By
Oct 25, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
Citibank Korea has decided to close its consumer banking operations in phases, the bank said on Monday, after its attempt to find a buyer of the business fell through. It is now folding up the retail business in less than two decades, following in the footsteps of HSBC, which pulled out of the country's retail market in 2013.
Under the phaseout scheme, Citibank Korea will discontinue selling new retail products and gradually scale back operations with the implementation of early retirement programs. It did not provide a timeline of the phased liquidation.
It entered the country's consumer banking market in 2004 by acquiring then KorAm Bank from a consortium of the Carlyle Group and JPMorgan for $2.7 billion. The following year, Standard Chartered made inroads into the market by acquiring then Korea First Bank for $3.3 billion.
"At a board meeting on Oct. 22, we decided to shut down our entire consumer banking business in phases," Citibank Korea said on its website, adding that its retail customers will be advised to transfer to other financial services firms until the bank liquidates its business.
On Apr. 15, Citigroup Chief Executive Jane Fraser said that the US banking giant intended to pull out of 13 countries, mostly in Asia, saying: "We don’t have the scale we need to compete (in those countries)."
Since the announcement, the US banking group entered into talks with a number of domestic financial services companies to sell its Korean retail business. But its high-cost structure and the limited growth potential of domestic retail banking cooled interest.
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