Gulf News

Citigroup profit jumps 16% as legal, restructur­ing costs fall

Adjusted net income rose to $4.82b, or $1.52 per share, in the first quarter from $4.15b a year earlier

-

Citigroup Inc, the third biggest US bank by assets, reported a 16 per cent jump in quarterly profit, beating analysts’ estimates, as legal and restructur­ing costs plunged.

Citi has been cutting costs and simplifyin­g its structure by selling retail operations in a number of countries, shrinking its US branch network and selling non-core businesses.

Adjusted net income rose to $4.82 billion, or $1.52 per share, in the first quarter from $4.15 billion, or $1.30 per share, a year earlier. The bank’s shares rose about 2 per cent to $54 in premarket trading yesterday.

Legal and restructur­ing costs plunged to $403 million in the first quarter ended March 31 from $1.16 billion a year earlier. He made progress toward that goal in March when the Federal Reserve approved his plans to raise dividends and buy back shares.

Return on assets

Citi’s return on assets was 1.05 per cent in the first quarter, higher than Corbat’s target of at least 0.9 per cent for the year. The bank’s tier-1 common equity capital ratio rose to 11 per cent from 10.6 per cent in the fourth quarter as it used $1.2 billion of deferred tax assets.

Citi had put a lot of legal and restructur­ing costs behind it in the fourth quarter, recording about $2.9 billion in legal expenses and $600 million of restructur­ing charges.

Total adjusted revenue fell 2 per cent to $19.8 billion.

Citi’s revenue from fixed income trading fell 11 per cent to $3.48 billion. In contrast, Goldman Sachs Group Inc and JP Morgan Chase & Co reported higher revenue from bond and currency trading in the quarter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates