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NEW YORK, May 1 (Reuters) - Citigroup Inc (C.N)
may need to generate up to $10 billion in new capital
to meet the requirements of the U.S. government's
stress tests, the Wall Street Journal reported on its
website on Friday,
Like other financial institutions, the bank is in
talks with the Federal Reserve about whether it needs
more capital, the Journal said, citing unnamed
sources.
Citigroup may need less if regulators accept its
arguments about its financial health. In a best-case
scenario, Citigroup could have a roughly $500 million
cushion above what the government requires, the paper
reported.
Calls to Citigroup were not immediately returned. A
spokesman for the U.S. Treasury had no comment.
The government created the stress tests as a way to
measure the capital needs of the nation's 19 largest
banks and their ability to withstand a variety of
economic scenarios.
According to a government source, the results are
expected to be released to banks on Tuesday and
publicly on Thursday. [ID:nN01312288]
Analysts believe the government will say all 19
banks are solvent, but that some will need to drum up
more capital than others to cushion themselves as the
U.S. recession deepens.
The results are expected to show that the banks
must raise about $150 billion or more in fresh
capital, a scenario that is likely to test the stocks
of the neediest banks next week. (Reporting by Deepa
Seetharaman; Editing by Richard Chang)
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