Citi Says Loss Tied to Asian Hedge Fund Weighed on FICC Results

Citi Says Loss Tied to Asian Hedge Fund Weighed on FICC Results

(Bloomberg) -- Citigroup Inc. said its employees didn’t go beyond the bank’s risk limits with loans to an Asian hedge fund that hurt fixed-income results in the fourth quarter.

The bank indicated that it took a charge of $100 million to $200 million for losses tied to the loans. Chief Financial Officer John Gerspach told reporters on a conference call Monday that the loss hasn’t been realized yet, and some of the charge may be reversed. The loans were made in accordance with Citigroup’s risk appetite, he said.

“We are a bank, we do take risk and, at various points in time, there are losses associated with the risk that we take,” Gerspach said on the call. “We’ve had these situations in the past. I can’t predict how this one is going to turn out.”

Citigroup faces losses of as much as $180 million on loans made to the hedge fund, which is managed by a unit of GF Holdings (Hong Kong) Corp., Bloomberg News first reported last month. The matter was escalated to Citigroup’s board, and the bank has since reorganized its prime brokerage business, a person briefed on the matter said last month.

Read more: Citigroup Said to Face $180 Million Loss on Asia Fund Loan

The bank doesn’t have any other plans to change how it vets potential hedge fund clients, Gerspach said. The bank’s revenue from trading bonds, currencies and commodities dropped 21 percent to $1.94 billion, its lowest level in seven years. Excluding the charge, the drop would have been a percentage in the “mid-teens,” he said.

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

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