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Judge questions fairness of Citigroup $590 million settlement

A Manhattan federal judge on Monday signaled he will not rubber-stamp Citigroup Inc's proposed $590 million settlement of a shareholder lawsuit accusing it of hiding tens of billions of dollars of toxic mortgage assets.

 

New Call For Citi Split, Investor Says Bank Can Recoup $50B Valuation Gap

Since the financial crisis Citigroup has managed to firm up its balance sheet and fence off most of the toxic assets that brought the bank to its knees. Some shareholders want the firm to go further though, and the latest call for a breakup comes from an unlikely source.

 

Obama Administration Considers Splitting Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac

The Obama administration launched a broad government effort this week to overhaul mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and is considering splitting the companies and putting their troubled assets in a new federally backed corporation, administration officials said.

 

Bank of England to Expand Asset-Buying Program

The central bank said it would expand its program of purchasing corporate debt and government bonds by $75 billion and kept its key interest rate at 0.5 percent.

 

Geithner says most banks have sufficient capital

Geithner says most banks have sufficient capital

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said on Tuesday that most U.S. banks have enough capital to keep lending but a pile of bad debts is fostering doubts about their health and slowing a recovery.

 

New Accounting Rules for Mortgage-Backed Securities

The board that sets U.S. accounting standards voted to adopt guidelines that could reduce the losses banks have been forced to report as the values of their securities have crumbled.

 

Toxic assets cleanup plan unveiled by Obama administration

Toxic assets cleanup plan unveiled by Obama administration

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner says government will spend up to $100 billion to join private investors in buying up to $1 trillion in bad sub-prime mortgages, securities and other ailing assets.

The Obama administration today formally unveiled details of its long-awaited plan to help cleanse banks and financial institutions of bad home loans and toxic securities, making a calculated gamble that partnering with private investors to buy the assets will stabilize the crisis while limiting the

 

Stocks Rise Sharply at Bell

Investors respond positively to plan to remove up to $1 trillion in bad assets from banks' books.

 

Treasury has three-part plan for toxic assets

The U.S. Treasury Department is likely to unveil as soon as next week a three-part plan to relieve the U.S. financial system of the toxic assets that have been clogging up the banks' balance sheets, a source familiar with the plan said on Saturday.

 

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