عرض مشاركة واحدة
قديم 06-12-2009, 04:19 PM   #22
salmanov2002
متداول فعّال
 
تاريخ التسجيل: Jan 2005
المشاركات: 216

 
افتراضي

اقتباس:
المشاركة الأصلية كتبت بواسطة أبن المقنع
الهيئة العامة للاستثمار" تحقق 1ر1 مليار دولار أرباحا من بيع حصتها في "سيتى قروب"
كونا 06/12/2009
أعلنت الهيئة العامة للاستثمار أنها استكملت بيع حصتها في مجموعة سيتي المصرفية (سيتي قروب) محققة أرباحا اجمالية بلغت 1ر1 مليار دولار أمريكي أي ما يعادل 7ر36 في المئة عائدا على رأس المال المستثمر.

وقالت الهيئة في بيان صحافي اليوم ان تحقيقها هذا الربح يأتى على الرغم من الأزمة المالية العالمية والمشاكل التي أصابت القطاع المصرفي في العالم بأضرار كبيرة.

يذكر ان الهيئة كانت قد استثمرت مبلغ ثلاثة مليارات دولار في سيتي غروب على شكل أسهم ممتازة في شهر يناير 2008 قامت في فترة لاحقة بتحويل الأسهم الممتازة الى أسهم عادية بعد مفاوضات أجرتها مع ادارة البنك تم بيعها كامله بمبلغ 1ر4 مليار دولار لتحقق الربح المشار اليه.




اذا الهيئة للأستثمار أستثمرت في عام 2008 في سيتي قروب وكان السعر بين 35 و 15 دولارآ
ومن ثم باعت في 2009 وقت الخسارة وهبوط السهم وكسبت بعد تحويل أسهمها الممتازة الى
عادية 1,1 مليار دولار..................... السؤال

ماهي ياترى أرباح الوليد في هذا البنك؟


الشيطان يكمن في التفاصيل والتفاصيل على الاغلب تحددها الشفافية والبيئة الاستثمارية ورغم ذلك اعلانات المملكة المتوالية سلبية علاوة على ان هناك حركة تسييل مستمرة لبعض أصول الوليد ....

خذ مثلا هذا خبر سلبي حول الاستثمارات السيادية لأبو ظبي لم يتم تغطيته اعلاميا !

Abu Dhabi's Citigroup Investment Turns Costly .

By MARSHALL ECKBLAD
NEW YORK—Abu Dhabi Investment Authority is set to pay its first bill of misery to Citigroup Inc.

Because of an investment deal struck two years ago, early in the financial crisis, the United Arab Emirates' sovereign fund will soon start purchasing $7.5 billion in Citigroup shares at $31.83 apiece, even though the New York bank's stock closed at $4.10.

The value of Abu Dhabi's investment will ultimately be shaped by the price of Citigroup's stock come March. But it seems very likely that "one of the world's...most sophisticated equity investors," as Citi crowed of Abu Dhabi when it inked the complex deal, will soon overpay for the stock of a bank that has fallen into the arms of the U.S. government.

More on Abu DhabiWSJ.com/Mideast: News, video, graphics .
The news is the latest setback for the United Arab Emirates. Last week, Dubai World, a government-owned company, sought a standstill on debt payments, a move that shocked world markets.

The terms of the Citigroup deal looked lucrative for Abu Dhabi back in November 2007, when it raced to Citi's rescue as the New York bank crumbled under soaring investment losses tied to the depressed U.S. mortgage and housing markets. Abu Dhabi wrote a check for $7.5 billion in exchange for an 11% annual dividend.

The bad news for Abu Dhabi is it only demanded such dividend payments for a little more than two years—until March 15, 2010. Afterwards, Abu Dhabi would in essence exchange its original investment in four installments for Citigroup common stock, which was then worth nearly $31.

To pull off that exchange, Citigroup on Wednesday announced a coming public bond offer that will pay a much smaller yield of slightly more than 6%. The proceeds will go to Abu Dhabi, which is required to use the cash in March for its expensive purchase of Citigroup stock.

Abu Dhabi, by agreeing ahead of time to exchange cash for stock at a price of $31.83, figured to make money under the assumption that Citigroup's shares would rise modestly over more than 27 months. "This investment reflects our confidence in Citi's potential to build shareholder value," Sheikh Ahmed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Abu Dhabi's managing director, said at the time.

But now it is Citi, not Abu Dhabi, that is seeing prospects for a winning deal. If Citi's stock price holds steady through March, the beleaguered New York bank will basically be able to raise new capital by selling stock at more than seven times its market price. The deal will also boost Citi's Tier 1 common equity and tangible common equity by $1.875 billion, according to Wednesday's statement.

As harsh as the deal's terms now seem for Abu Dhabi, they perhaps could have been worse. In early 2008, after Citigroup raised $12.5 billion, it reduced Abu Dhabi's conversion price to $31.83.

If the current deal holds, as expected, it will mark a rare win for Citigroup, which has been mauled by the financial crisis. The bank turned to the Treasury twice for infusions of capital, which ultimately left the U.S. government owning 34% of the bank. For a time in March, its stock traded below $1 a share.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...IDDLTopStories


salmanov2002 غير متواجد حالياً