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Registered Rep. September 22, 2008 John Churchill |
Sallie Krawcheck Out at Smith Barney Sallie Krawcheck, CEO of Citi's global wealth management division, and once considered a potential successor to the CEO role, is leaving the firm. |
Registered Rep. January 22, 2007 John Churchill |
Krawcheck Back, Thompson Bows Out at Citigroup Citigroup announced two key management changes today: Sallie Krawcheck, Citigroup's CFO, returns to her role as CEO of global wealth management, and Todd Thomson, who currently holds the position, is leaving the company. |
Registered Rep. November 1, 2002 Gaffen & Weinberg |
Brokers React to Citi's Research Move Sallie Krawcheck, former head of independent research firm Sanford C. Bernstein, will head a new business unit of Citigroup that will operate under the name Smith Barney, and include the private client group. Smith Barney brokers are skeptical, though. |
BusinessWeek February 20, 2006 Mara Der Hovanesian |
Rewiring Chuck Prince Citigroup CEO Charles O. Prince strives to make himself into a leader with vision. |
CFO November 1, 2004 Kate O'Sullivan |
Trading Places Why did Citigroup CFO Todd Thomson switch jobs with Sallie Krawcheck?... Kevin Parker lands in the hot seat at PeopleSoft... CFOs on the move... |
The Motley Fool August 4, 2009 Matt Koppenheffer |
Bank of America Submits Its Bid for Dumbest Move of the Week Bank of America hires former Citigroup CFO Sallie Krawcheck to take over the bank's global wealth and investment management operations. |
BusinessWeek February 14, 2005 Mara Der Hovanesian |
Citi: A Whole New Playbook Citigroup CEO Chuck Prince is moving away from Sandy Weill's empire-building strategy. |
Registered Rep. December 1, 2004 David A. Gaffen |
Sallie Krawcheck Has Left the Building In a move that presages future Citigroup plans, Smith Barney CEO Sallie Krawcheck and Citigroup's CFO Todd Thomson have switched offices. |
Fast Company Robert Safian |
"I Knew I Would Get Fired": Sallie Krawcheck Krawcheck has had "the dubious distinction of having worked for seven financial services CEOs." Along the way, she had always resisted efforts to connect her professional achievements to her gender. |
BusinessWeek February 26, 2007 Mara Der Hovanesian |
The Real Scandal At Citi Is Citi using a high-level ouster and tabloid-style rumors to obscure the disarray and dismal returns of Chuck Prince's reign? |
Registered Rep. August 3, 2009 John Churchill |
When Kenny Met Sallie - Bank of America hires Krawcheck Sallie Krawcheck, one of the most powerful women on Wall Street, has ended her year-long absence from the wealth management industry with an auspicious return. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2007 John Churchill |
Sallie's Back At first glance, this second coming of Sallie Krawcheck probably looks like a cakewalk compared to her first adventure in 2002. But, make no mistake: Smith Barney is not the awesome brokerage it appears to be on paper. |
Registered Rep. May 30, 2003 David A. Gaffen |
The New Smith Barney CEO Sallie Krawcheck was recruited to restore the credibility of Smith Barney and lead the business through its toughest slump in a generation. Krawcheck wants Smith Barney advisors to more than double their average annual production to $1 million. |
BusinessWeek July 28, 2003 Anthony Bianco |
Citi's New Act Chuck Prince, Sandy Weill's top troubleshooter, is the unlikely choice for CEO. Does he have the right stuff? |
Registered Rep. December 16, 2004 David A. Gaffen |
Smith Barney's Matthews Retires; Johnston Steps In Tom Matthews, president of Smith Barney's global private client group, is retiring and Charles Johnston, currently director of the retail branch system at the firm, will replace him. |
Bank Systems & Technology August 4, 2009 Maria Bruno-Britz |
Bank of America's New Executive Roster Ken Lewis reshuffles BofA's management team, including the hiring of former Citi CFO Sally Krawcheck. |
Registered Rep. March 3, 2008 Christina Mucciolo |
Krawcheck Says Advisors Not Forced Into Wealth Silos: UPDATE Citigroup's reorganization of its private bank and Global Wealth Management division, announced Tuesday, will absolutely not force advisors into silos based on client wealth. |
Registered Rep. April 18, 2007 Halah Touryalai |
