May 4 (Bloomberg) -- Citigroup Inc. proprietary trader Jay Glasser quit to join Nomura Holdings Inc., Japanâs biggest brokerage, as U.S. lawmakers pressure domestic banks to stop speculating with their own capital.
Glasser, 53, who was based in New York and specializes in derivative and currency trades linked to Japanese interest rates, generated an average of more than $10 million a year of revenue for Citigroup from 2007 through 2009, people with knowledge of the matter said. He started at Nomura last week and is based in New York, said Peter Truell, a spokesman for the Tokyo-based firm.
Glasser told his former bosses at Citigroup, which has lost at least 10 proprietary traders this year, that he quit partly because of concern that President Barack Obamaâs proposed Volcker rule may force U.S. banks to divest or close proprietary-trading units, people with knowledge of the matter said. As a Japanese securities firm, Nomura wouldnât be subject to the rule. Citigroup is the third-biggest U.S. bank by assets.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=ae8jYm03IQPU&pos=5
Glasser, 53, who was based in New York and specializes in derivative and currency trades linked to Japanese interest rates, generated an average of more than $10 million a year of revenue for Citigroup from 2007 through 2009, people with knowledge of the matter said. He started at Nomura last week and is based in New York, said Peter Truell, a spokesman for the Tokyo-based firm.
Glasser told his former bosses at Citigroup, which has lost at least 10 proprietary traders this year, that he quit partly because of concern that President Barack Obamaâs proposed Volcker rule may force U.S. banks to divest or close proprietary-trading units, people with knowledge of the matter said. As a Japanese securities firm, Nomura wouldnât be subject to the rule. Citigroup is the third-biggest U.S. bank by assets.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=ae8jYm03IQPU&pos=5