Citigroup CEO expected to resign Sunday
NEW YORK -- Citigroup Inc.'s board plans an emergency meeting Sunday, and Chief Executive Charles Prince is expected to offer to resign, according to the Wall Street Journal.
The Journal cited people familiar with the situation.
Citigroup spokesmen declined to comment on the report.
The CEO's departure would be the second in a week among the world' s biggest financial institutions. Merrill Lynch & Co. ousted Stan O'Neal after his New York-based firm disclosed $8.4 billion of writedowns.
Citigroup posted a 57 percent profit drop in the third quarter after taking billions of dollars in writedowns of debt tied up in tight credit markets and defaulting mortgages. Speculation about whether Prince would leave has been swirling in the market since then.
Many investors expect Citigroup to take similar, or perhaps even larger, write-offs in coming quarters.
Analysts have downgraded Citigroup and other major financial institutions in recent days because of concerns about their debt holdings and potential write-offs.
Deutsche Bank analyst Mike Mayo estimated in a note late Thursday that the investment banks will need to take an additional $10 billion in writedowns in the fourth quarter, and that Citigroup's share would amount to $4 billion. The worst housing slump in 16 years has led to record U.S. foreclosures and brought trading in some mortgage bonds to a standstill as their value fell.
Citigroup fell 78 cents, or 2 percent, to $37.73 at 4:17 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The stock traded for more than $39 in extended hours. The company's shares have lost 32 percent this year.
After Citigroup warned in early October that the credit squeeze would hurt its bottom line, the bank combined its investment banking and alternative investments businesses into one unit led by Vikram Pandit, who had led Citigroup's alternative investments unit. Tom Maheras, co-CEO of the investment banking unit, left.
But at the time, Citigroup executive committee chairman Robert Rubin and Saudi Arabian Prince Alwaleed bin Talal -- Citigroup's biggest individual shareholder and once a critic of Prince -- expressed their support for the bank's embattled CEO.