Citigroup launched a major restructuring of 2 of its top moneymaking units in sales and trading. We

Publish date: 2024-07-19
2019-06-17T15:39:45Z

Citigroup is launching a major restructuring of two of its top sales and trading businesses within fixed income, currencies, and commodities. 

The firm sent out an internal memo Monday announcing it was merging its rates and currencies operations, two of the top moneymakers in the firm's $11.6 billion FICC division, in a move first reported by The Financial Times

Nadir Mahmud, who ran the firm's foreign exchange and local markets (FXLM) business, is taking on a new role in strategy for the EMEA region, according to the memo, which was confirmed by a company spokesman.

This was the first major shakeup since Paco Ybarra took over as head of the investment bank following the announcement in April of Jamie Forese's retirement. 

"We have decided to integrate FXLM and G10 Rates by creating a single Rates and Currencies business line. Our two existing businesses have a neighbouring product set, share corporate sales, structuring and a significant technology stack," Carey Lathrop and Andy Morton, who took over the markets division after Ybarra was promoted, wrote in the internal memo. "We believe this more streamlined operating model will drive better client service, risk management and profitability.

Citigroup is the second-ranked FICC business on Wall Street after JPMorgan Chase, according to industry consultant Coalition. It ranks first in emerging market macro trading, second in G10 FX, and third in G10 rates. 

FICC revenues largely declined across Wall Street in 2018, and 2019 has been a struggle thus far as well. Executives at Citi and Morgan Stanley warned last week that second-quarter trading revenues were likely to take a hit.

Read the full memo, which details the new reporting structure within rates and currencies, below:

To:
Markets and Securities Services, ICG Management, Mike Verdeschi
 
From:
Carey Lathrop and Andy Morton
 
Date:
June 17, 2019
 
Re:
Organizational Announcement
 
 
We have decided to integrate FXLM and G10 Rates by creating a single Rates and Currencies business line. Our two existing businesses have a neighbouring product set, share corporate sales, structuring and a significant technology stack. We believe this more streamlined operating model will drive better client service, risk management and profitability.

We want to thank Nadir Mahmud for managing our leading FXLM franchise over the last five years. He will continue to report to us; assisting in this transition and then working with Leo Arduini on EMEA strategy, including optimizing the legal entity and booking model structure.

Within Rates and Currencies, we will broadly align activity along these two dimensions, with the following management structure:

Brian Mccappin (head of FXLM Investor sales) will report to Itay, Deirdre, Pedro and Jim O'Donnell. 

Serge PomontiMike Saraceni and Ben Travers (APAC & Japan, NAM and EMEA heads of G10 Rates Investor Sales respectively) will report to Deirdre, Pedro and the corresponding regional sales head. 
 

Other direct reports of Nadir will transition to reporting lines to be determined over the coming weeks. We would like to thank Pankaj Vaish for his commitment to the Local Rates franchise over the last few years.

The current G10 Rates Finance desk will be outside the scope of Rates and Currencies. We will be sending a separate communication describing that construct in the next couple of weeks.

We wish all our colleagues here the best of success in their new roles, as we work together to extend Citi's lead over the competition in the Rates and Currencies domain.

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