Citi paying $75m to settle charges of misleading investors
The Citibank's logo is seen at the US bank Citigroup world headquarters on Park Avenue in New York in this file photo.
Published: Jul 30, 2010 22:58 Updated: Jul 30, 2010 23:22
WASHINGTON: Banking titan Citigroup Inc. is paying $75 million to settle civil charges that it misled investors about its potential losses from subprime mortgages as the housing bust hit in 2007.
The Securities and Exchange Commission announced the settlement with Citigroup on Thursday. It said the company repeatedly made misleading statements in calls with analysts and regulatory filings about the extent of its holdings tied to high-risk mortgages. As borrowers defaulted, Citigroup's losses reached tens of billions of dollars on complex instruments linked to mortgages, pushing the bank to a financial precipice.
Citigroup had said the exposure was $13 billion or less.
The SEC said it exceeded $50 billion.
Citigroup earned $2.7 billion in the second quarter of this year. So the penalty represents less than 3 percent of its net income from April through June.
The settlement marked the second time in weeks that the agency reached an agreement on punitive action against a major Wall Street firm in connection with the financial crisis. Earlier this month, Goldman Sachs and Co. agreed to pay $550 million to settle civil fraud charges that it sold mortgage investments without telling buyers that the securities had been crafted with input from a client that was betting on them to fail.
Citigroup was one of the hardest-hit banks during the financial crisis. It received $45 billion from the $700 billion financial bailout - among the largest of the government rescues.
A current and a former Citi executive also settled charges with the SEC. Former Chief Financial Officer Gary Crittenden agreed to pay a $100,000 civil penalty. The former head of investor relations, Arthur Tildesley Jr., agreed to pay $80,000. Tildesley now is the head of cross marketing at the company.
New York-based Citigroup, Crittenden and Tildesley neither admitted nor denied the SEC's allegations. But they did agree to refrain from future violations of the securities laws.
"We are pleased that we have reached agreement with the SEC to put this matter concerning certain 2007 disclosures behind us, and that the SEC is not charging Citi or any individual with intentional or reckless misconduct," the company said in a statement.
SEC Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami said in a statement that Citigroup boasted of its superior ability to reduce its subprime exposure, even in the fall of 2007 as the subprime mortgage market quickly weakened.
"In fact, billions more in ... subprime exposure sat on its books undisclosed to investors," he said. "The rules of financial disclosure are simple - if you choose to speak, speak in full and not in half-truths." The SEC charged Citigroup with unintentional civil fraud.
