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Vikram Pandit to Step Down as Citigroup’s Chief Executive
http://www.cnbc.com/id/49429100
Published: Tuesday, 16 Oct 2012 | 9:35 AM ET Text Size
By: CNBC.com
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Citigroup tapped Michael Corbat as its new CEO after Vikram Pandit announced
Tuesday that he is stepping down from the helm of the banking giant.
Source: Cindy Ord | Getty Images
Vikram Pandit (l.) & Michael Corbat (r.)
Corbat was formerly the chief executive of Citi's Europe, Middle East, and
Africa division.
President and Chief Operating Officer John Havens also resigned.
After finishing 5.5 percent higher Monday, shares of Citigroup [C Loading..
. () ] fell in early trading following the announcement.
Pandit also resigned from the bank's board of directors, effectively
immediately. "Citigroup is well-positioned for continued profitability and
growth, having refocused the franchise on the basics of banking," Pandit
said.
In 2007, Pandit succeeded Charles Prince, after the bank racked up losses
relating to mortgage-backed securities.
Citi's board of directors praised Pandit's "leadership, integrity and
resilience in guiding Citi through the crisis and positioning it well for
the future."
Pandit's resignation caught industry watchers completely by surprise. CNBC
has learned that officials at the Treasury Department were also unaware that
a change in Citi leadership was imminent.
“This is a complete shock. No one expected this whatsoever,” said Jim
Cramer, host of CNBC’s “Mad Money.” The divisions were all in very good
shape, I don’t even want for a second to tell people that there was
anything in the works to make this happen. There was nothing … this was the
quarter where you give him a big raise, he was under a lot of pressure but
he got this right.”
Cramer lauded Citi’s earnings results and questioned why he would leave so
abruptly.
“Vikram Pandit, 24 hours ago, was the belle of the ball. This guy finally
got it right. Something’s wrong here,” he said.
On Monday, Citigroup reported quarterly earnings that beat analysts'
expectations. The bank reported third-quarter earnings, excluding items, of
$1.06 per share, down from $1.23 a share in the year-earlier period.
Revenue fell, however, to $19.4 billion from $20.83 billion a year earlier.
Analysts had expected Citi to report earnings of 96 cents a share on $18.71
billion in revenue, according to a consensus estimate from Thomson Reuters.
After a huge volume day for Citi Monday following its earnings report — at
more than 75.7 million shares — Citi shares have already traded half their
10-day and 100-day volume averages of 36 million shares, at more than 18
million shares in pre-market trading.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/49429100
Published: Tuesday, 16 Oct 2012 | 9:35 AM ET Text Size
By: CNBC.com
76
22
Share
Citigroup tapped Michael Corbat as its new CEO after Vikram Pandit announced
Tuesday that he is stepping down from the helm of the banking giant.
Source: Cindy Ord | Getty Images
Vikram Pandit (l.) & Michael Corbat (r.)
Corbat was formerly the chief executive of Citi's Europe, Middle East, and
Africa division.
President and Chief Operating Officer John Havens also resigned.
After finishing 5.5 percent higher Monday, shares of Citigroup [C Loading..
. () ] fell in early trading following the announcement.
Pandit also resigned from the bank's board of directors, effectively
immediately. "Citigroup is well-positioned for continued profitability and
growth, having refocused the franchise on the basics of banking," Pandit
said.
In 2007, Pandit succeeded Charles Prince, after the bank racked up losses
relating to mortgage-backed securities.
Citi's board of directors praised Pandit's "leadership, integrity and
resilience in guiding Citi through the crisis and positioning it well for
the future."
Pandit's resignation caught industry watchers completely by surprise. CNBC
has learned that officials at the Treasury Department were also unaware that
a change in Citi leadership was imminent.
“This is a complete shock. No one expected this whatsoever,” said Jim
Cramer, host of CNBC’s “Mad Money.” The divisions were all in very good
shape, I don’t even want for a second to tell people that there was
anything in the works to make this happen. There was nothing … this was the
quarter where you give him a big raise, he was under a lot of pressure but
he got this right.”
Cramer lauded Citi’s earnings results and questioned why he would leave so
abruptly.
“Vikram Pandit, 24 hours ago, was the belle of the ball. This guy finally
got it right. Something’s wrong here,” he said.
On Monday, Citigroup reported quarterly earnings that beat analysts'
expectations. The bank reported third-quarter earnings, excluding items, of
$1.06 per share, down from $1.23 a share in the year-earlier period.
Revenue fell, however, to $19.4 billion from $20.83 billion a year earlier.
Analysts had expected Citi to report earnings of 96 cents a share on $18.71
billion in revenue, according to a consensus estimate from Thomson Reuters.
After a huge volume day for Citi Monday following its earnings report — at
more than 75.7 million shares — Citi shares have already traded half their
10-day and 100-day volume averages of 36 million shares, at more than 18
million shares in pre-market trading.