
Viswas Raghavan, hired by Citigroup in 2024 with a $52 million package after leaving JPMorgan Chase, faces allegations of bullying and inappropriate remarks during his tenure at JPMorgan. Reports detail complaints about his management style, including offensive language and temper issues, leading to internal reviews and pay cuts. Citigroup defended its hiring process, highlighting Raghavan's leadership record, while some colleagues express concern over his potential succession to Citigroup's CEO role.
The articles present perspectives focusing on corporate leadership and workplace conduct without explicit political framing. They include viewpoints from former colleagues, internal reviews, and corporate statements, reflecting concerns about management style alongside the hiring institution's defense. The coverage centers on professional behavior and organizational decisions rather than political ideology.
The overall tone is mixed, combining critical accounts of Raghavan's alleged behavior with neutral reporting on Citigroup's hiring rationale. While allegations of bullying and inappropriate remarks introduce negative sentiment, the inclusion of Citigroup's defense and acknowledgment of his leadership record balances the narrative, resulting in a measured and factual presentation.
Each source's own headline, political lean, and sentiment — so you can see framing differences at a glance.
| Source | Their headline | Bias | Sentiment |
|---|---|---|---|
| ndtv | Citigroup Hires JPMorgan-Fired Banker Viswas Raghavan For 52 Million Amid Bullying Claims | Center | Neutral |
| hindustantimes | Citi's 52M banker Vis Raghavan accused of bullying, sexist remarks at JPMorgan: 'Waste of calories' | Center | Negative |
hindustantimes broke this story on 3 May, 07:03 am. Other outlets followed.
Well-covered story — coverage matches public importance.
Institutions and figures named across source coverage.
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