blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Business News

 

Citigroup to make more cuts; executives buy additional shares
Posted: 15 November 2008 0300 hrs

  Citibank logo
 
Photos  of

   
 



NEW YORK : Citigroup said Friday it would make further job cuts to cope with the financial crisis, and announced that its top executives had bought up 1.3 million shares to show confidence in the banking giant.

Citi spokeswoman Shannon Bell told AFP the company would make reductions, but declined to confirm a Wall Street Journal report of 10,000 job cuts.

"We have said consistently that we will reduce expenses, including through staff reductions," she said.

"We are showing good traction on cutting our expenses; and we are selling businesses and shedding assets that don't fit our strategic profile. We will continue to carefully manage our head count levels as we re-engineer the company in line with our stated goal and market realities."

Bell also said that chief executive Vikram Pandit and other key executives had bought up a total of 1.3 million shares.

"These purchases reflect their belief in the long-term strength and growth opportunities of the company," she said.

Citigroup shares have fallen more than 24 percent this week and 70 percent since the start of the year, with the bank hit by hefty writeoffs linked to the US real estate crisis.

On Friday, Citi shares fell another 5.4 percent to 8.91 dollars.

Citigroup has already announced plans for 22,000 staff reductions and has eliminated at least 13,000 so far this year, according to company figures.

Last month, Citi reported a third-quarter loss of 2.8 billion dollars, its fourth straight quarter in the red.

The troubled bank is saddled with billions of dollars in losses tied to mortgage investments that lost value in the collapse of the US real estate market and the credit squeeze that erupted last year.

- AFP /ls

 


Other business News
US trade deficit jumps on stronger imports
Greek coalition buckles amid strikes, EU diktat on debt
Sony's Hirai refuses to abandon dire TV business
Lenovo's net profit surges 54% in fiscal Q3
Nissan recalls 39,000 vehicles in US, Canada
Toyota probed over car door fires
US stocks tumble amid doubts over Greece deal
Oil prices slide on Europe debt fears
China sovereign wealth fund gets US$50b injection: report
China's exports and imports fall in January
Greeks strike in defiance of EU ultimatum on debt
Indian factory output slows sharply in December
Impact of Thai floods continues to affect firms
Zuma hailed for US$40b railway, port scheme
Barclays bank reveals drop in profits, cuts bonuses
Asian markets slip on Greece bailout fears
Australian central bank cuts growth forecasts
Hong Kong faces labour shortage
China releases Jan trade data
M'sia trade expected to grow at slower pace

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions