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Citigroup beats earnings views on strong trading results after rival banking giants fall short

Jul 15, 2022, 19:19 IST
Business Insider
The prestigious bank has lost 4 TMT bankers in recent weeks.Mark Lennihan/AP

Citigroup beat second-quarter forecasts Friday, helped by strong trading revenue, after other banking rivals reported weak results.

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Shares rallied 3.8% to $45.80 in premarket trading.

Here are the key numbers:

  • Quarterly revenue: $19.64 billion vs. $18.48 billion predicted by Bloomberg analysts
  • Diluted earnings per share: $2.19 vs. $1.70 analyst consensus
  • Net income: $4.5 billion, down 27% from a year ago

Earnings per share declined 23% from a year ago as the higher cost of credit and expenses weighed on net income, but revenue was up 11%.

Equity trading revenue grew 8% to $1.2 billion, and fixed income trading revenue jumped 31% to $4.1 billion. But investment banking revenue sank 46% to $805 million.

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The US consumer banking unit saw revenue climb 9% to $4.1 billion, while global wealth management revenue was flat at $1.9 billion.

"Trading volatility continued to create strong corporate client activity for us, driving revenue growth of 25% in markets. While economic sentiment clearly impacted investment banking and wealth management, we continue to invest in these businesses and we like where they are headed," said CEO Jane Fraser in a statement

Citigroup's report contrasts with a gloomy initial round of earnings for other top US banks, which have been hit by a steep downturn in the stock market as well as signs of caution among consumers and businesses amid growing fears of a recession.

Also Friday, Wells Fargo reported weak quarterly results as provisions for loan losses ramped up.

On Thursday, JPMorgan Chase missed second-quarter forecasts, and CEO Jamie Dimon warned the global economy is fragile. Also on Thursday, Morgan Stanley fell short of views, led by weakness in investment banking.

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Bank of America and Goldman Sachs are due to report on Monday.

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