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Non-Tech : Bank of America -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brian Sullivan who wrote (4231)6/29/2016 9:00:16 PM
From: Brian Sullivan  Respond to of 4366
 
Citigroup More Than Triples Its Dividend After Stress Test


Citigroup Inc. got a green light on the Federal Reserve’s stress test for the second year in a row and said it would buy back up to $8.6 billion in shares over the next year and sharply raise its quarterly dividend.

The Fed on Wednesday approved the New York bank’s capital plan after determining that Citigroup could keep lending in a severe economic downturn. The approval clears the way for the company to raise dividends, increase share buybacks, or both.

Citigroup said it would boost its quarterly dividend to 16 cents a share from 5 cents and would begin the stock buybacks in the third quarter.

The Fed’s approval gives breathing room to Citigroup CEO Michael Corbat. The bank had failed the test twice, including one time during his tenure as chief executive. One of Mr. Corbat’s mandates when he was installed in the job was to improve the bank’s relationship with regulators.

The Fed’s approval is also particularly important to the bank because many investors have been disappointed by its relatively low dividends and share price. The bank is expected to announce later Wednesday its plans for upcoming dividend and buybacks, both of which can increase a company’s share price.

The Fed calculated that at the low point of a hypothetical recession, Citigroup’s common equity Tier 1 ratio — which measures high-quality capital as a share of risk-weighted assets — would be 7.7%, above the 4.5% level the Fed views as a minimum. The new ratio, unlike the one reported last week by the Fed in a related test, takes into account the bank’s proposed capital plan.

The bank’s Tier 1 leverage ratio, which measures high-quality capital as a share of all assets, would be 6.1% in a hypothetical recession under the Fed’s estimates, above the 4% minimum.

The bank might have also been helped by taking a more conservative tack on its submission. Generally, the banks are more optimistic than the Fed is about how they would fare in a severe recession. But last week, on the first round of stress-test results, Citigroup estimated that its ratios would fall lower than the Fed did.

The latest stress-test result incorporates quantitative factors assessed in data released by the Fed last week. These included a simulation of how the bank’s capital buffers would hold up under a world-wide recession. The Fed’s “severely adverse” scenario of financial stress this year included a 10% U.S. unemployment rate, significant losses in corporate and commercial real estate lending portfolios, and negative rates on short-term U.S. Treasury securities.

This second part of the test also included a qualitative assessment by the Fed of a bank’s capital-planning process and internal controls. The Fed has the ability to object to a bank’s capital plan on either quantitative or qualitative grounds.

by Christina Rexrode



To: Brian Sullivan who wrote (4231)6/30/2016 12:49:34 PM
From: Qualified Opinion  Respond to of 4366
 
Check your age in at the door. The U.S. government and deadbeats get paid before the shareholders.
On the positive side, only about $50 billion left of legacy assets of which at least 50% are earning or collateral going up. Interest only HELOC loans becomes less of an issue as interest rates stay down longer.