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NEW YORK (Reuters) - CITIGROUP (C.NY)Inc revealed plans to cut 52,000 jobs by early next year in a dramatic move to restore the No. 2 U.S. bank to health as it combats mounting debt losses and sagging economies worldwide.
The reductions announced on Monday by Chief Executive Vikram Pandit will affect 15 percent of Citigroup's
Citigroup's cuts will be global, affecting many regions and business lines, including the retail and investment banks, a person close to the matter said. About one-half will come from layoffs and attrition, and the rest from the sale of units, such as the German retail banking business.
Pandit became Citigroup's CEO last December, and has faced much criticism from investors and others for failing to implement a workable turnaround plan. The bank has lost $20.3 billion in the last year, and some analysts do not expect it to make money before 2010.
"As the economy continues to weaken they will have greater credit losses," said Michael Holland, founder of money manager Holland & Co in New York. "Cuts will lessen the losses, but they in no way guarantee profitability."
The latest cuts would leave Citigroup with about 300,000 employees, down 20 percent from the end of 2007 and roughly the same number it had at the end of 2005.
Citigroup plans to slash expenses by 20 percent from peak levels and spend a total of $50 billion to $52 billion in 2009. That compares with $61.9 billion over the last four quarters.
Shares of Citigroup, a component of the Dow Jones industrial average <.DJI>, fell 28 cents, or 3 percent, to $9.24 on the New York Stock Exchange.
STOCK UNDER PRESSURE
Last week, Citigroup stock fell into the single digits for the first time since Sanford "Sandy" Weill created the bank in 1998 from the merger of Travelers Group Inc and Citicorp.
Well over 100,000 jobs have already been lost at the largest banks and brokerages. In the last month, Goldman Sachs Group Inc
Citigroup said it plans to make the latest job cuts in the "near term." People at the New York bank said it expects to complete the reductions in the first couple of months of 2009.
"If the past is any guide, Wall Street overshoots in terms of hiring, and then overshoots when it's time to cut jobs," said Walter Todd, portfolio manager at Greenwood Capital Associates LLC, which invests $1 billion. "It's a moving target."
Citigroup said it has a "very strong" capital position, and according to the person close to the matter has no need to cut its dividend, which has already been reduced twice this year.
Still, many investors remained wary. Through Friday, the bank's stock was down 68 percent this year, leaving Citigroup with a market value of $51.9 billion.
That's barely twice the $25 billion of capital it received from the U.S. Treasury Department's bank bailout plan, and down from more than $270 billion in late 2006.
"We have a bull market in fear," said Henry Asher, president of Northstar Group Inc in New York.
DIVERSIFICATION DOESN'T HELP
Citigroup was built principally by Weill, who ceded control to Pandit's predecessor, Charles Prince, in 2003.
Analysts believe Citigroup never invested enough in technology or to make the bank's various parts work well together.
Its geographic diversity, including operations in more than 100 countries, is now also working against it as customers in such countries as Brazil, India and Mexico find it harder to keep up with their bills.
At the same time, Citigroup's ability to grow at home is relatively limited. Last month, Wells Fargo & Co
The bank has been trying to downplay reports of dissension among its directors regarding the performance of Pandit and the bank's chairman, Sir Win Bischoff.
Last week, lead director Richard Parsons said the board supported management's plans for the bank.
(Editing by John Wallace/Jeffrey Benkoe)
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