Chuck Prince: Smith Barney Goin' Nowhere Citigroup's CEO has been at the center of company news recently with his plans to cut costs including last week's announcement of about 17,000 job cuts. That cut may affect over 100 Smith Barney employees and about 30 advisors. |
BusinessWeek October 16, 2006 Mara Der Hovanesian |
Citicorp: Cleaned Up But Falling Behind Investors are carping about Citicorp's slow recovery. Can Chuck Prince pick up the pace? |
Registered Rep. November 5, 2007 John Churchill |
Questions Surround Citigroup, Smith Barney Solid Citigroup's Charles Prince resigned Sunday night in the aftermath of Citi's horrendous third-quarter earnings report. Prince has been under fire from investors for a long time because the stock consistently lagged behind its peers. |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2008 Christina Mucciolo |
Citi Reorganizes For Smith Barney Citigroup announces plans to reorganize its private bank and Global Wealth Management division into four separate units according to client wealth. |
Registered Rep. April 6, 2009 John Churchill |
Citi Smith Barney Head, Michael Corbat, Now Head of "Bad Bank" Just over six months after he was named the new leader of Citi Global Wealth Management, Michael Corbat is bouncing to another post. Today, the firm named Corbat CEO of Citi Holdings. |
U.S. Banker March 2007 Karen Krebsbach |
As Controversy Dogs Citi, Prince Buys 2 UK Firms, Aims to Cut Costs Excessive spending is the last thing CEO Charles Prince should put up with; even more, Todd Thomson's departure allows for some internal moves of greater significance. |
U.S. Banker July 2007 Holly Sraeel |
Split Citi Up? The Merger Was Fated from the Start. The intense scrutiny that Charles Prince has been under in the past four years is something few bank CEOs will ever know. None of them has run an institution as complex as Citigroup. |
U.S. Banker February 2002 |
Citigroup Thrives, While Chase Shrivels Citigroup is king -- of just about everything financial. For one thing, it has unseated Merrill Lynch & Co. from its 11-year reign as the nation's lead underwriter... |
Bank Systems & Technology March 20, 2009 Maria Bruno-Britz |
Citi's CFO Crittenden to Head Troubled Bank Unit Edward Kelly becomes the new CFO of Citi after the bank's Crittenden was named to lead its troubled Citi Holdings unit. |
BusinessWeek March 3, 2011 Farzad & Son |
The Bull Whisperer Sallie Krawcheck, chief of the wealth management unit at Bank of America, needs her Merrill Lynch brokers to drive profit to other divisions. And Merrill's "Thundering Herd" is snorting mad about it |
Registered Rep. September 9, 2002 Rick Weinberg |
Acknowledging Some "Inappropriate Behavior," Sandy Weill Defends Solly Sandy Weill, chairman of Salomon Smith Barney's parent Citigroup, acknowledged that his firm may have engaged in some inappropriate behavior during the bull market and said that Citigroup would have to make "amends" to regain respect. |
BusinessWeek September 5, 2005 Mara Der Hovanesian |
Chuck Prince's Citi Planning Citigroup's CEO has a strategy for the financial giant. Those who don't like it can quit. |
The Motley Fool January 30, 2007 David Lee Smith |
An Egg for a Cracked Citigroup Will the acquisition of England's Egg Banking help Citigroup get back on the road to stardom? And where does this leave investors? |
Fast Company May 2005 Jennifer Reingold |
Varnished History Citigroup's documentary about its history aims for Ken Burns but comes closer to Spinal Tap. But ultimately, effective communications are rooted in authenticity -- and this film is only selectively authentic. In that failure, it subverts Prince's hope for change. |
The Motley Fool September 18, 2009 Morgan Housel |
Citigroup Hates Its Profitable Assets With Smith Barney divested, shareholders may wonder where profits will come from. |
U.S. Banker October 2003 |
Power In its first-annual ranking of "The 25 Most Powerful Women in Banking," U.S. Banker pays tribute to the executives whose contributions to their institutions and their communities are most profound. |
U.S. Banker January 2008 Karen Krebsbach |
Citi - Top Wealth-Management Team U.S. Banker has chosen Citi Global Wealth Management as its top wealth-management team, due to the bank's double-digit organic growth, and the trust placed in the company by its affluent overseas investors. |
