首页
登录
职称英语
ABN Amro is not the only big, floundering bank under fire. Across the Atlant
ABN Amro is not the only big, floundering bank under fire. Across the Atlant
游客
2023-12-22
55
管理
问题
ABN Amro is not the only big, floundering bank under fire. Across the Atlantic, disgruntled investors continue to call for a shake-up—or even a break-up—of Citigroup, the world’s biggest bank. Its share price has languished for the past five years and shareholders are restless. On February 25th it said it had hired Gary Crittenden, the well-regarded chief financial officer of American Express, to fill the same role at Citi. The person he replaces, Sallie Krawcheck, was a former research analyst with surprisingly little experience in the "financial" bits of a chief financial officer’s job. You might think shareholders would be pleased. In fact, the shares drooped.
This was partly because of the news, disclosed late on February 23rd, that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) was investigating the way Citi handled the taxes that arose from its acquisition in 2000 of Associates First Capital, a consumer-finance firm. But investors were also dismayed by the broader implications of Mr. Crittenden’s solid, but uninspiring, appointment. Chuck Prince, Citi’s boss, is staying put. And so is his strategy.
Mr. Prince’s predecessor, Sandy Weill, oversaw years of hard-charging growth. But Citi now seems to have lost its way. It has trailed behind rivals that dedicate themselves either to investment banking or to retail, but not to both. Its costs have ballooned. Critics snipe that, having seen a lot of its managers leave, Citi’s top brass lacks experience. Mr. Prince is doing his best to answer them. Installing Mr. Crittenden adds depth to Citi’s executive suite, and he is busy working on a cost-cutting initiative, to be unveiled this spring.
But complaints linger about Mr. Prince’s strategy and how soon it will pay off. The chief executive has set out to transform Citi from a bank that knew how to grow only through acquisitions to one that grows "organically".
This is something his predecessor never accomplished, perhaps because he doubted it could be done. "Sandy Weill had little faith that he could grow Citi internally," explains Dick Bove of Punk Ziegel, an investment bank, "so he consistently ripped capital out of Citi to buy growth elsewhere." As long as the buying binge went on, this worked handsomely. But managing the bits and pieces he acquired became increasingly difficult, A series of regulatory snafus prompted Mr. Weill to bring in Mr. Prince, a lawyer by background, to tidy up.
Last month Mr. Prince ditched the name "Citigroup" for the punchier "Citi", and decided to fold the firm’s famous red umbrella once and for all. Mr. Prince wants to make Citi one cohesive company, rather than a jumbled group amassed under a single canopy.
Rebranding a company may be easy; restructuring one is not. "Old" Citi’s shadow is proving hard to escape. It is not just the SEC’s probe into Associates, which was described in Mr. Weill’s autobiography as one of the worst purchases of his career. Rocketing expenses, Mr. Prince’s biggest problem, have their origin in a failure to invest in the technology and infrastructure needed to fuse Citi into a coherent whole. Mr. Prince is also intent on investing in Citi’s international presence, which should be its greatest strength. He aims to increase international revenues to 60% of the total, from around 45% today, through internal growth and small acquisitions.
The latest effort is in Japan. Citi is reportedly trying to boost its small holding in Nikko Cordial, Japan’s third-biggest broking firm, which is reeling from an accounting scandal. This would give Citi a stake in Nikko’s branch network and well run asset-management business. Old Citi was forced to close its private-banking operations in Japan in 2004, after serious breaches of anti-money-laundering rules. Controlling Nikko might mark a new start for a new Citi. [br] Citigroup is now facing a series of problems. Which of the following is NOT one of them?
选项
A、There are five straight years of share price dropping but it began to come up again after new CFO had come into position.
B、SEC was investigating acquisition tax.
C、Mr. Chuck Prince didn’t bring up a convincing resolution.
D、Investors were dismayed by Citi’s performance.
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3294429.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]Onceasocialtaboo,loveacrossthecolorlineisbecomingi
[originaltext]Onceasocialtaboo,loveacrossthecolorlineisbecomingi
[originaltext]Onceasocialtaboo,loveacrossthecolorlineisbecomingi
[originaltext]Onceasocialtaboo,loveacrossthecolorlineisbecomingi
[originaltext]Onceasocialtaboo,loveacrossthecolorlineisbecomingi
[originaltext]Onceasocialtaboo,loveacrossthecolorlineisbecomingi
[originaltext]Onceasocialtaboo,loveacrossthecolorlineisbecomingi
TheincreasingnumberoftheunaccompaniedchildrenacrosstheU.S.borderpres
TheincreasingnumberoftheunaccompaniedchildrenacrosstheU.S.borderpres
TheincreasingnumberoftheunaccompaniedchildrenacrosstheU.S.borderpres
随机试题
Giorgio,nowfifteen,andLucia,alsoinherteens,werereachingthe______of
ThreeEnglishdictionariespublishedrecentlyalllayclaimtopossessinga
Americansdependontheircarsmorethananyotherpeople.Thefamilycarha
Themainideaofthispassageisthat______.[br]Wecaninferfromthepassag
档案文献汇编一般由哪几方面构成()A.汇编题名 B.编辑说明 C.目录
2017年全国举办马拉松赛事达1102场,其中,中国田径协会举办的A类赛事223
接上题,田先生卖出该600份债券的收入,需要缴纳个人所得税的应纳税所得额为()元
根据宪法相关知识,下列职务必须由实行民族区域自治的民族的公民担任的是()A.自
单侧颞下颌关节强直患者可出现()A.颏点偏向健侧 B.颏点偏向患侧 C.患侧
危害税收征管罪是《刑法》规定的破坏国家税收征管制度的一类犯罪。下列罪名中,不属于
最新回复
(
0
)