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Citigroup Profits Jump By 42% In Q1 With Equity Trading Gains

Citi Backs Stablecoin Firm BVNK in Onchain Settlement Drive

Citigroup Profits Jump By 42% In Q1 With Equity Trading Gains

Imesh Ranasinghe

Imesh Ranasinghe

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Catenaa, Tuesday, April 14, 2026- Citigroup posted a 42% jump in first-quarter profit, beating market expectations, as gains from equity trading rose 39% amid market volatility.

The bank reported earnings per share of $3.06 on Tuesday, beating analyst estimates of $2.65 per share. Revenue of $24.63 billion, the bank’s highest quarterly figure in a decade, also topped Wall Street expectations of $23.55 billion.

Geopolitical tensions that stoked volatility across asset classes helped push total markets revenue up 19% year-over-year to $7.2 billion, Reuters reported. 

Equities brought in $2.1 billion, a 39% year-over-year gain, while the fixed income desk generated $5.2 billion, up 13%. Prime balances in the markets division climbed more than 50%, Citigroup said.

Commodities drove a 27% increase in other fixed income categories, while rates and currencies contributed a 6% gain. Equity markets’ growth reflected strength across derivatives, prime services, and cash equities.

Investment banking revenue for the banking division rose 15% in the quarter. On the underwriting side, equity fees surged 64%, and M&A advisory fees added 19%, though fixed income underwriting slipped 6%. The services division posted a 17% revenue increase to $6.1 billion.

Citigroup’s return on tangible common equity came in at 13.1%, above the bank’s full-year target range of 10% to 11% and the highest since 2021. “We remain very much on track to deliver the 10-11% RoTCE target this year,” CEO Jane Fraser said in a statement.

Fraser also said the bank repurchased $6.3 billion in stock during the quarter and added: “We’ve entered into the final phase of our divestitures and 90% of our transformation programs are now at or near our target state.”

A 7% increase in expenses reflected the cost of ongoing headcount reductions, with compensation, benefits, and severance payments all weighing on the bottom line as Citigroup pressed ahead with its restructuring. 

At $2.81 billion, the provision for credit losses exceeded the $2.64 billion analyst forecast, with consumer card net credit losses and a $579 million allowance build both contributing to the shortfall.

Moreover,  Citigroup said its exposure to private-credit firms was $22 billion in the fourth quarter.

The loans are part of the bank’s portfolio of lending to financial firms other than banks, which totaled $118 billion at the end of last year, Citigroup said Tuesday in a presentation. 

The bank also said its corporate private-credit warehouse financing has “substantial equity cushions” as well as structural protections to help the firm weather any major stress.

Over the past year, Citigroup shares have gained roughly 104.9%, a run that has left both the KBW bank index and most large-bank peers behind, according to Reuters.