Registered Rep. January 12, 2009 Halah Touryalai |
Citi Grabs a Lifeline, Morgan Stages a Coup Despite a $45 billion capital injection from the government in 2008, Citi is in dire enough need of capital that it is planning to spin off its retail brokerage operation, Smith Barney, according to reports, in a joint venture with cross-town rival Morgan Stanley |
Registered Rep. April 18, 2012 Kristen French |
Due Diligence: Krawcheck Reincarnated as Gold Bug Sallie Krawcheck, aka "Mrs. Clean," is kicking off the next chapter of her career in the wealth management industry with a position on the advisory board of Gold Bullion International. |
Registered Rep. May 13, 2008 Nancy N. DiCostanzo |
Citi Plan Gets Whitney Smackdown Citigroup's turnaround plan gets a big thumbs down by an Oppenheimer analyst. |
Registered Rep. May 29, 2007 Kevin Burke |
Smith Barney's Krawcheck to Smooth Out Comp. Plan The brokerage giant's top executive is set to tweak the firm's compensation plan in an attempt to address financial advisors' repeated complaints over pay complexities and claims of unfairness. |
Registered Rep. January 13, 2009 David Geracioti |
Citi, Morgan Stanley Agree To Form Joint Venture; Reps Will Receive Retention Bonus--Gorman Says: "We're Not Stupid" The combined retail brokerage units will become the largest financial services firm in the world and be a "force to be reckoned with." The combined entity will have more than 20,000 Financial advisors and an estimated $1.7 trillion in client assets. |
Bank Systems & Technology February 22, 2007 Katherine Burger |
What Are the IT and Distribution Implications of Citigroup's Rebranding Initiative? As Citigroup sells its red umbrella logo back to St. Paul Travelers as part of chairman and CEO Charles Prince's rebranding initiative, what are the IT, channel and distribution implications? |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2008 David Geracioti |
Sallie Krawcheck A conversation with Sally Krawcheck, CEO of Citigroup's Smith Barney unit, about the company's recent reorganization. |
CFO March 1, 2007 Joseph McCafferty |
For CFOs, Few Gold Watches The average tenure of big-company finance chiefs is less than five years, according to a recent study. |
Registered Rep. December 4, 2002 Rick Weinberg |
Weill Postpones Elimination of Salomon Name Sandy Weill, the chairman of Salomon Smith Barney's parent Citigroup, has informed brokers and other employees that plans to eliminate the Salomon name, a Wall Street hallmark for nearly a century, have been postponed, according to sources. |
BusinessWeek July 28, 2003 Louis Lavelle |
Commentary: The Problem of the "Lingering CEO" Sanford Weill is a great leader -- but his continued presence will only cramp his successor Chuck Prince's style |
Registered Rep. January 9, 2009 |
Citi: What Sandy Built, Pandit Will Dismantle? The Wall Street Journal is reporting that Citigroup has put Smith Barney up for sale -- or a joint venture. |
U.S. Banker December 2002 Michael Dumiak |
Finding the Spotlight Economists may practice a dismal science, but people make it happen. Here are a few set to affect the scene in 2003. |
The Motley Fool January 23, 2007 Michael Leibert |
Citigroup Faces Its Critics Robust growth has yet to return to the financial-services giant. Investors who believe Prince can maintain the support of his board until the bank's international efforts can succeed might want to bet on the stock now. |
BusinessWeek November 19, 2007 Mara Der Hovanesian |
Can Citi Regroup? Investors want a Citigroup breakup, but the arguments against that are powerful. |
Registered Rep. September 24, 2002 David A. Gaffen |
Former Brokers Sue SSB, Grubman, Even Sandy Weill Want $100 Million Each for Wrongful Termination, Defamation Spartis and Elias claim that they were wrongfully fired from their positions in February of this year after the firm, in their eyes, did not adequately represent them in complaints filed by customers related to WorldCom. |
Registered Rep. January 24, 2007 John Churchill |
Another Good Year for the Brokerage Industry Fourth-quarter earnings reports are just now rolling in, and they're even better than expected. And it's not just Wall Street's investment-banking divisions that are reeling it in. |