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Citigroup agrees to settlement over defunct hedge fund

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(Reuters) — Citigroup Inc. agreed to pay $13.5 million to settle a lawsuit accusing the bank of deceiving investors into remaining in its Corporate Special Opportunities hedge fund, only to suffer big losses when the fund was liquidated in November 2008, court papers filed on Monday show

The lawsuit accused Citigroup and its Citigroup Alternative Investments affiliate of misleading investors in a Dec. 14, 2007, letter about the status of the fund’s leveraged, €558 million ($756 million at the time) original investment in a syndicated loan arranged for ProSiebenSat1 S.E., a large German broadcaster.

Investors said Citigroup falsely told them in the letter that the quality of the fund’s portfolio was “fundamentally sound,” but was forced six weeks later to suspend redemptions. They claimed to lose the bulk of their investments when the fund was liquidated, despite Citigroup’s efforts to prop it up.

The preliminary settlement was filed in Manhattan federal court and requires court approval. Citigroup denied wrongdoing in agreeing to settle. A spokeswoman said the New York-based bank is pleased to resolve the matter.

The lawsuit, led by David Beach and Christopher Kelly, was brought on behalf of a proposed class that suffered an estimated $39.2 million of CSO fund losses attributable to ProSiebenSat1.

Legal fees for the plaintiffs’ lawyers would not exceed $4.5 million, court papers show.

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