Charles Prince resigned on Sunday as chairman and chief executive of Citigroup Inc, as the bank said it may write off $11 billion of subprime mortgage losses, on top of a $6.5 billion write-down last quarter.
Robert Rubin's career has taken him from Wall Street wizard to the pinnacle of power in Washington, and back.
Sir Win Bischoff has taken on a tough role - being acting chief executive for a giant bank that needs plenty of attention.
Stocks fell in Europe and Asia after Citigroup Inc's announcement of as much as $11 billion in writedowns suggested financial companies may face more losses. US index futures retreated.
MasterCard Inc, the second-biggest payment-card network, said profit climbed 63 percent, beating analysts' estimates, as customer spending increased. The shares rose as much as 8 percent in premarket trading.
Kingfisher Plc said yesterday that Chief Executive Gerry Murphy would step down in February, boosting its shares on speculation of a bid for, or break up of, Europe's biggest home improvements retailer.
IBM Corp, the world's biggest computer-services provider, plans to spend $1.5 billion next year to help customers secure data and comply with new rules for guarding information.
Israeli billionaire Nochi Dankner owns the country's biggest mobile-phone provider, supermarket chain and insurer. Now, as Dankner searches for ways to expand his IDB Group, he's looking abroad.
Ford Motor Co, battling a 12-year slide in US market share, negotiates a new contract this week with a United Auto Workers union seeking to extend job guarantees won at General Motors Corp and Chrysler LLC.
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