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Citigroup says sued by Argentina amid debt battle

Citigroup said it has been sued by Argentina and that some employees could face criminal charges there due to a court battle between Argentina and US hedge funds

Citigroup said Monday it had been sued by Argentina and that some employees could face criminal charges there due to a court battle between Argentina and US hedge funds.

Argentine officials have since late March "taken certain adverse actions against Citi Argentina, including filing a lawsuit against Citi Argentina and instituting a suspension of certain activities," the US bank said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Additional potential sanctions include "the loss of licenses to operate in Argentina and criminal charges against bank employees," Citigroup added.

Citigroup's travails come amid longstanding litigation between Argentina and US hedge funds NML Capital and Aurelius Capital Management, which did not accept a restructuring deal of Argentine debt. The funds seek $1.3 billion from Argentina.

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US district court judge Thomas Griesa has repeatedly backed the funds' campaign to attain full debt repayment, ruling that Buenos Aires cannot make payments on the restructured debt to other creditors until it pays the so-called "holdout" hedge funds first.

Griesa on March 12 barred Citigroup from handling payments as the custodian of Argentine bonds. The bank, the nation's fourth-largest by assets, subsequently announced plans to exit the Argentine custody business.

After Citi's announcement, Griesa permitted the US bank to handle two more payments of interests as custodian while it exits the business.

However, Argentina has dismissed the US holdouts as "vulture" funds and essentially ignored Griesa's rulings.

In late March, Argentine regulators blocked Citibank Argentina from conducting capital market operations. Argentina's central bank also suspended the head of Argentina's Citi operations, Gabriel Ribisich, accusing him of "misconduct."

Citi said in the SEC filing that "the situation continues to evolve and may result in additional negative consequences to Citi?s franchise in Argentina, some of which could be significant."