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...information-technology rainbow remains elusive. Citicorp has watched close to $200 million go up in smoke since 1985. Its first major information-service investment, a joint venture with McGraw- Hill to supply electronic data on prices and market activity to oil traders, flopped after a year. Earlier this year, Citi pulled the plug on a computerized information service aimed at grocery shoppers. Knight-Ridder lost about $50 million in a failed home-shopping service. And in its ambitious effort to make paper vanish, Wang Laboratories itself almost disappeared when it bet the ranch on manufacturing expensive document-scanning and imaging...
Nelson March 15 at CITI...
...competition has stolen away some of Citicorp's top-drawer clients. The bank was taken aback recently when it lost Marriott Hotels, a longtime corporate customer, to a group of Japanese rivals. Citi has also watched nervously as competitors expanded their American beachheads. Britain's Barclays Bank is enlarging its U.S. operations to target multinational firms, many of them Citicorp customers. Of all the rivals on Citi's turf, Reed considers Deutsche Bank "the biggest and most formidable" because of its commanding presence in Europe...
Citicorp has only itself to blame for many of its problems. It led the ill- fated charge by American financial institutions into the London equities market in anticipation of the 1987 "Big Bang," which deregulated the British securities industry. When the overcrowded market proved to be a disappointment, Citi dissolved its London equities business, losing $65 million; 140 people lost their jobs. Citicorp was also the leader in Third World lending. Today the bank has some $8.4 billion in outstanding loans to less developed countries, or LDCs. Since 1987 Citi has been forced to write off or set aside reserves...
...compete abroad more effectively, Citi has spent an estimated $1.3 billion on computers and telecommunications in the past five years. Its advanced communications have enabled the bank to remain the world's top dealer in foreign currencies. The firm also operates the world's largest network of automated teller machines and has introduced such innovations as the touch- tone screen. The bank is currently linking its 2,000 ATMs worldwide, so travelers in, say, Singapore can tap their accounts in New York City or Buenos Aires. With a reach like that, Citicorp will remain a major player on the world...