Citi is 'fundamentally different': CEO

Author: 
DANIEL WAGNER | AP
Publication Date: 
Thu, 2010-03-04 23:03

"I am pleased to say we are in a far different and much healthier position," Pandit said in testimony Thursday before the Congressional Oversight Panel. The independent watchdog group oversees the $700 billion financial bailout.
Pandit said Citi's experience during the crisis showed the need for a clearer process to deal with large, failing financial firms - a key priority of the Obama administration.
The panel earlier questioned Treasury's top official handling the cleanup from the crisis.
Assistant Treasury Secretary Herbert Allison frustrated panelists by refusing to answer many of their questions. He would not discuss events that preceded his arrival at Treasury, provide any analysis of the company's situation or describe conversations between Citi and Treasury officials.
Allison described Treasury as a "passive investor" that is barely involved in overseeing Citi.
His reticence led panel chairman Elizabeth Warren to ask, "Are you saying today that no one in Treasury monitors the financial condition of Citi, and no one in Treasury is paying attention to the systemic risk that Citi poses?" "We do look at public information," Allison replied.
Citi's bailouts left Treasury owning 27 percent of Citi's common stock. Taxpayers might shoulder losses on a financial portfolio worth $301 billion.
The bailouts put Citi in a small club of banks and other companies that required extraordinary assistance to weather the worst of the crisis.
Warren said the great danger is that Citi will always enjoy government support in tough times because of its sheer size.
"The United States government will bear any burden and pay any price to ensure Citigroup does not fail," she said in opening remarks.
 

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