Subscribe

Citigroup: Financial bill will make largest banks bigger

New rules will make it tougher for smaller financial-services companies to compete.

Citigroup Inc., the U.S. lender with more than 200 million clients, said the country’s planned changes to the financial-services industry will make the largest banks bigger.

“They will make it tougher for smaller competitors and the big are going to get bigger,” Citigroup Chairman Dick Parsons, 62, said in an interview at the Fortune Global Forum in Cape Town today. The changes will lead to a “denser regulatory environment” and may not create any “material impediments” to Citigroup’s growth strategy, he said.

U.S. President Barack Obama praised lawmakers last week for passing what he described as the “toughest financial reforms” since the Great Depression. The broadest changes affecting banks will regulate the $615 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market and mostly ban proprietary trading. In Europe, banks like Citigroup and Deutsche Bank AG may face stress tests, while those with U.K. operations may be taxed more.

Citigroup is focusing on expanding in emerging markets, and Africa’s population of 1 billion creates a “sweet spot” for financial institutions, Parsons said. The lender plans to fund more transactions in Africa, targeting growth in industries from oil and gas to mining and telecommunications. Nigeria and Angola provide “important” opportunities, he said.

The Basel Committee of Banking and Supervision’s likely proposals on capital rules for lenders may be “restrictive,” Parsons also said.

Citigroup, which received a $45 billion government bailout in 2008, is the world’s ninth-largest bank by market value. It gained 4.2 percent to $3.94 in New York trading on June 25.

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Bank of America sounds warning on options-ETF boom

Skeptics says products often fare worse than simpler alternatives.

Gold in flux as investors await Fed meeting

Following a 13 percent advance this year, the price of the yellow metal wavered as traders weigh the odds of harmful rate hikes.

Hedge funds ramp up tech allocations, says Goldman

Data show amped-up net buying in sector through long positions and short-covering even amid a slide in S&P 500 IT index.

Stocks rise following hot March inflation

The S&P 500 is poised to extend gains on tech earnings while short-term Treasury yields fell following brisk rise in Fed’s preferred inflation gauge.

Fed will cut once before presidential election, says Howard Lutnick

Cantor Fitzgerald’s chief executive predicts the central bank will “show off a little bit” just before voters head to the polls.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print