Citigroup faces $180mn loss on Asia loan

Bloomberg

Citigroup Inc faces losses of as much as $180 million on loans made to an Asian hedge fund whose foreign-exchange wagers went awry, prompting board-level discussions and a business shakeup, according to a person briefed on the matter.
The hedge fund, managed by a unit of GF Holdings (Hong Kong) Corp, and Citigroup are in discussions on the positions and how they should be valued, said people with knowledge of the talks, who asked not to be identified because the discussions are private. The situation is fluid and the eventual losses may end up being smaller depending on how the trades are unwound, one of the people said.
The matter was escalated to Citigroup’s board, one person said. The bank is also reorganising its prime brokerage business as a result of the expected financial hit, the person said. It’s taking the FX prime brokerage unit out of the currency trading division and placing it under the oversight of its prime finance and securities services unit, according to a memo from the bank.
Chris Perkins, who leads the bank’s over-the-counter clearing business, will become head of the FX prime brokerage, the company said in the memo. Sanjay Madgavkar, who ran the FX prime brokerage unit and has worked at Citigroup for more than 20 years, is leaving the firm, the person said. Madgavkar declined to comment, as did Scott Helfman, a spokesman for the New York-based lender.
GF Holdings is owned by Guangzhou-based brokerage GF Securities Co, according to its website. It has four wholly-owned subsidiaries: GF Securities (Hong Kong) Brokerage Ltd, GF Capital (Hong Kong) Ltd, GF Asset Management (Hong Kong) Ltd. and GF Investments (Hong Kong) Co, the website shows.
GF Holdings Chief Executive Officer Tang Xiaodong declined to comment when reached on the phone by Bloomberg News and didn’t reply to a follow-up email. Another representative for the firm wasn’t immediately able to comment. GF Holdings is separate from GF Fund Management Co, another unit of
GF Securities.
The episode shows that banks are beginning to feel some of the pain that’s besieged the hedge fund industry this year as geopolitical tensions around the world have spurred dramatic swings in asset prices. The $3.2 trillion industry is on track to post its worst performance since 2011, and hedge funds with a focus on Asia are particularly struggling.
Citigroup Chief Financial Officer John Gerspach said earlier this month that momentum in rates and currencies trading hadn’t carried over from the third quarter and the firm would likely post a year-over-year decline in fixed-income trading revenue this quarter.

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