CitiGroup Background Information
In 1960, he helped form a small brokerage firm, Carter, Berlind, Potoma & Weill, which grew through numerous acquisitions. (Weill & Levitt, Hayden, Stone; Shearson; Hammill & Co.; Loeb Rhoades; Hornblower & Co.) By 1981, with Weill at the helm, Shearson Loeb Rhoades was second only to Merrill Lynch when it was itself acquired by American Express. Weill then became president of American Express but lost a power struggle and resigned in 1985. Weill reportedly vowed to return to the top of Wall Street and later succeeded in that effort.
After a failed attempt to become CEO of BankAmerica Corp. and take over Merrill Lynch, Weill persuaded Control Data Corporation to spin off its troubled consumer finance subsidiary Commercial Credit, which Weill and others purchased in 1986. After a round of deep cost cuts and reorganization, Weill took the company public.
In 1987, Commercial Credit acquired Gulf Insurance and, in 1988, paid Japanese owners $1.5 billion for Primerica Insurance. Primerica then acquired Smith Barney and the A.L. Williams insurance company. In 1989, operating under the Smith Barney name, it acquired the retail brokerage accounts of scandal ridden Drexel Burnham Lambert. In 1992, it paid $722 million for a 27 percent of real estate troubled Travelers Insurance.
In a personal triumph, Weill’s Smith Barney reacquired his old Shearson brokerage (then Shearson Lehman) from American Express for $1.2 billion. By the end of the year, the remainder of Travelers Corp was acquired for $4 billion in stock and the firm’s name was changed to Travelers Group Inc. In 1996, the property/casualty operations of Aetna Life & Casualty was added at a cost of $4 billion. In September 1997, the parent company of Salomon Brothers was acquired for $9 billion in stock.
In 1998, at a cost of $76 billion, Travelers acquired and assumed the name of Citigroup, Inc. (Citigroup is parent of CitiCorp, a two century old
Shepherd Smith & Edwards law firm
Our law firm represents institutional and individual investors nationwide with significant losses in their portfolios, retirement plans or investment accounts. Our attorneys and staff have more than 100 years of combined experience in the securities industry and in securities law. Several of our lawyers served for years as Vice President or Compliance Officer of brokerage firms.
Each lawyer and staff member of our firm is devoted to assisting investors to recover losses caused by unsuitability, over-concentration, fraud, misrepresentation, self-dealing, unauthorized trades or other wrongful acts, whether intentional or negligent. We have handled over a thousand cases against hundreds of large and small investment firms, including claims against both Citigroup and Smith Barney.
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Additional Information:
Citigroup to Pay BellSouth Retiree Victims $12 Mil.
The NASD fined Citigroup Global Markets, Inc., $3 million for using misleading materials in retirement seminars and meetings to entice BellSouth employees in North and
The NASD order found that Citigroup failed to adequately supervise a team of brokers who used misleading sales materials during dozens of meetings for hundreds of employees of BellSouth Corporation. Most of the employees were unsophisticated investors with little experience in investing who were offored packages to retire early. They were enticed to cash out their pensions and invest the proceeds at Citigroup.
Traveler’s Merger with Citigroup Called Illegal
The takeover of Citicorp by Travelers was deemed illegal because the Glass-Steagall Act, legislation, stemming from the
Yet, lawyers for the new financial giant, found the Federal Reserve could grant it a two year trial period before the insurance underwriting division must be divested. Weill and his counterpart at Citicorp went to work to change the law before that expiration date. Through efforts of heavyweight lobbyists, even former President Gerald Ford, the law was finally changed in 1999 with the passing of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act.
Oddly enough, the company soon spun off its Travelers Property and Casualty insurance underwriting business deeming it as a drag on Citigroup stock price. The brokerage and banking unites attempted to co-exist, but too many egos were at work. Infighting between corporate bankers and investment bankers culminated with a drunken skirmish between the heads at a company retreat led to the ousting of the banking head.
Citigroup’s Fraudulent Research Scandal
As Federal Regulators including the SEC looked the other way, New York Attorney General Elliott Spitzer embarked upon an investigation of Wall Street, with Citicorp and other major firms at the center of the scandal. These firms were accused of having struck secret deals with companies in which the firms’ stock research division would rate a company a "Buy" to entice that company to hire the firm’s investment banking division. Implicated by the scandal were officials at CitiGroup, primarily Citigroup’s Jack Grubman. Sandy Wiell was himself investigated but not formerly charged.
Citigroup’s Enron, WorldCom & Parlamat Scandals
Citigroup’s Japanese Private Banking Scandal
Citigroup removed three senior executives in the wake of a banking scandal in
Citigroup’s Proprietary Government Bond Scandal
In 2004, Citigroup was criticized for disrupting the European bond market by rapidly selling €11 billion worth of bonds on the MTS Group trading platform, driving down the price, and then buying it back at cheaper prices. In a reportedly related action the U.S. Federal Reserve refused for months to rule on Citigroup's application to acquire a Texas Bank as a result of these claims.
Citigroup’s Brazilian Pension Scandal
As is a major partner of Brasil Telecom, Citigroup was implicated in charges related to a highly controversial deal executed with pension funds of Brazilian state-owned companies. According to allegations, these funds would have a put option against them for a value deemed far above arm's-length market levels. After public outcry in
Citigroup’s Improper Late Fee Scandal
In 2001, Citibank settled a lawsuit for improperly assessing late fees. The class action lawsuit was for 45 million dollars. Following this Citibank lobbied in Congress, to pass legislation that would limit class action lawsuits to 5 million dollars unless they were initiated on a federal level (Class Action Fairness Act of 2005). Many consumer advocate websites report that Citibank is still improperly assessing late fees.
Citigroup’s Australian Insider Trading Scandal
In March 2006, the Australian corporate regulator ASIC filed penalty proceedings in the Federal Court against Citigroup's global markets subsidiary in