Thursday, October 30, 2008

Weill Seeks to Gain From Pain: Considers Fund to Invest in Battered Financials

Oct 23 -- Wall Street Journal -- Sanford Weill, the architect of Citigroup Inc., is considering a plan to profit from the same turmoil that has clobbered the banking giant.

Mr. Weill, who pulled off the deal that created Citigroup a decade ago and became its chairman and chief executive, is in talks about launching a private-equity fund that would invest in beaten-down financial companies and assets, according to people familiar with the matter.

Mr. Weill's potential partners are Michael Klein, who was co-head of Citigroup's investment bank until he left in July, and Michael Masin, former chief operating officer at the New York company.

Such ventures often fizzle before getting off the ground, so it isn't clear if Mr. Weill will go through with the plan. In recent weeks, though, Mr. Weill's team has reached out to potential investors, including sovereign-wealth funds, outlining their strategy and gauging interest in putting money into such a fund, people familiar with the discussions said. The tentative goal is to raise about $5 billion. Read More.

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