Financial Results

Wealth Results Sharply Improve At Citigroup

Editorial Staff January 16, 2025

Wealth Results Sharply Improve At Citigroup

The headline figure for Citigroup's wealth business showed that the US lender ended 2024 on a strong note.

The wealth arm of Citigroup, which includes its private bank as well as the Wealth at Work and Citigold business lines, reported fourth-quarter 2024 net income of $334 million, up from $21 million a year before. For 2024, it stood at $1 billion, rising 139 per cent year-on-year.

Revenues at the wealth business rose 20 per cent year-on-year to $2 billion; in 2024, they rose 7 per cent to $7.512 billion, the New York-listed banking group said in a statement. 

Total operating costs fell 3 per cent to $1.57 billion on a year ago. Net credit losses fell 3 per cent to $30 million. 

Private bank revenues rose 9 per cent year-on-year to $590 million, mainly as a result of higher deposit spreads and higher investment fee revenues, partly offset by higher mortgage funding costs.  

Group results
Citigroup said group net income was $2.9 billion, reversing a net loss of $1.8 billion in the prior-year period, primarily driven by the higher revenues, lower expenses and lower cost of credit. 

Revenues rose by 12 per cent from the prior-year period, on a reported basis, driven by growth in each of Citigroup’s businesses and the smaller impact from the currency devaluation in Argentina, partially offset by a decline in certain other categories, excluding the impact of the Argentina currency devaluation and divestiture-related effects, rose 7 per cent. 

The bank had a Common Equity Tier 1 capital ratio – a bank’s “buffer” against shocks – of 13.6 per cent, up from 13.4 per cent a year before.

Jane Fraser, CEO, hailed the results for the group. 

“2024 was a critical year and our results show our strategy is delivering as intended and driving stronger performance in our businesses. Our net income was up nearly 40 per cent to $12.7 billion and we exceeded our full-year revenue target, including record years in services, wealth and US personal banking,” Fraser said. 

“We delivered expenses within our guidance and improved our efficiency ratio while concluding a significant reorganization of our firm. We returned nearly $7 billion of capital to common shareholders and our board of directors has authorized a program to repurchase $20 billion in common stock.

"We entered 2025 with momentum across our businesses and we continue to strengthen our ability to serve our clients. While we now expect our 2026 RoTCE [return on average tangible common equity] between 10 per cent and 11 per cent in order to make additional investments in our businesses and transformation, this level is a waypoint, not a destination. We intend to improve returns well above that level and deliver Citi's full potential for our shareholders,” Fraser concluded. 

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