3rd UPDATE: Citi 3Q Profit Soars As Credit Losses Decline
18 Outubro 2010 - 5:07PM
Dow Jones News
Citigroup Inc. (C) managed to grow its core businesses broadly
in the third quarter. Revenue and profits rose from the
year-earlier period despite wobbly capital markets as Chief
Executive Vikram Pandit appeared to turn the ship in a new
direction.
The bank's third-quarter profit was $2.2 billion, up from $101
million a year earlier, with per-share profit of seven cents coming
in just above analysts' estimates. Improving credit helped power
earnings: The bank took $2 billion out of its reserve for future
loan losses, $500 million more than in the second quarter.
Revenue in Citi's core banking businesses rose 7% on the year,
to $16.3 billion, excluding accounting changes and the businesses
and assets it wants to divest -- but fell 1.2% from the previous
quarter.
That year-over-year growth contrasts with falling revenue at
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM), the only other large bank to
report so far.
Much of Citi's strength came from emerging markets. Retail
banking results in the U.S. remain lackluster, Chief Financial
Officer John Gerspach conceded during a conference call with
investors.
"The economies are looking better in Asia and the emerging
markets in general compared to the developed economies," Gerspach
said. Even abroad, he said, is "not robust," though at least in
those markets Citi is "able to replenish loans as they come due."
Trade finance was a particular bright spot, Gerspach said. He said
the global political discontent about currencies hasn't impacted
Citi.
To Pandit, the third consecutive quarterly profit is "continued
evidence that we are successfully executing our strategy and we
believe we have put in place all the elements for continued
profitability," he said in a press release.
Pandit said during the conference call Citi's managers
"anticipate that we should be in a position to return capital to
our shareholders in 2012," while "2011 will be a year of rulemaking
in the U.S. and moderate calibration across the industry. "
Citi shares rose 5% to $4.16.
"Revenues come in better than expected," Sanford C. Bernstein
& Co. analyst John E. McDonald wrote in a research note. Glenn
Schorr of Nomura wrote, "non-US growth is still the differentiator"
for Citi.
Citi's investment banking results were weaker from the previous
quarter; a falloff in trading hurt results at J.P. Morgan Chase and
are expected to hit Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) and Morgan
Stanley (MS). Citi's stronger historical focus on debt underwriting
cushioned the decline from the strong second quarter.
Capital markets revenue rose 14% from a year earlier, and
profits rose a strong 66%, to $1.4 billion. Consumer banking
revenue rose 33% and that division's profit rose 75%, to $1.2
billion.
The legacy businesses and assets in the Citi Holdings division
it is selling or running off continued to be a drag on results;
Holding's loss was $1.1 billion.
Citi continued splitting off assets. Recently it sold $3.5
billion of commercial real estate loans to J.P. Morgan at a small
profit, according to people familiar with the matter.
Citi's total revenue rose 2% from a year earlier, to $21
billion, but fell 6% from the second quarter -- and adjusted for
the accounting change earlier this year revenue fell 10% from a
year earlier.
Total credit-loss provisions were $5.92 billion, down from $9.1
billion a year earlier and $6.67 billion in the prior quarter.
Besides improving credit, a shrinking loan book helped require less
reserves.
Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had most recently forecast
earnings of 6 cents on $21 billion in revenue. In the year-earlier
period, Citi lost 27 cents a share.
The U.S. Treasury, which bailed out Citi during the financial
crisis and subsequently converted its holdings into common stock,
still holds 12.4% of its stock.
Gerspach reiterated that Citi has avoided the massive
foreclosure trouble plaguing several of its big bank competitors,
and said even the risk of private investors forcing the bank to
repurchase mortgage-backed securities is limited. Unlike Bank of
America Corp. (BAC) and Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC), Citi didn't
acquire banks with big mortgage servicing businesses.
-By Matthias Rieker and Nathan Becker, Dow Jones Newswires;
212-416-2471; matthias.rieker@dowjones.com
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