Financial Results
Citigroup’s Second Quarter Results Beat Expectations

Citigroup has released its second-quarter results for 2022 in New York, reporting better-than-expected figures.
Citigroup's
second-quarter results show that revenue rose by a
better-than-expected 11 per cent from the prior-year period,
driven by increased rates, client activity
in markets and continued momentum in the US cards
businesses.
This was partially offset by a slowdown in investment
banking activity as well as investment fee headwinds
in global wealth management, Citigroup said in a
statement.
According to the firm, revenue reached $19.6 billion in the
second quarter, more than $1 billion over estimates, with growth
in both net interest income as well as non-interest revenue.
Higher net interest income was primarily driven by the benefits
of higher rates as well as strong volumes
across institutional clients' group, personal banking and
wealth management. Global wealth management revenues of
$1.9 billion were nevertheless flat, as investment fee headwinds,
particularly in Asia, were offset by growth in average deposits
and loans, Citigroup said.
Non-interest revenue also increased, driven by fixed income
markets and services in ICG, which more than offset lower
non-interest revenue in investment
banking in ICG and PBWM, the US bank
stressed.
Profit, meanwhile, fell by 27 per cent to $4.5 billion from the
prior-year period, driven by the higher cost of credit and higher
expenses, partially offset by the increase in revenues, the group
said. Citigroup’s effective tax rate was 19.8 per cent in
the current quarter versus 15.7 per cent in the second quarter
2021. The higher tax rate for the current quarter reflected lower
tax benefits related to certain non-US operations, the bank
added.
Earnings per share of $2.19 also decreased by 23 per cent from
the prior-year period, reflecting the lower net income, partly
offset by an approximate 4 per cent decline in shares
outstanding, the bank said. Due to the better-than-expected
results, shares of the bank increased by 5.4 per cent in early
New York trading.
Citi CEO Jane Fraser said: “Trading volatility continued to
create strong corporate client activity for us, driving revenue
growth of 25 per cent 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.”
“In US personal banking, the positive drivers we saw in our two
credit cards businesses over the last few quarters converted into
solid revenue growth this quarter, most notably a 10 per cent
growth in branded cards,” she added. “In a challenging macro and
geopolitical environment, our team delivered solid results and we
are in a strong position to weather uncertain times, given our
liquidity, credit quality and reserve levels,” she said.