Sun. Jul 7th, 2024

Citigroup beats 4th-quarter forecasts as its fixed income trading group delivers record results<!-- wp:html --><p>The prestigious bank has lost 4 TMT bankers in recent weeks.</p> <p class="copyright">Mark Lennihan/AP</p> <p><strong>Citigroup reported fourth-quarter earnings and revenue that beat estimates on Friday.</strong><strong>The bank's fixed-income trading unit delivered record results as it benefited from a higher interest rate environment.</strong><strong>The bank increased its provisions for loan losses due to expectations of a shaky economy.</strong></p> <p><a href="https://markets.businessinsider.com/stocks/c-stock">Citigroup</a> gave upbeat guidance and reported <a href="https://www.citigroup.com/citi/investor/qer.htm" target="_blank" rel="noopener">fourth-quarter earnings</a> that beat analyst estimates on Friday, driven by record results from the bank's fixed-income trading unit. </p> <p>For 2023, the bank estimated that it will generate between $78 billion and $79 billion in revenue, which is higher than analyst estimates of $76 billion.</p> <p>In the fourth quarter, Citi's $3.16 billion in revenue from its fixed income sales and trading division beat analyst estimates for $2.81 billion and represented year-over-year growth of 31% as higher interest rates drove more business.</p> <p>Meanwhile, equities sales and trading revenue of $789 million was down 14% year-over-year and missed analyst estimates of $930.6 million. Investment banking revenue fell 58% to $645 million, well below analyst estimates for $722.4 million. Both units were hurt by a continued sell-off in the stock market and a lack of IPO activity, respectively. </p> <p>Shares of Citigroup initially sold-off more than 2% following the release of its results, but then turned 1% higher. </p> <p><strong>Here are other key numbers:</strong></p> <p><strong>Revenue: </strong>$18.01 billion, versus the average analyst estimate of $17.96 billion <br /><strong>Earnings per share: </strong>$1.16, versus the average analyst estimate of $1.14<br /><strong>Total Deposits: </strong>$1.37 trillion, versus analyst estimates of $1.28 trillion</p> <p>Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser said the bank has made "significant progress" in its strategic plan to simplify its business and strengthen its five key underlying businesses.</p> <p>"We intentionally designed a strategy that can deliver for our shareholders in different environments, and we are very much on track to reach the medium-term return targets we shared on Investor Day," Fraser said.</p> <p>Citigroup said a souring global economy is leading it to increase its provisions for loan losses to $1.8 billion, compared to last year when the bank was releasing old reserves. Net loan charge-offs rose 36% year-over-year to $1.2 billion, which was ahead of estimates of $1.1 billion.</p> <p>The company's total allowance for credit losses on loans was $17.0 billion in the quarter, with a reserve-to-funded loans ratio of 2.60%. That compares to last year's allowance for credit losses of $16.5 billion.</p> <p>Also on Friday, <a href="https://markets.businessinsider.com/news/stocks/jpmorgan-q4-bank-earnings-jamie-dimon-stock-market-news-today-2023-1">JPMorgan beat its earnings estimates</a> but CEO Jamie Dimon warned investors of an increasingly dark macro environment. </p> <div class="read-original">Read the original article on <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/citigroup-stock-4q-earnings-fixed-income-trading-investment-banking-economy-2023-1">Business Insider</a></div><!-- /wp:html -->

The prestigious bank has lost 4 TMT bankers in recent weeks.

Citigroup reported fourth-quarter earnings and revenue that beat estimates on Friday.The bank’s fixed-income trading unit delivered record results as it benefited from a higher interest rate environment.The bank increased its provisions for loan losses due to expectations of a shaky economy.

Citigroup gave upbeat guidance and reported fourth-quarter earnings that beat analyst estimates on Friday, driven by record results from the bank’s fixed-income trading unit. 

For 2023, the bank estimated that it will generate between $78 billion and $79 billion in revenue, which is higher than analyst estimates of $76 billion.

In the fourth quarter, Citi’s $3.16 billion in revenue from its fixed income sales and trading division beat analyst estimates for $2.81 billion and represented year-over-year growth of 31% as higher interest rates drove more business.

Meanwhile, equities sales and trading revenue of $789 million was down 14% year-over-year and missed analyst estimates of $930.6 million. Investment banking revenue fell 58% to $645 million, well below analyst estimates for $722.4 million. Both units were hurt by a continued sell-off in the stock market and a lack of IPO activity, respectively. 

Shares of Citigroup initially sold-off more than 2% following the release of its results, but then turned 1% higher. 

Here are other key numbers:

Revenue: $18.01 billion, versus the average analyst estimate of $17.96 billion 
Earnings per share: $1.16, versus the average analyst estimate of $1.14
Total Deposits: $1.37 trillion, versus analyst estimates of $1.28 trillion

Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser said the bank has made “significant progress” in its strategic plan to simplify its business and strengthen its five key underlying businesses.

“We intentionally designed a strategy that can deliver for our shareholders in different environments, and we are very much on track to reach the medium-term return targets we shared on Investor Day,” Fraser said.

Citigroup said a souring global economy is leading it to increase its provisions for loan losses to $1.8 billion, compared to last year when the bank was releasing old reserves. Net loan charge-offs rose 36% year-over-year to $1.2 billion, which was ahead of estimates of $1.1 billion.

The company’s total allowance for credit losses on loans was $17.0 billion in the quarter, with a reserve-to-funded loans ratio of 2.60%. That compares to last year’s allowance for credit losses of $16.5 billion.

Also on Friday, JPMorgan beat its earnings estimates but CEO Jamie Dimon warned investors of an increasingly dark macro environment. 

Read the original article on Business Insider

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