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Citigroup Talks To Axis Bank Over India Business Sale – Report

The US banking group has been spinning off parts of its retail operations in Southeast Asia and Mexico, as it restructures and pushes into areas such as wealth management.
India-based Axis Bank is close to buying Citigroup’s India retail banking business in a transaction that could be valued at about $2.5 billion, Bloomberg reported.
An agreement for the consumer unit, which may be announced as
soon as in the next few weeks, is contingent on approval from the
Reserve Bank of India, the newswire quoted people as saying. The
deal would include a cash component of less than $2 billion,
accounting for the consumer business’s liabilities, the people
said.
Citigroup has
been selling off a selection of its retail banking
operations in a range of countries from Mexico to Taiwan, as part
of a pivot towards areas such as wealth management.
The news report said that Axis Bank emerged as the buyer after
beating rivals, with factors such as job security for current
Citigroup employees and competition concerns being taken into
account, one source said.
Representatives for Axis Bank and Citigroup declined to comment,
Bloomberg said.
Earlier in January, the US bank agreed to sell consumer banking
businesses in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam to United
Overseas Bank for about S$4.9 billion ($3.6 billion). That
disposal followed the sale of its assets in the Philippines last
December to Union Bank of the Philippines for a cash
consideration plus a premium of about $904 million. Citigroup has
also wound down its consumer and SME banking operations in
Mexico.
Under Jane Fraser, Citigroup CEO, the bank’s US consumer and
global wealth arms are being melded into a single business. Like
other international banks, it is also pushing into areas such as
wealth management and private banking in Asia to tap a rising and
affluent middle class.