Report: Sumitomo Mitsui, Citigroup near deal
TOKYO — Major Japanese bank Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc. has reached a basic agreement to buy a Japan-based brokerage unit from Citigroup Inc. for 500 billion yen ($5.2 billion), a newspaper said Tuesday.
Sumitomo Mitsui has been in talks over an acquisition of Nikko Cordial Securities Inc. from Citigroup as part of the ailing U.S. bank’s global restructuring, and an official announcement is expected within the next few days, The Nikkei business newspaper said, without citing sources.
If the deal materialized, Sumitomo Mitsui would be the first Japanese bank to buy a top brokerage in Japan, the Nikkei said.
Both Sumitomo Mitsui and Nikko Cordial declined to confirm the report, saying no decision has been made. Citigroup said it had no comment.
Two other of Japan’s “megabanks” — Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. and Mizuho Financial Group Inc. — had also competed for Nikko Cordial. But they lost out to Sumitomo Mitsui, which last week became the top bidder and obtained a preferential status to negotiate with Citigroup, the Nikkei said.
Nikko Cordial, which Citigroup acquired just a year ago, is Japan’s third-biggest brokerage with managed assets of 25 billion yen ($260.4 million) and 111 branches.
Sumitomo Mitsui aims to expand its brokerage operations by acquiring Nikko Cordial, which operates in both individual and corporate services in Japan, and close in on the industry leader Nomura Holdings, Inc., the report said.
After reporting a quarterly loss of $8.29 billion, Citigroup last month reorganized into two entities, Citicorp and Citi Holdings. The first is focused on traditional banking around the world, while the second holds the company’s riskier assets and tougher-to-manage non-core ventures, including Nikko Cordial.
Analysts have said that CEO Vikram Pandit’s reorganization allows Citigroup to sell or spin off the Citi Holdings assets to raise cash.
Citigroup has already begun scaling back its presence in Japan to cope with the global financial crisis. In December, it agreed to sell NikkoCiti Trust and Banking Corp. to Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking Corp. in an all-cash deal worth 25 billion yen.
Related News
FINRA fines Citigroup $600,000 over alleged trading strategies to pare taxesOctober 12th, 2009 FINRA fines Citigroup $600K over tax trading plansWASHINGTON — Citigroup Inc. has agreed to pay a $600,000 fine and be censured to settle regulators' charges that it failed to supervise complex stock-trading strategies aimed at reducing the bank's potential tax bill.
Citigroup completes sale of Japanese brokerage in $8.7 billion dealOctober 1st, 2009 Citigroup closes $8.7B sale of Japanese brokerageTOKYO — Citigroup Inc. has completed the sale of its Japanese brokerage to Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.
Pandit says Citigroup plans to exit Smith Barney venture with Morgan Stanley, repay TARPSeptember 16th, 2009 Citi plans to sell remaining Smith Barney stakeNEW YORK — Citigroup Inc. CEO Vikram Pandit confirmed Wednesday that the bank plans to eventually sell the remaining stake in its Smith Barney brokerage venture to Morgan Stanley, which owns the other half.
Japan megabank Sumitomo Mitsui's net profit up 25 percent in April-June as stock markets climbJuly 30th, 2009 Sumitomo Mitsui profit jumps 25 percentTOKYO — Major Japanese bank Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc. booked a 25 percent jump in quarterly profit as climbing stock prices and a slowly improving economy bolstered its bottom line.
Citigroup sells entire stake in Nikko Asset Management for $795M to Sumitomo TrustJuly 30th, 2009 Citigroup sells stake in Japanese asset managerNEW YORK — Citigroup Inc. said Thursday it is selling its entire majority stake in a Japanese asset management company to The Sumitomo Trust and Banking Co Ltd.
Citigroup records profit, breaking six quarter slumpJuly 17th, 2009 NEW YORK - The sale of its controlling stake in a brokerage helped Citigroup Friday to surprise analysts and announce $4.3 billion of net income in the second quarter of 2009, after six quarters of falling ever further into the red. However, the fact that the entire uptick into positive numbers was due to its decision to merge the Smith Barney brokerage into a joint venture to be controlled by Morgan Stanley, created questions as to whether the company could continue to earn profits in the near term.
Citigroup sells NikkoCitu Trust to Nomura Trust in scale back of Japan businessJuly 1st, 2009 Citigroup sells NikkoCiti Trust to Nomura TrustTOKYO — Nomura Trust and Banking Co. is acquiring NikkoCiti Trust and Banking Corp.
Daiwa Securities falls 12 percent after announcing public share offeringJune 29th, 2009 Daiwa Securities tumbles on share offering newsTOKYO — Shares of Daiwa Securities Group Inc., Japan's second-biggest securities company, plunged more than 12 percent Monday after the company announced plans to raise about 240 billion yen ($2.5 billion) in a public share offering
The news stunned investors who worried that the offering would dilute the value of existing shares. The Tokyo-based brokerage said after market close Friday that it will issue up to 345 million new shares from July 15 to July 21.
Mitsubishi UFJ to boost acquisition of Morgan Stanley's common stockMay 13th, 2009 Mitsubishi UFJ boosts swap of Morgan Stanley stockTOKYO — Japan's biggest bank, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., said Wednesday it will swap a larger amount of its preferred shares in Morgan Stanley for common stock to keep its voting rights stake of the U.S. bank above 20 percent.
Report: Citigroup may need to raise $10 billion in extra capital to meet new gov't standardsMay 2nd, 2009 Report: Citigroup may need $10B in extra capitalNEW YORK — Citigroup Inc. may need to raise as much as $10 billion to meet the government's increased capital standards for banks outlined in its stress tests, according to a report.
Sumitomo Mitsui to buy Citigroup's Japan brokerage unitMay 1st, 2009 Sumitomo Mitsui, Citigroup reach deal on brokerageTOKYO — Sumitomo Mitsui is taking over Citigroup's Japan brokerage businesses, both sides said Friday, as part of a bigger plan to restructure the struggling U.S. bank. Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc.
Banking group Sumitomo Mitsui to buy Citigroup's Japan brokerage unit for $5.6 billionMay 1st, 2009 Sumitomo Mitsui to buy brokerage from CitigroupTOKYO — Sumitomo Mitsui is taking over Citigroup's Japan brokerage businesses, both sides said Friday, as part of a bigger plan to restructure the struggling U.S. bank. The deal is Japan's first acquisition of a leading brokerage by a bank.
Bank of America and Citigroup are reportedly told they may need additional capitalApril 28th, 2009 Bank of America, Citigroup may need more capitalWASHINGTON — Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc., which have each received $45 billion in government bailout funds, have been told by regulators that "stress test" results show they may need to raise additional capital, The Wall Street Journal said Tuesday.
Reports: Sumitomo Mitsui most likely candidate to buy Citigroup Japan unitApril 25th, 2009 Reports: Sumitomo likely to buy Japan CitigroupTOKYO — Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc. has emerged as the most likely candidate to buy Citigroup Inc.'s Japanese brokerage unit after offering the highest bid worth $5 billion, reports said Saturday.
Japan's No. 2 bank Mizuho Financial expects first annual net loss in 6 yearsApril 23rd, 2009 Japan's Mizuho Financial forecasts annual net lossTOKYO — Mizuho Financial Group Inc., Japan's second-biggest bank, warned Thursday that it sank into the red last fiscal year amid mounting bad loans and steep stock market declines. The Tokyo-based lender slashed its earnings guidance for the 12 months through March 31, saying it expects a group net loss of 580 billion yen ($5.9 billion) — its first annual loss in six years.