01/28/2008 (1:33 pm)

Citi

Filed under: online |

Citigroup Inc. on Thursday disclosed equity awards for its top executives, including an award of $26.7 million in stock and 3 million stock options for new CEO Vikram Pandit.

Pandit, a former Morgan Stanley executive who took over at Citigroup last month, was awarded 1,094,948.7 shares under the company’s stock incentive plan on Tuesday, when shares of the banking giant closed at $24.40. Since then, Citigroup’s shares have risen and closed on Thursday at $27.33.

Citigroup’s (C, Fortune 500) stock fell 1.2 percent in Friday morning trading.

Pandit’s stock options were awarded in three lots of one million options each, all of which vest in one year. The exercise price of the first lot was pegged to Tuesday’s $24.40 closing price, the exercise price of the second lot was 25 percent above that figure, or $30.50, and the exercise price of the third lot was 50 percent above Tuesday’s closing price, or $36.60.

Other awards went to executives including Michael Stuart Klein, Co-CEO Citi Markets and Banking, who got 524,117 shares valued at $12.8 million at Tuesday’s closing price; Chief Financial Officer Gary L payday loan. Crittenden, who got 377,579.4 shares valued at $9.2 million; Sallie Krawcheck, Chair/CEO of Global Wealth Management, who got 345,550.1 shares valued at $8.4 million, and Vice Chairman Stephen Volk, who got 339,916.5 shares valued at $8.3 million. 

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01/25/2008 (8:18 pm)

Wall Street, even Goldman, faces

Filed under: marketing, money |

Wall Street banks battered by mortgage and credit losses survived 2007 only to face an even bigger challenge: a U.S. economy on the edge of recession.

Tougher conditions mean investment bank revenues could finally retreat for the first time since 2003, when Wall Street caught hold of a rally that generated a series of record results and only ended last summer.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc stood out last year, profiting by making the right bets ahead of the subprime debacle that bloodied rivals. But if markets worldwide indeed shrink this year, not even Goldman and its trading wizards can keep defying gravity.

“If there’s a recession, business will slow down for everyone, even the vaunted Goldman Sachs,” said James Ellman, president of financial services hedge fund firm Seacliff Capital LLC in San Francisco.

Stocks plunged this week amid worries the United States economy would slow or even shrink savings account payday advance. Bank stocks, though, rallied since the Federal Reserve on Tuesday slashed interest rates and fueled optimism that central bankers can stave off recession.

Many analysts and investors say if the economy struggles, Wall Street will start to see declines in merger advisory, underwriting and financing activity. Money management and brokerage businesses will also suffer.

Morgan Stanley said on Thursday it would cut jobs amid concern revenue will slip this year. According to a person briefed on the moves, more than 1,000 jobs, or 2 percent of employees, will go, the latest in a series of job cuts on the Street.

TIED TO MARKET 

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01/08/2008 (5:05 pm)

Whitman, Zucaro Sweat Out 40% Drop by U.S. Mortgage Insurers


Marty Whitman and Al Zucaro, stock pickers with a knack for buying low, may be dripping in sweat after they snapped up U.S. mortgage insurers that shed more than 40 percent of their value in the past three months.

MGIC Investment Corp., PMI Group Inc. and Radian Group Inc., the industry’s three largest firms, had their worst year in 2007, declining as much as 78 percent. Whitman bought into the slump to become the largest stakeholder in Philadelphia- based Radian. Zucaro became the No. 1 investor in PMI of Walnut Creek, California, and the second-biggest for Milwaukee-based MGIC.

“We’re just going to have to sweat it out for the next 18 or 24 months,” said Zucaro, who runs Old Republic International Corp., parent of the industry’s sixth-largest company.

Investors abandoned the group on concern record mortgage defaults may wipe out profit in 2008 and beyond. MGIC plummeted 64 percent during 2007, PMI dropped 72 percent and Radian fell 78 percent. That made them bargains to Zucaro and Whitman’s Third Avenue Management LLC, whose flagship mutual fund outperformed the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index in seven of the past eight years.

Zucaro has increased his stake in MGIC to 11 percent and owned 15 percent of PMI, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Whitman held 19 percent of Radian and 1.2 percent of MGIC.

Lower Value

Neither Whitman, 83, nor Zucaro, 68, disclosed what they paid for the shares. If Zucaro purchased PMI at the average price of $28.29 during the 11-week period when he obtained the stake, according to a regulatory filing, his investment may have lost about 60 percent through yesterday. PMI closed at $11.45 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading yesterday, down from a 52-week high of $51.46 on Feb. 6. Using the same methodology, Zucaro’s MGIC holding may have lost about a third of its value.

The Radian stake acquired by Whitman in July may have dropped about 80 percent based on the average share price. Stock acquired during the next three months may have dropped more than 40 percent. Radian closed at $10.11 yesterday, down from $54 at the end of June.

“While the near-term situation may seem dire, we are patient, long-term investors willing to ride out short-term volatility,” Whitman’s company said in a Dec. 28 filing. Financial insurance companies, including Radian, MGIC and bond insurer MBIA Inc., were less than 4 percent of holdings in the Third Avenue Value Fund as of Oct. 31. The fund had assets of more than $11 billion on Dec. 31. Whitman didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Premiums Increase

The recovery Whitman and Zucaro anticipate may have already begun bad credit payday loans. The Mortgage Insurance Companies of America in Washington said premiums from new policies rose 79 percent in November from a year earlier as banks, weary of record foreclosures, forced more borrowers to buy policies. Mortgage insurers repay lenders when customers don’t.

Pressure from regulators and mortgage investors has also forced lenders to tighten standards and screen out people who can’t really afford loans. That may cut future default rates and reduce claims costs for mortgage insurance.

Another boost may come from Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s plan to curb foreclosures by freezing rates on some adjustable loans for five years.

“Value investors are looking ahead and have figured that, by hook or by crook, these companies will get through 2008,” said David Havens, a credit analyst at UBS AG in Stamford, Connecticut. “The insurance they are selling now is probably quite a bit better than it has been for a number of years in terms of quality.”

Quarterly Losses

MGIC is the largest U.S. mortgage insurer, covering $173 billion of home loans, followed by PMI with $152 billion and Radian with $114 billion, according to 2006 data from trade publication Inside Mortgage Finance.

Zucaro and Whitman accumulated their stakes as the industry struggled through its worst year on record. MGIC’s third-quarter loss was $372.5 million and the company said it didn’t expect to be profitable in 2008. PMI had an $86.8 million loss as claims costs increased fivefold. Radian lost $704 million.

Zucaro has run Chicago-based Old Republic since 1990. Born in France, he joined the insurer in 1976 as chief financial officer. The company also covers property and sells title insurance. The value of Old Republic’s bond holdings more than doubled to $6.8 billion in the four years ended 2006 and its stock investments increased 25 percent since they were purchased, according to the company’s most recent annual report.

`The Mess We’re In’

“You shouldn’t be in the insurance business unless you have a 5-to-10 year horizon,” Zucaro said in a Nov. 30 interview. “Lower interest rates do encourage business activity, and it all feeds on itself and might enable us to get out of the mess we’re in.”

Whitman’s third-quarter letter to shareholders said he won’t buy “unless the issuing company enjoys a super-strong financial position.” He did just that with Radian amid what he saw as a “panic” surrounding financial stocks. Whitman called Radian “well-financed” and said it can “survive and prosper” without going to capital markets for new funds in 2008.
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