$16 Million in FINRA Arbitration Claims Filed Against Citigroup Global Markets According to Aidikoff, Uhl & Bakhtiari -- C
Monday, October 06, 2008 12:17 PM
Symbols: C

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif., Oct. 6, 2008 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Aidikoff, Uhl & Bakhtiari announces the filing of 19 FINRA arbitration claims with damages of more than $16 million during the last several weeks. The arbitration claims were filed against Citigroup Global Markets (NYSE:C) regarding the collapse of its MAT/ASTA and FALCON bond funds.

The arbitrations allege that Citigroup Global Markets marketed and sold these funds to some of its best retail clients as safe, secure, low-risk municipal bond funds that would generate tax free returns of between 5% and 8%. Citigroup also told customers that these funds would be closely monitored in accordance with a sophisticated risk management strategy that would minimize, if not eliminate, any significant downside risk of loss. In fact, Citigroup engaged in highly risky investment practices that resulted in fund losses of more than 75%.

The brokers who sold these funds are not targets of arbitration filings, according to the investors' legal team (www.subprimelosses.com) which includes the firms of Aidikoff, Uhl & Bakhtiari, of Beverly Hills, Calif.; Maddox, Hargett & Caruso, P.C., of Indianapolis, Ind. and New York, N.Y.; Page Perry, LLC, of Atlanta, Ga.; and David P. Meyer & Associates Co., L.P.A., of Columbus, Ohio.

"It appears that brokers were also misled by Citigroup about the true risk of the funds, and that these misrepresentations were passed on to clients of the firm," said attorney Ryan Bakhtiari of Aidikoff, Uhl & Bakhtiari.

As the truth about the Funds' dismal performance began to emerge late in 2007, it became clear that leverage in the portfolio's had increased substantially. Despite this ratcheting up of risk, Citigroup employees assured investors that prices were already recovering which would lead to improved results in the future. By March of 2008, investors learned that they would no longer receive income distributions, nor could they redeem their shares.

"Citigroup blamed unprecedented market conditions, yet a report sent to investors contains tacit admissions that the Funds' failure to follow their own risk management strategies and to take appropriate actions when conditions in the market demanded that they do so resulted in the devastating losses that our clients suffered," added attorney J. Boyd Page of Page Perry.

More information is available at www.subprimelosses.com or by contacting an attorney.

CONTACT:  Aidikoff, Uhl & Bakhtiari
          Ryan K. Bakhtiari
          (800) 382-7969
          rbakhtiari@aol.com
          Beverly Hills, California
          Maddox, Hargett & Caruso
          Steven B. Caruso
          (212) 837-7908
          SBCaruso@aol.com
          New York, New York
          Page Perry, LLC
          J. Boyd Page
          (877) 673-0047
          jbpage@pageperry.com 
          Atlanta, Georgia
          David P. Meyer & Associates, Co., L.P.A.
          David P. Meyer
          (866) 827-6537
          dmeyer@dmlaws.com
          Columbus, Ohio
(Source: PrimeZone )

More Options



Subscribe to Email Alerts rss feed or RSS feeds rss feed for articles from more than 300 contributors and press releases, SEC filings and full text news from thousands of sources.


 
Rate :  Rate this Commentary  


 Number of Comments (0) Post Comment
 
  
Good Rating(+1)    Bad Rating(-1)
No Data Found

 
Enter Symbol
Enter Search String
Bookmark This Article
Email Article

Send this article by email


Recipient's Name
Recipient's E-mail
Your Name
Your E-mail
Related Quotes

 
  Home | Login |Research | Earnings | Scans | Chat Rooms | Charts | Submit Article | Join Blog Network | Contributors | Subscribe to RSS

copryright 2008 all rights reserved