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WILL
CITIBANK SURVIVE?
by James Turk
Founder, GoldMoney.com
March 17, 2008
The center of focus this
past week on Wall Street – and indeed, much of the financial world –
was whether or not Bear Stearns will go belly-up. As questions arose
about the quality of its $395 billion of assets that were carried on
only $12 billion of equity, its customers and other brokers became
unwilling to accept the counterparty risk that arises from transacting
with Bear, while its lenders began worrying about repayment. Being
leveraged to that extent, even a small decline in the value of its
assets can significantly erode the firm's equity base. But given that
Bear is no more than the fifth largest broker in the US, it is a
relatively small fish in the financial world.
Let’s
take a look at the big fish, namely, the commercial banks. In fact,
let’s look at the biggest of them all to ask: “Will Citibank
survive?”
It’s
a question that would have been outrageous to even consider asking as
recently as a year ago. Interestingly, it’s a question that was often
asked nearly two decades ago during the last banking crisis that
eventually led to a bailout in 1991.
Back
then Citi – or more precisely, Citigroup Inc. and its banking
subsidiary, Citibank – was bailed out by Saudi Prince Al-Waleed bin
Talal with a $590 million investment. Citi and many other US banks were
nearly ruined by the Savings & Loan crisis and subsequent real
estate collapse that plunged the United States into a severe
recession.
The
tab for losses incurred by the financial system back then was about $100
billion. The final numbers are undoubtedly going to be much higher this
time around. Not only is the US more over-leveraged than last time, the
impact from the sub-prime morass is being felt globally. Financial
institutions worldwide have already come to grips with $140 billion of
bad debts.
Commenting
upon the recent $200 billion scheme announced by the Federal Reserve
this past week, The Telegraph in the UK wisely observed: “The Fed,
with its latest $200 billion offer of cheap cash, has provided yet more
state aid for errant hedge funds and another Washington-backed bailout
for Wall Street bankers…But as
the bail-outs are getting bigger, then clearly the problems causing them
must be getting bigger.” [Emphasis added]
Could
what happened to Bear Stearns also happen to Citi and for that matter,
other banks? Yes, and it may be happening now because the growing
concern about counterparty risk cuts across all sectors and its impact
is effecting all financial institutions to some degree.
Commercial
banks, however, have some advantages over brokers. They have access to
the Federal Reserve, the so-called lender of ‘last resort’. Also,
banks have an “invisibility cloak” to conceal assets, so it is much
harder to discern what is happening to the financial capacity of
commercial banks than brokers like Bear Stearns. Brokers do not have
“invisibility cloaks” because they are required to mark the value of
their assets to market values, i.e., which is the price at which the
last trade was made.
Banks
argue that the loans on their books are not tradable securities, so they
do not have a market value. There is some logic to this argument, but it
is disingenuous in many instances. One does not need a market price to
know that the value of a fixed rate mortgage will go down when interest
rates rise, but banks nevertheless may be carrying the mortgage at book
value. Or if a company is downgraded by a rating agency, a bank need not
mark its loan to that company as doubtful if in their judgment (and not
the rating agency’s) the loan will be repaid.
Banks
of course also own tradable securities, many of which are probably
similar to those owned by Bear and other brokers. But even here
commercial banks get a free-pass. If a security in a trading portfolio
is not performing as expected, the bank can transfer the security to its
investment portfolio to avoid marking it to market, claiming that it
intends to hold the security to maturity and that its present market
value is therefore irrelevant. This logic is of course nonsense because
of one deadly factor – leverage. The use of leverage means that all
banks could face a crisis of confidence, like that now being endured by
Bear. And in a crisis, again as we are finding out with Bear,
potentially all of the bank’s assets may need to be sold before
maturity.
So
while the market is already trying to analyze whether Bear Stearns,
Fannie Mae, Lehman Brothers and others are going to make it to the other
side of the valley, we also need to ask if the biggest of them all –
Citigroup Inc. and its banking subsidiary, Citibank – are
solvent.
We
can do this by examining Citi’s balance sheet. I am ignoring its
income statement because in a crisis, future cash-flow is basically
irrelevant to a bank’s survival and need for liquidity.
The
key financial facts are presented in the accompanying table. These
numbers are from Citi’s quarterly reports from December 2005 through
December 2007, the latest report available.
|
|
31-Dec-05
|
31-Mar-06
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30-Jun-06
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30-Sep-06
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31-Dec-06
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31-Mar-06
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30-Jun-07
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30-Sep-07
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31-Dec-07
|
|
Total
Liabilities
|
1,381,500
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1,471,783
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1,511,123
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1,628,383
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1,764,535
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1,898,883
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2,093,112
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2,231,153
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2,069,108
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Stockholder
Equity
|
112,537
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114,418
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115,428
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117,865
|
119,783
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122,083
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127,754
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127,113
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113,598
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Stated
Leverage
|
12.3
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12.9
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13.1
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13.8
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14.7
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15.6
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16.4
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17.6
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18.2
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%
Equity/Liabilities
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8.1%
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7.8%
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7.6%
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7.2%
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6.8%
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6.4%
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6.1%
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5.7%
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5.5%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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Intangible
Assets
|
47,879
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48,025
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48,760
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48,894
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49,316
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53,710
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62,206
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63,600
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63,891
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Tangible
Assets
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1,446,158
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1,538,176
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1,577,791
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1,697,354
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1,835,002
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1,967,256
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2,158,660
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2,294,666
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2,118,815
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Tangible
Equity
|
64,658
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66,393
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66,668
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68,971
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70,467
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68,373
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65,548
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63,513
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49,707
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Real
Leverage
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21.4
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22.2
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22.7
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23.6
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25.0
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27.8
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31.9
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35.1
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41.6
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T-Equity/T-Assets
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4.5%
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4.3%
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4.2%
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4.1%
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3.8%
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3.5%
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3.0%
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2.8%
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2.3%
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From
2005 to the present Citi’s leverage (total liabilities divided by
stockholders’ equity) has increased in each quarter from 12.3 to 18.2
times. So equity as a percent of liabilities has declined during this
period from 8.1% to 5.5%. However, the real picture that I present in
the bottom half of the table shows a more significant decline in
Citi’s equity and corresponding increase in leverage.
