Filed under: Citigroup Inc. (C), Goldman Sachs Group (GS)
BusinessWeek interviewed former Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C) CEO Sandy Weill about a range of topics regarding Citi’s performance and prospects as well as its efforts to raise capital. He defends the complex business structure he created and declines to reveal how much he invested in its latest round.
After reading the interview, I get the impression that he still wields tremendous power over Citigroup and that it could be stuck with its current corporate strategy until Weill departs from the scene. His defense of the current corporate strategy is not compelling, at least not to me. Arguing against breaking up Citi, he says, “One of the advantages of the company is that it is in 100-plus different countries and has diversity in income streams.”
He continued by defending the merits of this diversification. “Since the merger of Citi and Travelers in 1998, we’ve had a big corporate business and we’ve had a big consumer business. We’ve watched times when the consumer business did poorly and the corporate business did very well. Now, we’re watching a time where the global consumer business has done well, whereas the U.S. consumer business has had to add to loan loss reserves. Over time, they balance out.”
Continue reading Sandy Weill spins Citi
Permalink | Email this | Comments











Entries (RSS)