Citibank Suspends Student Loan Program for International Students
Citibank announced it is canceling its private student loan program for international students in an effort to minimize its financial risk during the global financial crisis, Bloomberg reports (“Citigroup Curbs Foreign-Student Loans at Harvard, MIT, Michigan,” Oct. 15, 2008).
The lender’s CitiAssist private student loan program allowed international students at certain schools to borrow as much as $150,000 in private student loans without a cosigner; similar programs required that international borrowers have a U.S. citizen or permanent resident cosign on the loans.
Citibank informed MIT and the University of Michigan this month that it will stop making CitiAssist loans to the schools’ international students in November, just before students begin borrowing for the 2009–2010 academic year. Earlier this month, the bank also terminated its international lending program at Harvard University.
CitiAssist “did fill a very important role,” says Elizabeth Hicks, executive director of student financial services at MIT, where more than 200 of the school’s foreign students at the Sloan School of Management will have fewer borrowing options to help them meet their education costs, which total nearly $76,000.
International Student Loans Drying Up, More Banks Unwilling to Lend
In suspending its lending program to international students, Citibank joins Bank of America, one of the largest providers of student loans to foreign students, which terminated its foreign student lending program in April.
Other lenders are not likely to fill in the lending gap to international students, due, in part, to the fact that international students have a higher likelihood of default than U.S. students and because loans to “international students are not the most profitable loans,” says Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of Finaid.org, a financial aid website sponsored by Citibank’s parent company Citigroup.
Analyst Daniello Natoli, of New York-based financial firm Matrix USA, adds, “It makes sense for [Citibank] to move away from riskier products such as loans to international students, whose creditworthiness is more difficult to assess.”