking out in a new direction, before it's too late and this country is totally bankrupt.

If the direction President Obama is taking us in gets us out of this mess, then it's definitely the "right direction", so far as I'm concerned.
Posted by An-Historian at 3:09 PM : Mar 5, 2009
+ report abuse + permalink

**********

employment was just fine during buh's 8 years TILL 2 months down obama's tenure..WHY IS THAT?? lack of confidence from the public??

I bet you dont even spend money because there is doubt that obama's plan might not bloom
Reply to this comment
by GODSnLIBERALS March 8, 2009 4:28 AM EDT
Wall Street has long been called "The Bastion of Conservatism"

If Wall Street has finally revealed itself to be a huge, ideologically and economically bankrupt failure, what does that suggest about Conservatism itself?
Posted by An-Historian at 3:47 PM : Mar 5, 2009
+ report abuse + permalink

*****

mtv's jackass is the bastion of modern day liberalism..and the just voted thier man to the white house..
Reply to this comment
by keithle1 March 7, 2009 6:17 AM EST
USA! USA! USA!
Reply to this comment
by bumpedoff March 5, 2009 11:20 PM EST
Citi bank will be the first of the domino's then bank of america and AGI then obama will
have what he wants full depression.
Reply to this comment
by hetup-2009 March 5, 2009 8:05 PM EST
Citi and Bank of America need to go out of business. They are TOXIC BANKS with TOXIC EXECUTIVES.
Reply to this comment
by An-Historian March 5, 2009 7:30 PM EST
The banks are not being nationalized. Get real.

"Nationalization" means giving the government permanent 100% ownership and control. That has not happened, nor is it ever likely to.

The government is demanding a level of control over these entities equal to the percentage of government investment in them. They wisely do this in order to have some power to protect the taxpayers investment. Just like any other shareholder, the taxpayer deserves to have a vote proportional to their investment too.

The plan is to put these banks back on solid footing (not take them over totally) and once they are on solid ground, then recover the investment - with interest. The investment monies AND the interest then accrue to the taxpayers, not the greedy, overpaid Capitalists that got the banks into this mess in the first place.

If it all works out as planned (and despite the naysayers rants, it probably will succeed) then the taxpayers get their original investment back, plus a nice return on that investment in the form of accrued interest.

That's a far cry from "nationalization". Obviously, most Repugs posting their drivel here don't have a clue what "nationalization" even means.
Reply to this comment
by philabias March 5, 2009 6:56 PM EST
I will bet that it go's much lower . The banks that except bailout funds are being shunned by the public, We just dont trust them and shouldnt. So Obama wil bail and bail and bail but it wont do any good. It was a stupid ideal to nationalize the bank. I will not use them becaused they failed .And appaerntly neither will you. Mr President LET THEM FAIL!
Reply to this comment
by ghostofwallygeorge March 5, 2009 6:55 PM EST
Citi Bunk will go down as one of the great scams of all time. The money they claim they lost never existed. The so-called loses were from the penalties and interest on interest they tacked on loans and credit cards after they doubled and tripled the payments. Your bailout money is going for loses that only existed in the minds of Citi's Harvard MBA's.
Reply to this comment
by An-Historian March 5, 2009 6:47 PM EST
Wall Street has long been called "The Bastion of Conservatism"

If Wall Street has finally revealed itself to be a huge, ideologically and economically bankrupt failure, what does that suggest about Conservatism itself?
Reply to this comment
by An-Historian March 5, 2009 6:40 PM EST
Conservatism = Intellectual and Ideological Stagnation = Cultural and Economic death

Capitalism = Unfettered Greed = Short-sighted Profiteering = Cultural and Economic death

If you're not actively moving forward (being progressive) then you're just standing still as the world continues to move on around you.

Thinking the same way your grandpa thought and doing things the same way your grandpa did them just won't cut it in today's world. The world is constantly changing and evolving, whether you like it or not. You have to change and evolve with it, or become irrelevant. Conservatism is just another name for slow suicide.
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