New York, Jan 14: Citigroup Inc (NYS:C) is planning to ask regulators for permission
to buy back a "minimal" number of shares, the Wall Street Journal
reported.
The bank is not planning to ask to increase its quarterly
dividend, which is currently a penny a share, the newspaper reported, citing
people familiar with the company's plans.
Citigroup Chairman Michael
O'Neill and newly installed CEO Michael Corbat have told company executives that
the capital plan the company submits to the Federal Reserve must be so
conservative that it will not be rejected, the Journal said.
Big banks
are due to submit their capital plans to the Fed.
Another bank, JPMorgan
Chase & Co (JPM), has reason to be "cautiously optimistic" about its chances
of winning approval to raise its dividend and buy back more stock, an official
who asked not to be named said.
In November, JPMorgan won approval from
the Fed to resume previously approved buybacks it had suspended in May after a
multi-billion dollar loss surfaced on derivatives transactions in its London
office. JPMorgan's operations have generated more than enough capital to cover
those losses.
The Journal reported that Morgan Stanley (MS) will focus
its plan for the Fed on using its capital to complete its purchase of
Citigroup's minority stake of a joint venture the two companies have in a
wealth-management business. A spokesman for the investment bank declined to
comment.
Citigroup's last annual plan was rejected by the Fed in March
after former CEO Vikram Pandit led analysts and investors to believe the company
would be allowed to spend a few billion dollars on share buybacks and additional
dividends. The rejection became a major embarrassment for the bank and
contributed to the board's decision to replace
Pandit.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Citigroup to seek permission to buy back shares: WSJ
Citigroup to seek permission to buy back shares: WSJ
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