Meredith Whitney appeared on "Bloomberg Surveillance" Thursday morning to discuss the government's case against Standard & Poor's, her municipal bond call and her thoughts on new Citigroup CEO Michael Corbat.
Whitney said, "We don't really know Mike Corbat's agenda…He didn't give us an agenda and he didn't even give us a time stamp for when he's going to give us an agenda, so it left people a little bit uninspired."
Of her muni bond call, Whitney said, "What I am most concerned about it is the lack of health of different states. This issue of state arbitrage where people are voting with their feet. That is very clear. You have net emigration from California for the first time in 150 years."
On whether the government has a valid case against Standard & Poor's:
"I was surprised what source of the government this came from. Very surprised. I was surprised that—you find emails at S&P. You could find emails at any company want to."
"The case of the government is that S&P actively defrauded investors. I find that very hard to believe, and I think it will be very hard to prove. But guilty until proven innocent. To me, it is disturbing on so many levels. $5 billion? What was the settlement case with Henry Blodget and Merrill Lynch? It was not $5 billion. It just seems curious."
On whether the U.S. government should be focusing more on the banks instead of the ratings agencies:
"The Federal Reserve had it wrong. It had housing wrong. Every government agency had housing wrong. Everybody thought that home prices would not go down because they have not gone down since the Great Depression. It sounds similar for the municipal bond world. But the idea is, things happened. There was a perfect storm of events."
"I think the government has to be very careful about what they're doing to the bond market. Moody's and S&P are so entrenched within the bond market that most pension funds have to have their rating in order to buy their bonds. If you are disrupting the bond market, you are doing some very damaging things because the system is so tightly structured. Unintended consequences is something they should be very focused on."
Whitney on Citi CEO Michael Corbat and how different Citi is from its previous regime:
"We do not know yet. What we do know is Mike O'Neill's history, he's the chairman. He likes to downsize, he likes to sell stuff. We know his agenda. We do not know Michael Corbat's agenda. he did not give us an agenda or even a time stamp for when he's going to give us an agenda, so it left people a little bit uninspired." On what bank stock investors should own right now:
"I think that Citi does ok, but I think Bank of America is the stock to own this year without a doubt. There is so much financial leverage with that name. They will return, I think, over $4 billion in buybacks. It could be $5 billion in buybacks this year and really move the needle. I think that stock easily goes to 15 in the next six to nine months."
On which bank is having the hardest time justifying its cost base: