Once again, I can’t believe it, but I’m quoting Henry Blodgett, and he runs the numbers on the proposed conversion of preferred stock to common stock:
And what will the US taxpayer get for this preferred stock conversion? 40% of the company for some of its $45 billion of preferred, say reports. The reports add that Citigroup’s goal here is to keep the US’s ownership under 50%, so this won’t be a de facto nationalization.
Well, that’s nice for Citigroup…and another ream-job for taxpayers.
Citigroup’s common equity is currently worth $10 billion. If the US were to convert all $45 billion of its preferred at the current stock price, it should end up with 80% of the company, not 40%.
Basically, preferred stock is very similar from an accounting standpoint, to debt, while common stock is assets….What’s more in the process of writing off debt to assets, the taxpayer is expected to take a 50% haircut.
So the way for the banks to stay out of government hands is for the government to own the banks.
Citi also wantsother sovereign investors, such as, “Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation, and the Kuwait Investment Authority,” to take part in a similar debt to equity swap, though it is not clear if they are being asked to take a similar haircut.
It appears that the US government, particularly treasury are, “open to considering a request to so do,” because placing an insolvent bank, which is what we have with Citi, in receivership is, at least according to Timothy “Eddie Haskell” Geithner evil beyond belief.
Someone needs to explain to Mr. Geithner that he is no longer an employee of the New York banks, as he was when he was president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.