Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
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Citigroup and Morgan Stanley agreed to
merge their brokerage units, according to a joint statement on
Tuesday. (Xinhua/Reuters file Photo) Photo
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NEW YORK, Jan. 13 (Xinhua) -- Citigroup and Morgan Stanley agreed to merge their
brokerage units, according to a joint statement on Tuesday.
Under the deal, Citigroup's retail brokerage Smith
Barney will combine with Morgan Stanley while the latter is paying Citigroup 2.7
billion U.S. dollars in cash.
The statement said Morgan Stanley will own a
51-percent stake in the joint venture while Citigroup will have the remaining 49
percent.
The new venture is expected to become the industry's
leading wealth management business with over 20,000 brokers and financial
advisors, 1.7 trillion dollars in client assets and 6.8 million households
around the world.
During the recent credit crisis, the troubled banking
giant Citigroup is under pressure to shore up its finances, especially after
taking billions of bailout money from the U.S. government.
The deal will grant Citigroup a pretax gain of 9.5
billion dollars or 5.8 billion after taxes.
