- Rising Jobless Biggest Threat to World Trade: WTO
- Gold Hits $1,122, Barrick Chief Says Selloff Possible
- Wall Street Pay Is Often too High: Bill Gates
- Morgan Stanley Gets Aggressive in Luring Brokers
- Foreclosures Fall Again But Improvement Likely Fleeting
- Highest State Foreclosure Rates
- Yuan Critics Want Obama to Keep Campaign Promise
- Obama Most Powerful Person in World: Forbes
- Hewlett-Packard to Acquire 3Com for $2.7 Billion in Cash
- What to Expect From Disney Earnings?
- HP's Shot Across Cisco's Bow
- USC Football Blog Leads All-Access Space
- Clowning Around At Work
- Ahead of Earnings Disney Restructures Studio
- Nov. 11: Unusual Volume Leaders
- 3 'Clear Sailing' Mid-Caps For Investors: Strategist
- Intimate Apparel Sales Heating Up: Maidenform CEO
- A Day On The USS Harry S. Truman
- BMW to invest $735 million in China joint venture
- GDF Suez confirms earnings target
- Shipper A.P. Moller-Maersk posts 9-month loss
- China extends investigation of Rio Tinto employees
- Romanian subway workers on 2-hour strike
- Greek August unemployment falls to 9 percent
- Polish gas monopoly PGNiG posts strong 3Q gains
- SKorea, Peru seek to conclude free-trade deal
- China hints at yuan rise ahead of Obama's visit
NEW YORK - Citigroup Inc. filed plans for an initial public offering of its Primerica Inc. life insurance unit late Thursday, and said it will sell the rest of the unit after it goes public.
Divesting Primerica is part of Citi's effort to simplify its operations and raise cash. The bank, one of the hardest hit during the credit crisis and recession, has reported huge losses in the past two years as its investments and consumer loans and credit cards soured.
Citi will sell all the Primerica shares being offered in the IPO, and receive all proceeds from the stock sale.
Primerica has about 100,000 sales representatives selling life insurance and investment products like mutual funds, mostly to middle-income households. It earned $244.7 million on $1.09 billion in revenue in the first six months of this year, down from profit of $269.1 million on $1.19 billion revenue in the first six months of 2008.
The unit has its roots in a company called A.L. Williams & Assoc., formed in 1977 to market term life insurance using independent sales representatives. The company expanded rapidly to become one of the country's largest life insurance sellers, and went public in 1982. Citi acquired the company in the late 1980s.
Citigroup received $45 billion in loans from the U.S. government, which now owns a 34 percent stake in the bank. It has also received guarantees to protect against losses on more than $300 billion in risky assets.
As part of its efforts to recover, Citigroup is selling a wide range of the assets it acquired over the years as it became one of the world's largest players in banking, insurance and financial services.
Last month, Citi sold its commodities trading unit and its Japanese brokerage. It has also sold some of its credit card assets.
In September, CEO Vikram Pandit confirmed the bank plans to eventually sell the remaining stake in its Smith Barney brokerage venture to Morgan Stanley, which owns the other half. It is also reportedly looking to sell off branches in certain parts of the country.
- Bernard and Ruth Madoff's personal possessions will be auctioned this weekend. Click ahead to see.
- US real estate prices have fallen dramatically, but some places are still doing well. See the best-performing zip codes this year.
- An Italian cashmere maker aims to make profits while creating ideal conditions for his workers.
- Just in time for the holidays, the Triumph company of Japan offers the latest innovation in women’s undergarments.
- The real result of health care reform will be bloated government and higher deficits, says Larry Kudlow.
- Vote and suggest your own, and remember--there's a fine line between a hero and a zero.