Note
the increase in Citi’s intangible assets and goodwill since 2005.
These have essentially no value in a crisis situation, so I have
subtracted them from stockholder equity to determine Citi’s tangible
equity. I then calculated Citi’s real leverage by dividing its total
liabilities by tangible equity, which is an astounding 41.6-times. Citi
only has total equity to total tangible assets of 2.3%.
This
2.3% number is vitally important to determine whether Citi is solvent.
And here is where we get into the inevitable subjective judgements. The
“invisibility cloak” that commercial banks use to conceal assets
makes it impossible to determine the quality of those assets. But there
is one inescapable cold, hard fact. Given that Citi’s tangible equity
to tangible assets is 2.3%, we know that if the value of those assets is
2.3% less than their reported value, then Citi is insolvent. Citi may
continue operating because it is liquid, but it would be operating as an
insolvent.
The
question therefore becomes, what are Citi’s assets worth? As explained
above, we can’t accurately answer that question, but here is some
information to ponder.
(1)
Citi has $133.4 billion of Level 3 assets. Here’s how MarketWatch recently described this category when reporting Citi’s
Level 3 assets: “Level 3 assets are holdings that are so illiquid, or
trade so infrequently, that they have no reliable price, so their
valuations are based on management's best guess.” In an analysis of
Bear Stearns, Barron’s
prudently observes: “Of particular concern are Bear's so-called Level
Three assets, which stood at $28 billion as of November and by
definition are illiquid and valued on the basis only of the firm's own
estimates. Any buyer might be worried about the need to mark down the
value of these assets, and the value of Bear's large book of financial
derivatives.” What’s more, Bear’s so-called “large book” of
derivatives pales in comparison to the size of Citi’s book. According
to the Comptroller of the Currency, Citi is counterparty to financial
derivatives with a notional value of $34.0 trillion (sic). We should
keep in mind Warren Buffett’s warning from 2002: “Derivatives are
financial weapons of mass destruction, carrying dangers that, while now
latent, are potentially lethal.”
(2)
Last week JP
Morgan warned that the Street is facing a “systemic margin call” on subprime
mortgages that alone might deplete $325 billion of capital.
Citibank alone has about 10% of total bank capital in the US, so if it
were to incur 10% of that loss projected by JP Morgan or $32.5 billion,
only $17.2 billion of tangible equity would remain. Note that
Morgan’s analysis ignored all of the other paper now being called into
question, which could mean even bigger losses for the banks. For
example, on February 29th Bloomberg reported:
“Citigroup Inc. helped create at least $6.9 billion of securities
insured by Ambac Financial Group Inc. that have tumbled in value and may
require the insurer to pay claims.” Apparently these are some “of
Ambac's most troubled CDOs”, i.e. the one’s most likely to incur
large losses. Given that Ambac’s future is being questioned despite
its recent injection of capital, Citi may end up with losses on these
CDOs, not to mention other firm’s CDOs of inferior quality that it
helped write. It is worth noting that Citi already took more than $20
billion in credit-related losses in the last half of the year, and
conditions are worse this year given that the US is now in a recession.
Bank losses almost always worsen in recessions.
(3)
When I started my business career by working at a bank in the late
1960s, normal bank leverage was considered to be 6-to-8 times equity.
But let’s assume that the 21.4-times real leverage presented in the
above table for Citi in December 2005 is adequate. To reduce its
leverage and bring its capital ratio back to its December 2005 level,
Citi needs to raise $46.9 billion in equity, nearly doubling its capital
base. This calculation of course assumes that Citi has no further
charge-offs and doesn’t expand its total assets by making new loans
– both of which seem improbable.
(4)
Alternatively, Citi can sell assets and reduce its leverage by repaying
debt. But this alternative does not seem practical given the huge
amounts involved and present market conditions. To reduce its leverage
back to its 2005 level on its current capital base, Citi would need to
dispose $384.1 billion of assets. Sales of that size in all likelihood
could only be done with significant asset price destruction,
causing losses that would further erode Citi’s capital base.
(5)
The real Achilles heel is that banks lend long and borrow short. In
other words, they fund long-term loans with checking account deposits
and 90-day loans. These funding sources can evaporate overnight, as Bear
Stearns found out. This imbalance in asset/liability management has
killed countless banks throughout history.
So is
Citi solvent? We just don’t know. But there are reasons to be
concerned. We are in one of those recurring periods when the solvency of
banks is doubted, like the late 1980s when the S&L crisis was
brewing. Or perhaps it is more like 1974 when the failure of Herstatt
Bank in West Germany set off banking crises throughout the world,
culminating with the collapse of Franklin National Bank in New York
City. The problem is leverage. Too much debt has been extended on too
little capital, so even a small decline in the value of a bank’s
assets can significantly erode its capital and make it insolvent.
In
any case, it looks like the financial crisis already upon us will get
worse before it gets better, and I am not alone in that thinking. David
Rubenstein, co-founder of the Carlyle Group told The
Wall Street Journal last week: “This is the tip of the iceberg.
People are looking at our situation and saying, ‘There but for the
grace of God go I.’ There are others out there hanging on by their
fingernails.”
He
should know. His group managed Carlyle Capital, which recently defaulted
on its loans to Citi and other banks, and whose stock price is shown in
the above chart.

© 2008 James Turk
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