Citi: A Sell at $3.00?
I really thought we would finally see a less negative view on Citigroup (C) from Meredith Whitney a couple weeks back when the stock hit three bucks. Whitney, you may recall, is the Oppenheimer & Co banking analyst who downgraded Citigroup to "underperform" last year when the shares traded for around $40 each. Last month, Citigroup hit a fresh intra-day low of $3.05, capping a stunning 13 month 92% drop in the shares of what once was one of the most valuable U.S. companies.
What a perfect time that was to remove a "sell" rating. At $3.05, Citigroup stock likely had two possible long term outcomes; go bust or go a lot higher. Whitney could have closed the book on what would have been one of the best analyst calls of all time. It would be easy to justify upgrading Citi to "neutral" at $3 per share. After all, after a 92% drop, the risk-reward trade off is far less compelling unless you really think the company won't survive.
Whitney has never indicated she thinks Citigroup will go under, so I have to think recommending investors sell the stock at $3 makes little sense, unless she wants to remain the most bearish analyst on Wall Street and an upgrade of a large bank stock wouldn't fit that mold.
In the past two weeks, Citigroup stock has surged by more than 150% from the ridiculously low $3 quote to $7.70 per share as I write this. If that $3 print turns out to be the low (I am not predicting that necessarily, as I have no idea where bank stocks could trade in the short term), Whitney might have to remove her "underperform" rating at much higher prices, which tarnishes the call because she would have that rating on the stock as it doubled, tripled, or even quadrupled in value.
If the stock goes back down in the coming weeks or months, I think Whitney would be well-served to put a neutral rating on the stock, claim victory, and cement her Citigroup call as perhaps the best sell side recommendation of all time.
It would not be an easy decision given the banking sector still has not overcome its problems, but moving on would signal to investors and her clients that she has not resorted to simply being the most bearish banking analyst on Wall Street. Just because that is what put her on the map, it does not mean staying bearish for too long could not take her off of it just as quickly.
Full Disclosure: No position in Citigroup at the time of writing, but positions may change at any time.
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This article has 8 comments:
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CM in MA
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93 Comments
Dec 03 02:58 PM-
HOJOKAP
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1 Comment
Dec 03 03:49 PM-
JP in TO
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1 Comment
Dec 03 06:29 PM-
mik123
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20 Comments
Dec 03 07:16 PM-
roger maxims
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25 Comments
Dec 04 06:26 AMAs at Dec 2008, Citi's stock price should fall between:
0.98 [2% inflation] x ZERO [2009 loss]
to
1.03 [3% deflation] x ZERO [2009 profit]
which gives a price range of absolute zero to positive zero.
Please don't tell me 3 years or 5 years later Citi will become profitable again. All banks profit on ever-increasing leverage, that's what mortgages and credit cards are all about.
Imagine what would happen if Citi reduces your mortgage by half and your credit card limit by a third now.
To stop the train is hard, to drag it in reverse when there's still coal in the boiler is suicide.
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Pent up demand
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113 Comments
Dec 04 09:29 AMI agree with roger maxims. People have this wild notion that
1. stock is beat down
2. no way gov't. will not let them go out of business
3. profit
As roger says, look at when earnings per share go positive. Maybe in 3 to 5 years. In between time, you will get diluted, and/or high-yielding preferred will be issued to make sure that the profits go anywhere but to the rubes in steerage (common stock). If you want to buy a lottery ticket, go pick up some long dated calls on C.
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nelson mandela
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17 Comments
Dec 04 11:29 AM-
88008
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4 Comments
Dec 04 12:00 PMGoing long on C is definitely a lottery pick.