Posts tagged “citigroup”

Phibro Hedge Fund Goes From 12% Loss To 12% Gain In Four Months

February 10th, 2011

John Paulson isn’t the only well-remunerated hedge fund manager to manage a major turnaround late last year.

Astenbeck Capital Management, the firm run by former star Citigroup energy trader Andrew Hall, also swung from a double-digit loss to a double-digit gain as the year drew to a close. Westport, Conn.-based Astenbeck’s flagship was down 12% through the end of August—but was up 12% by the time the ball dropped in Times Square, Reuters reports. The fund returned 9% in September and then again in December to both begin and complete the turnaround.

The $1.7 billion fund relied on metals and agricultural commodities, as oil and natural gas bets took their toll.

“The persistent contango in the oil markets throughout most of 2010 meant that returns from oil were not as good as those from some other commodities,” Hall wrote.

Hall founded Astenbeck in 2008, just before Occidental Petroleum bought Hall’s Phibro trading desk from Citi in 2009. Citi moved to sell the highly-profitable desk, which now manages money exclusively for Occidental, because it feared the ire of federal regulators over Hall’s guaranteed $100 million bonus.

Astenbeck, which has been closed to new investors, was set to begin accepting new money again last month.

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Madoff Trustee Picard Fires at Citigroup

December 10th, 2010

Battle stations! Picard opens fire on Citigroup

Irving Picard is a man engaged in battle. After unleashing over 100 lawsuits to claw back funds from facilitators of Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, Picard has opened fire on seven more banks, including Citigroup and France’s Natixis.

All of the suits seek the return of transfers from Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities to various Madoff feeder funds. Of the more than $1 billion the receiver is seeking, the two banks account for $825 million.

“Armed with considerable non-public information about Madoff, Citi either knew or should have known that Madoff’s investment advisory business was a fake, and that funds Citi received from these two Madoff feeder funds came from Madoff’s fraudulent activities,” Picard said. “Evidence of awareness of the fraud is clear.”

Nonsense, Citi retorts. The bank will “vigorously defend against these claims by the trustee, as they are without merit and entirely untrue,” it said in a statement. “Citi did not know about nor in any way assist in the Madoff fraud.”

Picard is seeking $425 million from Citi, mostly as a result of a $300 million credit facility it offered a Rye Investment Management fund. The receiver sued Rye’s parent, Tremont Group, on Tuesday.

Picard’s team also didn’t mince words about Natixis, from which it is seeking at least $400 million.

“Armed with knowledge of many badges of fraud, Natixis and its related entities nevertheless provided substantial momentum furthering Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, especially in Europe,” Mark Kornfeld, a lawyer working for Picard, said. “Over time, this international collaboration became critical to sustaining the fraud.”

Piacard is also seeking more than $320 million from Fortis’ prime brokerage, more than $270 million from ABN Amro, about $45 million from Banco Bilbao Vizcaya, at least $35 million from Nomura Bank International and at least $16 million from Merrill Lynch International.

“Although many of these banks questioned Madoff’s trading strategy and returns, they continued to structure transactions seeking to exploit Madoff’s consistent returns,” another Picard lawyer, Ryan Farley, said.

The seven join a roster of many prominent banks sued by Picard. The reciever is seeking $9 billion from HSBC, $6.4 billion from JPMorgan Chase and $2.5 billion from UBS.

Picard is facing a Saturday deadline to file clawback suits in the case. To date, he has collected some $2.6 billion for victims of the $65 billion Ponzi scheme and has filed lawsuits seeking the return of  about $35 billion.

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Citigroup Hits An Iceberg

August 12th, 2010

“Citigroup sold these products like tickets on the Titanic and, with this ruling, they’re going to pay their victims whose investments they sunk.”

So says Robert Pearce, whose law office has just won a judgment against bank/prime broker Citigroup for $1.8 million. After an arbitrator awarded a pair of investors the lump sum amount, Citigroup now fears it may be facing a blizzard of lawsuits over a series of hedge funds it bailed out two years ago.

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority panel found that Citigroup Global Markets and Citi Alternative Investments negligently mismanaged the MAT/ASTA funds and negligently supervised employees, the Law Offices of Robert Wayne Pearce and Page Perry said. The two law firms have now teamed up to represent other clients of the municipal bond hedge funds, and they are not alone in that endeavor.

Mr. Pearce added “Citigroup tried the ‘blame the customer defense,’ but blaming the customer does not make sense for Citigroup’s failing to follow its own investment strategy and then sailing MAT/ASTA directly into the storm it saw on the horizon. The negligent management claim now is available to all MAT/ASTA investors, including employees not involved in the management of the funds.”

The $1.8 million award follows a $550,000 award made by a FINRA panel in June.

Investors say the MAT/ASTA funds were marketed as relatively safe, fixed-income products. But Pearce said that they “were risky investments that exposed investors to a 100% or more loss of principal.”

Pearce and Page Perry aren’t the only firms seeking to drum up clients against Citi. The Securities Law Firm of Klayman & Toskes issued a press release yesterday to “all Smith Barney/Citi Private Bank customers who invested in ASTA and MAT funds,” offering their services and promising to “aggressively” pursue claims for MAT/ASTA clients.

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